You're right it was a distortion. I should have stated again our fundamental difference of opinion. I believe your opinion is that without religion than the suicide bombing would not be carried out. I believe that without the political environment the religious zeal to kill oneself would not be necessary. I don't think they're perfectly entertwined. You remove the political and the entire motivation crumbles. You remove the religion and it does not.
Without the sanction of religion the suicide bombing would not be carried out. I am not saying that other forms of opposition and even terrorism would not be carried out. I am saying that without Islamic leaders sanctioning suicide terrorism as an acceptable method of martyrdom, the suicide terrorism would have not been popularized within this particular conflict.
I agree this is a waste of time. I can type over and over again that "politics and sociological problems" are the only true motivating factor. Religion is part of the equation. Religion is used as a way to... well let's see what you said about this.
I think I found my answer by reviewing your earlier statements:
Perhaps my paragraph above clarifies my stance.
We actually agree! You say here that those that manipulate suicide bombers do not believe any of it is about God. The poor suicide bombers have been manipulated. It's not about God at all. It's all about the will of the person that manipulated them to believe it WAS about God.
Whoa. I said that we cannot know whether or not those who manipulated suicide bombers do not believe any of it is about God. They may well sincerely believe it is. Or they may be deliberately manipulating their trusting followers. I really don’t know the answer to that, and neither do you.
I believe you're wrong. This is dying for a cause. How do they refer to themselves? They call themselves martyrs for a cause! Are you suggesting that they do not believe they're dying for a cause?
Again, what is your point?
Saying “dying for a cause” is acceptable does not necessarily entail suicide for a cause. It was the introduction of the suicide as part of terrorism that was controversial. (see my above link and quote)
Of course I think that the suicide bombers believe they are dying for a cause.
Suicide bombing is wrong. I can say so. I can be agnostic and say Timothy McVeigh was wrong. I can be a military brat and say the U.S. military has done things in it's past that were wrong. I can be a proud American and still condemn slavery.
What is your point? I believe it's all religiously motivated. Now tell me why I can't condemn it?
I tried to clarify my point above in my “Pahoran’s strawman” response. It is tiring dealing with Pahoran, and I can only take so much of it, hence, my refusal to engage in a point-by-point exchange with him. I can only ask you to not rely on his words to ascertain what I am trying to say.
The people who cannot condemn it without engaging in hypocrisy are those who do believe God tells people to kill other people. If you do not believe that, you can condemn it without hypocrisy. For those who actually believe that God tells people to kill other people, to condemn the Muslim terrorists requires the believer to insist that, despite the overwhelming evidence of the unreliability of man’s ability to ascertain God’s will, HE knows it well enough to know that even though God told followers of HIS religion to kill other people and they did so righteously, the Islamic terrorists were NOT obeying God because God would never tell them to do such a thing.
That was a very convoluted sentence, so I will try to restate in a list:
1. Believer A: God has, in the past, told followers to kill other people, and they did so out of obedience and love for God. The examples of this can be found either in my own religion’s scripture or sacred history.
2. Believer B, Islamic terrorist: God told me to kill other people and myself in order to die as a martyr, to help free my people.
3. Believer A: OH NO HE DIDN’T. God would never, never tell you to do such a thing.
4. Observer: Didn’t Got tell people of your own faith to kill other people? How can you know that God didn’t tell Believer B to do it too?
5. Believer A: You are just trying to paint all religion as evil.
I don't know if anyone is interested in the conversation over here or not, but just in case.