I really enjoyed his most recent book (
The Moral Landscape), so I decided to check out his first book (
The End of Faith) as well.
I find myself flabbergasted barely into Chapter 2, where he writes:
Some propositions are so dangerous that it may even be ethical to kill people for believing them... There is, in fact, no talking to some people. If they cannot be captured, and they often cannot, otherwise tolerant people may be justified in killing them in self-defense. This is what the United States attempted in Afghanistan, and it is what we and other Western powers are bound to attempt, at an even greater cost to ourselves and to innocents abroad, elsewhere in the Muslim world. We will continue to spill blood in what is, at bottom, a war of ideas."
Really? And here I thought the main cause of Muslim extremist violence was largely blow-back from the United States' own meddling in their affairs over there. I mean, it's not like 9/11 happened in a vacuum. Those hijackers (who were mostly Saudis, not Afghanis, by the way) didn't just out of the blue say: "Oh yeah, the Qur'an says we need to suddenly kill a bunch of innocent civilians in the United States." There were concrete actions by the U.S. in maintaining a foreign military presence in Saudi Arabia, in its blind support of Israel's policies, etc. that caused them to not only re-interpret their holy book, but actually act out on it in the way they did.
Bottom line is: I don't think we're going to be able to change many minds over there by imposing puppet regimes on them. It only plays into their "persecution complex" and makes them double-down on their extremist readings of their preferred holy book. Then it just becomes a glorified game of "whac-a-mole": kill a few "terrorists" here, watch more pop up elsewhere.
You fight bad ideas with good ideas and leading by example, not by simply killing those you disagree with. At least not if you want to win people over.
Am I being too critical here?