Quote:
Originally Posted by Bunk
Worse, he seems to let a mass murderer off the hook as some sort of victim. That narrative is extremely dangerous. And as a thought leader, it’ll risk getting more people killed.
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How is that different from saying social alienation sometimes plays a part in the radicalization of Muslims who commit terrorist attacks in the West? Alienation seems to be a common ingredient in a lot of mass attacks. In some cases that alienation is caused by being a young Muslim in a secular country, and in others by being unhappily celibate. Why is the one a legitimate explanation and the other not?