AndrewK is quite right to point out that it's no more practical to throw money at the domestic "war on terror" than it is to throw money at the war on intestinal infection if we're trying to actually save lives rather than merely assuage outrage.
The question is: why should we throw away more money to fund "security theatrics" in the west when the actual safety it provides is increasingly marginal and there are far more cost effective ways to save lives which are currently underfunded? Why is stopping terrorism related death more important than stopping obesity related death? (hint: emotion)
Closing down mosques and banning Qur'ans in the west is a steep price to pay to try and end terrorism, and aside from being a terrible strategy to begin with (obvious reasons), it may come back to bite other religions in the future (obvious reasons). I know politicians would love to convince you that TSA agents groping your children and the NSA spending tax money to invade your privacy using every possible covert means available has something to do with protecting your freedom; or that spending money on the military is required to stop terrorists from blowing you up, but in truth it amounts to less than the boost in actual safety you would get from purchasing an emergency medical kit or attending a driving safety class. — VagabondSpectre
domestic terrorism incidents, which I have indicated - without rebuttal - is an insignificant issue in public policy terms — andrewk
What action would you like taken, and what is the threshold criterion that must be met for such action, so that we can work out what other countries it should be applied to. — andrewk
I mean that Western governments have broken their own informal promises as well as legal obligations to militarily intervene in the event of genocide, the use of WMDs, and/or the crossing of red lines, all three of which have now occurred.
-The sufficient conditions are already in place, whether I like them or not, but I would simply like the US to honor its stated commitments and obligations. That's all. The form of the intervention is determined by whatever is necessary to honor said commitments.
You mentioned genocide earlier. You could pick a particular definition of genocide and use that as the centre of a criterion. I am interested to see what that criterion will be, and whether it also mandates military intervention in those other non-Islamic trouble spots I mentioned. — andrewk
Either your position is changing, from a focus on Western victims of violence to a focus on victims in places like Syria, or it has been like that all along but that was not clear. — andrewk
That position is prima facie more reasonable to me than one about heightening domestic anti-terrorist activities — andrewk
What would you like to be sufficient conditions for the US to intervene militarily in another country, and what form would you like that intervention to take? — andrewk
How does this apply to countries like North Korea, Burma, Zimbabwe and Congo? — andrewk
Nobody who defends the current state of gun ownership in the USA has the slightest scintilla of credibility on any questions of violence, in my book. — Wayfarer
If you want to argue that more money and loss of freedom — andrewk
I don't think that saying that deaths on account of illnesses and road accidents, and deaths on account of terrorism, is a fair reflection of the kind of problem that terrorism represents. One major point about deaths caused by terrorism, is that those deaths are the consequence of deliberate intent to kill, which neither road deaths nor natural deaths are. — Wayfarer
I agree that the US, in particular, has massively over-reacted to the actual threat of terrorism, and furthermore that the US attitude towards guns, and the NRA, pose a far higher risk of actual violent death, than does Islamic terrorism, on US soil. But none of that means that Islamic terrorism is not a threat to peace and safety everywhere it appears. — Wayfarer
Why is there no hysteria over road deaths, inadequate-health-system-related deaths, or poverty-related deaths, all of which dwarf terrorism-related deaths? — andrewk
lower speed limits, mandate collision avoidance systems in all cars, introduce vulnerable road user laws like in Europe, require driver re-licensing at least triennially, make activities like mobile phone use while driving result in immediate loss of licence. — andrewk
But no, we couldn't do that could we, because being allowed to drive your own car however you want is the American dream. — andrewk
My recollection is that you made some statement purported to be a reason, it was challenged and shown to be no reason at all, and you didn't even attempt rebut that challenge. It was too many pages ago to find, but if you want to do that and try to recycle it, go for it. — andrewk
No one except you is disputing the numbers — WhiskeyWhiskers
