ok doser
lifeguard at the cement pond
Most terrorism is done at the hands of Muslims.
'I doubt it.
of course you doubt it - it conflicts with your pollyannaish retarded liberal viewpoint
and so, you'll look for any justification for denying reality
Most terrorism is done at the hands of Muslims.
'I doubt it.
I doubt any assertion without hard data to back it. If he wants to make the claim he'll have to sustain it, something he's demonstrated a reluctance to do when challenged on any particular in the past.of course you doubt it
Did that study look at terrorism conducted in western nations? Probably not. Terrorism done for reasons other than hatred of the prosperous west is not the issue and to quote it as evidence of your point is dishonest.Sometimes the media concentration can feed a popular perception. For instance, the University of Georgia looked at the coverage and actuals from 2011 through 2015 utilizing the global terrorism database and addressing terrorist acts and coverage in our country:
For those five years, the researchers found, Muslims carried out only 11 out of the 89 attacks, yet those attacks received 44 percent of the media coverage. (Meanwhile, 18 attacks actuallytargeted Muslims in America). The Boston marathon bombing generated 474 news reports, amounting to 20 percent of the media terrorism coverage during the period analyzed. Overall, the authors report, "The average attack with a Muslim perpetrator is covered in 90.8 articles. Attacks with a Muslim, foreign-born perpetrator are covered in 192.8 articles on average. Compare this with other attacks, which received an average of 18.1 articles."
Controlling for target type, fatalities, and being arrested, attacks by Muslim perpetrators received, on average, 449% more coverage than other attacks. By covering terrorist attacks by Muslims dramatically more than other incidents, media frame this type of event as more prevalent. Based on these findings, it is no wonder that Americans are so fearful of radical Islamic terrorism.
Your hard data does not address the issue under discussion.I doubt any assertion without hard data to back it. If he wants to make the claim he'll have to sustain it, something he's demonstrated a reluctance to do when challenged on any particular in the past.
I doubt any assertion ....
My data was on the U.S. and compiled by the University of Georgia.Come back with hard data on terrorism conducted in America or Europe or in popular tourism destinations. That would be honest.
The problem is that the holy books of islam, and their greatest example of how to live, are violent against unbelievers and apostates. It would be great of they would admit their sacred texts had mistakes in them and revise or remove those violent commands, but the vast majority of muslims would rather not. Although there are a few that do.It seems a little explanation of my stance on these subjects is in order. It is a bit complex, and I don't think labeling me as "liberal" or my thinking as "wishful thinking" works.
I live in Israel. We have been dealing with Islamic terror here for many years. Buses blown up, missiles from Lebanon, rockets from Gaza, stabbings- you name it. I've been to the funerals and made condolence calls. Nearly blown up myself. I've been in the army here. I have two sons who do reserve duty.
When there is war in Gaza or Lebanon, I don't have any qualms. I know that civilians will get killed. That is the unfortunate nature of war, and if those "militants" (as the press likes to call them) want hell- they'll get it. And I am very aware that my family and home are at risk.
When some Arab decides to stab people, and gets shot dead by a policeman or soldier, I do not shed any tears.
But there is another side to the story. And the other side is that around 20% of the country is Arab- mostly Muslim. And the vast majority of them are not terrorists. I live in a city known for peaceful coexistence, and the fact remains that it is possible to have decent relations with your Muslim neighbor, even if other Muslims are terrorists or having a fun war where they kill each other by the hundreds of thousands.
The only thing that can work is a carrot and stick approach. Tough on terrorists, and encourage peaceful Muslims to fit into society. You need both.
When I see Muslim nurses in the hospital (you can tell by the Hijab), I feel good. I am glad to see Muslim families on the beach or in the shopping mall, or to meet them at weddings or my accountant's office. I have no problem hiring a Muslim (I had an Alawi PhD scientist working for me a few years ago. If you don't know what an "Alawi" is- time to get educated).
Lumping all Muslims into the same category is classic bigotry, but worse than that- it is simply stupid. The only real chance to win is by encouraging the moderates while at the same time attacking the extremists. It isn't easy, and will take a long time. But that is where we are.
