Arthur_Tuxedo wrote:
What you see as a glimpse of his aims and way of thinking, I see as angry rhetoric. You would ask me to ignore evidence and logic in favor of the public rhetoric of a murdering fundamentalist son of a bitch. These people are willing to kill and die for their beliefs. Lies and self-justification are nothing to them.
He says he hates and wants to kill all Westerners, yet his group and others like it very rarely attack non-US, non-Israeli targets. His rhetoric doesn't jibe with facts, therefore it's bullshit.
I didn't consider the possibility because it doesn't make any damn sense, not because it runs counter to my previous assessment of the situation. Give me a good reason to take rhetoric at face value when it doesn't jibe with evidence.
It jibes perfectly with the evidence. He hates Westerners. And he kills them. What do you want? Do you need him to travel to, say Norway or Portugal to kill Westerners there in order to prove that he hates them too? Why should he do that when he lives in close proximity to Israel - a target rich environment as we said in the army. Even if he has the will, he lacks the ability to strike at all Westerners indiscriminately. There's a reason that terrorists engage in assymetrical warfare: they don't have the resources, the manpower, the organization, etc. to engage in the other kind. They are limited in what they can do. He hates the Israelis for being infidels in Arab lands, and he hates Americans for supporting Israel and spreading its decadent, Godless culture. None of this makes it automatic that he does not hate Western society in general with equal venom. He simply strikes out at Israel and America as both the nearest to hand and the most prominent examples of this despised Western culture.
Arthur_Tuxedo wrote: No, it doesn't fit the facts, so it must be bullshit.
No, you can't. He says he hates Westerners just for being the way they are, yet he doesn't attack countries that don't involve themself in his region. He's obviously lying, which is no surprise coming from a brainwashed murderer.
No he's obviously telling the truth. How do I know this? I can tell the same way I can tell when suspects are not lying to me on the street - this is a statement that is contrary to his interests. If he isn't motivated primarily by hatred. If he doesn't really mean it when he says that he just wants to destroy us, why would he say that he does? Admitting this not only gets him nothing, it hurts his cause. Because if he is willing to compromise or negotiate or be placated, why the hell would he say things calculated to make people think he is an intransigent fanatic who cannot be reasoned with? That might turn people who would otherwise be willing to negotiate with him and his group into hardliners who see him as an implacable enemy whom they have no alternative but to destroy.
Arthur_Tuxedo wrote: How much of this hatred existed before the Zionist movement? They say they hate the Jews because of the way they are, but that's bullshit. It's because the Jews and Muslims are at each others' throats. The Sikhs are a very progressive people (gave suffrage to women centuries before the West), yet Muslims don't care about them, even though they share many of these traits, and by the rhetoric you cited, they should hate them just as much.
This is simply a "what came first, the chicken or the egg" issue. Conflicts have a habit of persisting long after their initial causes have long since faded from memory. Even if I concede, for the sake of argument, that the Muslims did not hate the Jews before the Zionist movement, the fact remains that they
do hate them now. After generations of conflict, of atrocities by both sides, each of which creates new enmities and stirs up new resentments, it hardly matters what started it. People can forget the root causes of enmity and end up hating simply out of prejudice, intolerance, and bigotry. And once they become bigoted, they can find all sorts of ways to rationalize and justify their hatreds.
Arthur_Tuxedo wrote: You say I'm looking for deeper motivations, and you're offering the simplest explanation that fits all the facts, but this claim doesn't hold water:
I say that the evidence shows that the most terrorism by Muslim extremists occurs against countries that the Muslims could have a legitimate beef with.
You say that the Muslims simply hate Westerners irrationally and passionately.
No I didn't. Go back and reread my last post. I said there is both a sense of grievance AND fanatical hatred. Once these two elements are present in people's thinking, they can feed off each other.
Arthur_Tuxedo wrote: My hypothesis relies on simple cause and effect, while yours introduces an extra term that must be understood before we can understand why the Muslims hate us. Of course, yours doesn't fit the facts, so it's moot anyway, but you can give up pretending your hypothesis is simpler, because it's not true.
Mine is simpler. Yours is the one that has to introduce extra terms - torturted rationalizations to justify disregarded frank admissions by the parties whose motivations are in question, and find some rationale not to take what they say at face value. Mine fits the facts. It considers both the the fact that Muslims do feel aggrieved, and also the fact that there is a radical element in Islam today which is fanatical, fundamentalist, and venomously anti-Western.
Arthur_Tuxedo wrote:I've heard this argument before. They hate us for our freedoms, they're jealous because we have choice and democracry and because we're secular heathens. Either that or the more subtle variation: They hate the West because it's part of their culture and they can't let go of history. Either way, you realize it's bullshit as soon as you remember that there are other Western countries that are just as wealthy as us, freer than us (Patriot Act means we're no longer the Land of the Free), more secular than us (less fundies), and yet none of them are the Great Satan. We are. Your theory does not fit the facts.