Can you explain what makes intentions matter more than the actual relative ineffectiveness of terrorism when compared with other, more dangerous causes of death that we aren't even comparably concerned about in our day to day lives? — WhiskeyWhiskers
Surely all deaths of normal citizens are equally bad. — WhiskeyWhiskers
So another question is, why is the latter a bigger problem than the former, even though homicides are just as intentional as terrorist murders? — WhiskeyWhiskers
I'd also like to hear which side of the gun ownership/2nd amendment debate you fall on, just in case you're secretly a massive hypocrite across these two issues. — WhiskeyWhiskers
Here's some more evidence — WhiskeyWhiskers
If you took that as a smear, that says more about how you view conservatives than about how I do — WhiskeyWhiskers
It's a fairly well known fact that conservative minds have a more in-group/out-group mentality (this is why nationalism and tribalism occur more on the right, and the lefts 'openness to experience' renders them less sceptical of out-group individuals) — WhiskeyWhiskers
cool-headed risk-analysis that implores people to regain some perspective when thinking about the risk of terrorism to them and their families. But you choose to overlook all that just because terrorists have bad intentions? — WhiskeyWhiskers
So, the origin of the project was not anti-capitalist. The folks who put it there are all about capitalism. On the other hand — Bitter Crank
and many other tragedies that Western governments continue to neglect simply because they don't make as exciting news copy as terrorism does — andrewk
Why is there no hysteria over road deaths, inadequate-health-system-related deaths, or poverty-related deaths, all of which dwarf terrorism-related deaths? — andrewk
You know it's not simple. If it were simple it would have been done. — andrewk
But the sheer magnitude of the loss of life of 30,000 people — WhiskeyWhiskers
Do you agree? I don't see how you couldn't without at the same time admitting your objectivity is compromised. — WhiskeyWhiskers
especially if they're a minority and you're a conservative, and if the media keeps the enemy constantly in mind — WhiskeyWhiskers
Do you think the ontological of the Bull provides the power behind the "Fearless Girl". — Cavacava
(1) You use the words 'This is why', as if the sentence logically follows from what went before it. But it doesn't. The only conclusions that follow from what you wrote are 'don't give terrorists planes'. It seems to me that the West's governments have been pretty successful on that front over the last ten years or so. — andrewk
The question is, how do you plan to do that? I'm sure the West's security organisations would love to hear your ideas. — andrewk
But it gave no plausible reasons — andrewk
Can you make an even halfway plausible case that radical Muslims are likely to overthrow the governments of Western countries — andrewk
I identify with it, but I don't attend it. I conduct a solitary, self-maintained meditation practice which is guided by those principles. If I lived in San Fransisco, I think I would probably attend the SFZC. But, I realised when I started to practice meditation, it's religious in the sense that you have to adopt an attitude of unconditional commitment to it - you 'sit with no idea of gaining something' was the way it was described to me. So if you're engaged in that kind of training, then it's 'religous' in that sense. — Wayfarer
That entails living by principles and standards, but it's nothing like the Nicene Creed. — Wayfarer
So, do you suggest I ought to cut off contact with them? Not go to their funerals? You think we have nothing in common, becuase of what we believe? You think that a person who practices Buddhism should simply regard Christians as delusional? Would that be preferable in your opinion? — Wayfarer
So I have no hesitation in describing myself as spiritual but not religious — Wayfarer
but I also don't believe that any single religion has a monopoly on the truth — Wayfarer
My beliefs are syncretic - I don't see any choice, in a global and pluralistic culture such as the one we live in — Wayfarer
but I really think materialism has passed its heyday, and is on the wane — Wayfarer
I'm not going to argue with you — GreyScorpio
mirza ghulam ahmad. I'm sure jihadists don't think highly of either. — Benkei
but mainly a long way from here, in those benighted heathen countries where they know no better, in the hope that our enlightened attitude will flow through the bombs and devastation — unenlightened
As an example of Reformist interpretation: http://www.justislam.co.uk/product.php?products_id=198 — Benkei
it is only an observation that so far the process (assimilation of foreign elements and discontentment with that) has been peaceful on the larger scale — Mariner
This shift is occurring through peaceful, democratic means — Mariner