I am comparing your comments which state that any Muslim who expresses shock at someone becoming radicalised as being in denial with Khan's that's why your change to the analogy doesn't work in getting it closer to your position. At no point does he imply that shock at an individual being radicalised if you knew them is necessarily being in denial.
I am really struggling to understand why you don't see the difference here.
Once again you are making things up.
I never said that any Muslim expressing shock at someone being radicalised was in denial.
My comment was much more specific than that - it was about comments where an individual expressed a refusal to believe that someone could have been radicalised, when clearly they had been. I think considering this to be denial is perfectly appropriate and never did I infer this applied to every individual who is shocked at attacks, let alone all muslims.
So I suggest you actually start reading what I wrote, not what you'd have liked me to have written to justify your little rant.
And I'd apply the same in other circumstances. If there was a case of serious bullying in a school and the Head Teacher is quoted as saying that he or she 'can't believe that there is bullying in my school' - I think it would be perfectly apt to suggest this person is in denial and I imagine you'd agree with me. Clearly that is different to the Head Teacher saying they are shocked at the bullying, which clearly wouldn't be a case of denial as there is a clear acceptance that it is or has happened.
And in that context I think my comment and that of Sadiq Khan are pretty well identical in their meaning.