First off, there are no other Western countries that are as wealthy as us. There are countries where the standard of living is just as high, but no other country represents as large an economic bloc as we do. No other country has seen its popular culture spread to the degree ours has either. Islamic fundies hate what they see as a godless, corrupt culture which gives more freedom and what they see as license to women, and this goes against the Islamic law they worship. They see a culture which promulgates secularism, which in its modern, political meaning, is the idea that religious and political authority - church and state - are, and ought to be separate. This is diametrically opposed to Islam, which holds that there is no human legislative power, and there is only one law for the Believers - the Holy Law of God, promulgated by revelation. It's American movies and American music and American pop culture more than anything else that waves this culture in their faces, so it's natural they should fixate on us as the primary target (or on Israel which is bother geographically closer, and culturally Westernized), but it does not for a moment mean that Western civilization as a whole is not reviled by Muslim fundamentalists.
They fear this as well because it is seductive. They fear the faithful will be seduced by this decadent lifestyle. In Islam, Shaitan is not quite the same as the Christian Satan. He is not the powerful and awesome Prince of Darkness, he is the subtle tempter, whose power lies in his ability not to destroy, but to lead one away from what is Holy. Western culture, with its high standard of living and freedom from the strict constraints of Islamic law is tempting in its perceived luxury.
Arthur_Tuxedo wrote:How is it inane? Are you suggesting that people would be willing to blow themselves up if they didn't feel cornered and desperate?
Yes! Don't you get it yet? These people (some of them) are religious
fanatics. They truly believe, right down to their marrow, that they are serving the greater glory of Allah. That they are obligated to spread Islamic culture (spirit of Jihad), and that Allah will reward them. They really, truly,
deeply believe in that paradise with the 72 nubile young virgins, and that a martyr's death will put them on the express train to get there. Some of the 9/11 hijackers were from very well-to-do Saudi families. They were well off, and living in a stable, unthreatened Islamic state; why would they feel cornered and desperate? They could have stayed in Saudi Arabia and lived a life of actual, no shit luxury, and they chose to slam themselves into American buildings at 600 miles per hour.
I don't think you appreciate the tremendous motivating power of religious fanaticism. Not being fanatical, I don't really understand it myself either, but unlike you, I don't let that blind me to the fact that it exists. In the words of Richard Dawkins:
Faith is powerful enough to immunize people against all appeals to pity, to forgiveness, to decent human feelings. It even immunizes them against fear, if they honestly believe that a martyr's death will send them straight to heaven. What a weapon! Religious faith deserves a chapter to itself in the annals of war technology, on an even footing with the longbow, the warhorse, the tank, and the hydrogen bomb.
Arthur_Tuxedo wrote:The suicide bombers are merely soldiers in an asymetrical war. Poorly educated, propagandized soldiers who understand what they're fighting for are a rarity. Why should I be shocked when these combatants' words don't correlate with reality?
For them it
is reality. That's what you seem incapable of understanding. What motivates someone to strap on a belt made of semtex and vaporize himself as long as he can take some hated Jews with him? Whether their leaders are selling them a bill of goods or not, the important thing is that these people really believe this stuff. Even if the terrorist leadership is composed of cynical, worldly, jaded men who merely use this faith as a tool to manipulate their followers and maintain their power, the important thing is that they are using this belief
successfully as a manipulating force. The rank and file are convinced. It's
real to them! When a mother gets that euphoric look in her eyes, and says she is grateful that her son was granted the blessing of blowing his guts all over the street with a bunch of Israelis, she's speaking from the heart.
Arthur_Tuxedo wrote:She didn't say anything at all about the reasons he did it, only that Allah wanted him to. What is this supposed to prove?
Aren't you paying attention? It's supposed to prove that rather than merely being about American foreign policy, it's about a hatred so all-consuming and venomous that a
mother can cheer and weep for joy at the death of her very son as long as he can take some of the hated enemy with him. It takes a powerful hatred to achieve that kind of result. It's a hatred so intense it's almost palpable, yet you are apparently unwilling to admit that it exists.
Arthur_Tuxedo wrote:You're claiming that the truth is obvious, and I just can't see it because I've been blinded by "liberal arrogance". That's an ad-hominem attack, and a misplaced one at that, as I've never associated myself with group thinking of any kind, be it liberal or conservative, Democrat or Republican. If the truth is so obvious, you should be crushing me with these undeniable facts. Are they too good for the likes of me, so you haven't presented them?
I've presented you with frank admissions by the very people whose motivations are in question - what better evidence for their intentions than their own words, borne out by their actions? - and you have blithely dismissed them or rationalized them away. I've shown you at least one example of an anti-Western and anti-Semitic hatred so apparent that a blind man could see it and you just dismiss the idea without serious consideration.
Arthur_Tuxedo wrote:
Your flowery rhetoric does not jibe with your resistance to the idea that the US's conduct is in need of overhaul.
You say you acknowledge our failures, yet I haven't heard you acknowledge a single one. Nothing but apology and justification.