Those who have served in the US military in Afghanistan, Iraq or wherever: You have likely spent much more time in uniform than I have. I respect that. But your view of the Middle East is narrow. You have seen it only as a soldier in combat.
It helps if you read a thing before you cobble a response to it. Or my response to your last response. All of them mention both the area of study and the source material. America, University of Georgia, University of Maryland, 2011-2015, it's all in there.Did that study look at terrorism conducted in western nations? Probably not.
Wait...:rotfl:...sorry, but you literally just insisted that it was dishonest not to jury rig the consideration by insisting on a focus that definitionally would require the outcome in line with your bias instead of exposing it utilizing empirical data.Terrorism done for reasons other than hatred of the prosperous west is not the issue and to quote it as evidence of your point is dishonest.
So, I take it the study is just as I surmised. Very dishonest of you.It helps if you read a thing before you cobble a response to it. Or my response to your last response. All of them mention both the area of study and the source material. America, University of Georgia, University of Maryland, 2011-2015, it's all in there.
Wait...:rotfl:...sorry, but you literally just insisted that it was dishonest not to jury rig the consideration by insisting on a focus that definitionally would require the outcome in line with your bias instead of exposing it utilizing empirical data.
You're a very funny fellow.
The problem is that the holy books of islam, and their greatest example of how to live, are violent against unbelievers and apostates. It would be great of they would admit their sacred texts had mistakes in them and revise or remove those violent commands, but the vast majority of muslims would rather not. Although there are a few that do.
So even the "peaceful" muslims are only that way because it is better, pragmatically, for them (I know that makes them sound like weak muslims, but, hey, most Christians are weak, too). But if they actually acted according to their scriptures, it wouldn't be that way. That's why when muslims hit roughly the 20% mark of the population, you have to deal with terrorism.
Sure, statistically having terrorism isn't so bad compared to the worst parts of US cities, but that doesn't justify it. One should deal with both forms of violence. The crime ridden parts of US can be handled in the obvious way to reduce crime; likewise the most obvious response to islamic terrorism should be implemented as well without being unjust.
The reasonable response is to ban muslims from entering the country as much as possible. Allow the culture to suspect muslims of having less than good intentions and have the freedom to act accordingly. That would be the start. And if the islamic terrorism doesn't slow or stop when that happens - up the response to root out the terrorists tactically, and make it clear as a nation that because the muslim faith includes violence as part of its core teachings, that people are free to suspect them and report them without being told they are racist or bigoted.
I have no idea what you just said. Nevertheless, the issue is terrorism conducted against western nations. That's what is of concern to sane individuals in America. That's what we want to stop. Who is responsible for that narrow area of terrorism?????It helps if you read a thing before you cobble a response to it. Or my response to your last response. All of them mention both the area of study and the source material. America, University of Georgia, University of Maryland, 2011-2015, it's all in there.
Wait...:rotfl:...sorry, but you literally just insisted that it was dishonest not to jury rig the consideration by insisting on a focus that definitionally would require the outcome in line with your bias instead of exposing it utilizing empirical data.
You're a very funny fellow.
For those five years, the researchers found, Muslims carried out only 11 out of the 89 attacks
So, I take it the study is just as I surmised. Very dishonest of you.
Is there a third option?
Like that's new.I have no idea what you just said.
That wasn't even your topic until my research had you moving the goalposts to justify an assertion you still haven't produced empirical proof to support.Nevertheless, the issue is terrorism conducted against western nations.
Sane individuals should want the actual odds and the full story, not the campfire tale used to political effect by the irresponsible.That's what is of concern to sane individuals in America.
Like suggesting what Americans want to know is which Japanese cars are unsafe. No, they want to know which cars are unsafe.That's what we want to stop. Who is responsible for that narrow area of terrorism?????
Muslims.
So who kills them for whatever reason is less important than who is more likely to.
Muslims isn't that answer here.
I think it's cute that you've found a new endearment. I'll just stick with the old tried and true: you missed it.mooslims are disproportionately represented by a factor of 13.8, pollyanna