ChatterBank3 mins ago
Apology for 9/11?
19 Answers
How strongly do you feel that the Muslim community should apologise for 9/11, 10 years on?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by chirpychirpy. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Deal with the extremist Muslims who have been born in to this country.l Since they feel it is normal to call me White Bitch, White ***, White ***. Do you think this is normal thinking for young Muslims, since I find their sisters very sweet and nice. They even accept my dog, knowing that he only attacks men.
I "shamelessly celebrated" when Barcelona defeated Man United in the Champions League final, but I'm not going to apologise for the humiliation wrought on the team that night. That's up to Barcelona to do.
The September 11 2001 attacks were crimes which so far as I recall, many have already been punished, and the arch-planner assassinated.
The September 11 2001 attacks were crimes which so far as I recall, many have already been punished, and the arch-planner assassinated.
"
Snafu03
LOL ikky - thats the poorest analogy evah! "
The point being (apologies to Man Utd fans everywhere btw) that celebrating something is not the same as perpetrating it. I can apologise for celebrating, but it's not the same thing at all. Actually, I'd have thought that was obvious.
If the attacks were carried out "in the name of Islam" then that is in the minds of the perpetrators. Should all white people apologise for attacks carried out on black people "in the name of white supremacy"? I don't think so.
Snafu03
LOL ikky - thats the poorest analogy evah! "
The point being (apologies to Man Utd fans everywhere btw) that celebrating something is not the same as perpetrating it. I can apologise for celebrating, but it's not the same thing at all. Actually, I'd have thought that was obvious.
If the attacks were carried out "in the name of Islam" then that is in the minds of the perpetrators. Should all white people apologise for attacks carried out on black people "in the name of white supremacy"? I don't think so.
Massive events are difficult for people to assimilate - which is where conspiracy theories come from.
For a momentous tragedy like this, it is human nature to look for someone to take responsibility and acknowledge a fault, and offer an apology. This is a psychological desire to help the healing process.
In this instance - with so many others, such an 'apology' is not going to be forthcoming because the perpetrators beieve they were right in their actions, and an apology from anyone else would be largely meaningless.
We should move on - and that includes avoiding the swathe of TV reminders going on now, and through the weekend. It does us no good at all to relive this horror - we should remember quietly and continue with the process of moving on.
For a momentous tragedy like this, it is human nature to look for someone to take responsibility and acknowledge a fault, and offer an apology. This is a psychological desire to help the healing process.
In this instance - with so many others, such an 'apology' is not going to be forthcoming because the perpetrators beieve they were right in their actions, and an apology from anyone else would be largely meaningless.
We should move on - and that includes avoiding the swathe of TV reminders going on now, and through the weekend. It does us no good at all to relive this horror - we should remember quietly and continue with the process of moving on.
I have always found it strange the way that a small group can terrorise the rest of us. If you and I could constuct bombs, we could call ourselves the "selly oak liberation front" put a bomb in Villa Park and immediatly we would get nation wide publicity but there would only be two people, so should all the people of Selly Oak have to apologise, even if some might be happy to be liberated.
If your brother was a member and not you, should you apologise, even if you didn't know what he was doing?
As I have said we as a nation are propagandised and polarised by the media some of which have thier own agenda.
If your brother was a member and not you, should you apologise, even if you didn't know what he was doing?
As I have said we as a nation are propagandised and polarised by the media some of which have thier own agenda.