Then you haven't been paying attention, since I've already twice admitted that our betrayal of the Kurds after the Gulf War in '91 was deplorable.
That not enough for you? Fine. You want examples? No problem. So as not to make this too long a list, let's start with fairly recent history - American foreign policy failures since WWII. (And this is by no means an exhaustive list.) U.S. foreign policy toward Soviet Russia was naive and shortsighted, and had we taken a tougher line, we might have kept a bit more of eastern Europe free. Then after the war, American foreign policy in the far east was
disastrously bungled, and in hindsight, actually appears to have helped the Reds take over China in 1949 and impose one of the most bloody regimes in history. During the Eisenhower years, a Vietnamese chap named Ho Chi Minh actually sought U.S. support against French colonialism in order to attain independence for his nation. He was refused because we did not want to go against France - DeGaulle's France that was already obstructing U.S. interests and sabotaging the U.S. economy. Our justification for this was not only that France was an ally (not much of one, even then), but also that Ho Chi Minh had espoused communist ideals in his younger days. He'd shed a lot of that communist baggage since then, especially since he was trying to court the United States. He picked it back up when we turned him down so he could get help from Red China and the U.S.S.R., so you might say we drive Ho back into the arms of the communists.
Then of course there was our involvement in Vietnam against Ho Chi Minh, which never should have happened. But when it did, we pulled out in the end and left our South Vietnamese ally in the lurch. We reneged on our commitment. We never should have made that commitment, but once it was made, we were obligated to live up to it, and we failed to do so. This not only damaged U.S. prestige, it hurt our credibility as well. Then there was giving up the Panama Canal, which is now controlled by China. Allow me to mention the Kurds yet again. And let's not forget our appeasement of North Korea during the 90s, and it's wonderful result.
And that's just in the last half century. That says nothing about our unjust military actions, like the Spanish-American War, or the Mexican War, and how we basically stole California, Arizona, New Mexico and Nevada. And of course, there are all those treaties we broke with the Indians, but if I list ALL our misdeeds since 1776, I'll have to make this post almost book-length.
Are you satisfied now? Are you ready to get off that particular horse yet? Because I'm tired of hearing this accusation.
Arthur_Tuxedo wrote:
You're missing the point. A person who insists on perfection that is beyond the attainable is usually the kind of person who thinks he knows how to get there.
I'd love to see you back that up.
I did. The socialist experiments, and all the deaths they caused, are a great example of this exact phenomenon. The French Revolution and the Reign of Terror are another. People in search of perfection, unwilling to settle for less, and ardently convinced they knew how to make it happen.
Arthur_Tuxedo wrote:They had a religious mindset, putting conclusion before evidence gathering. You assume that anyone who strives to perfect his society must share this mindset, that anyone who isn't satisfied with inequity and injustice must have a crystal clear image of perfection formed in his mind. Do you really think you're fooling anyone here? I hate to point out the obvious, but this is Stardestroyer.net. People don't buy that guilt by association shit here. If you want to show that I'm an ideologue who puts ivory tower pure philosophy ahead of truth and facts, you'll have to do better than "You strive for perfection, well so did the commies and the Nazis."
I hope everyone can see your strawman, because it's pretty obvious from where I'm sitting. Rather than try to deal with my points, you've chosen to explain that I subscribe to "the unconstrained view", a ridiculous and stupid mode of thinking that you can easily knock down. If you knew I was a student of Economics, you'd know how silly it is to contrast my views to those of Adam Smith, and anyone who's read even one of my posts in this thread can see plain as day that I'm not a follow of "the unconstrained view".
Let me spell it out for you: Humans aren't basically good, they're basically fucking idiots looking frantically for the nearest metaphorical needle they can find to jam themselves in the eye and blind themselves to the hard truths of the world.
You assume that because I attack Machiavellian geopolitics (and notice that I attacked it based on its results, not based on idealist philosophy), which is a constrained view (using your terminology), I must not advocate another constrained view. In fact, I point out that America's success worldwide comes from commercialism, and though I might not be a huge fan of McDonald's crappy food or the Gap's overpriced clothes, I recognize that international trade and commercialism (based on greed and self-interest, which you claimed without evidence that I rejected) can bring us prosperity without violent hatred and the inevitable bloody downfall of the empire. I advocate replacing one constrained view with another, despite your strawman.
Your statement that we need to have a foreign policy that ensures that we will "be well liked and the enemy of no one," is something that inclines one to think that you are an idealogue who puts idealism ahead of realism. The idea that a nation our size and with our interests, commitments, and alliances can possibly craft a foreign policy that will keep us in
everyone's good graces is starry-eyed, pie-in-the-sky fantasy wholly unworthy of a realist.
Your assertion that Europe has "shifted to new modes of thinking" and that they don't do all the shabby things we do anymore, that some how that have hearkened unto the better angels of their natures also would lead one to the conclusion that you subscribe to the unconstrained vision - since a central tent of the constrained vision is that basic human nature does not change.
If I have categorized you mistakenly, I think my error is understandable, given your statements.