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#1
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Paul Baechler wrote:
They don't demonstrate that there's no interest in using aircraft; general aviation was non-existent in Lebanon in 1981, and is for all practical purposes non-existent in Saudi Arabia. You can't reasonably argue that failure to use a non-obtainable weapon is evidence that there's no interest in using it. I'm not trying to make the above argument. Where and why did you get the impression I had? The point is, this is a group which has demonstrated an interest in using car and truck bombs. So if the real issue is security, why the focus on GA, a minor part of the threat picture? Why not impose restrictions on all vehicles, ground and air, commensurate with the demonstrated and potential threat? OTOH, if the real issue is political: creating an appearance that action has been taken, while focusing on actions which impact only a numerically small group of people, rather than the large numbers of people who make daily use of cars and trucks, focus on GA makes sense (from the viewpoint of strictly the most politically beneficial action) Cheers, Sydney |
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#2
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In article ,
Sydney Hoeltzli wrote: Paul Baechler wrote: They don't demonstrate that there's no interest in using aircraft; general aviation was non-existent in Lebanon in 1981, and is for all practical purposes non-existent in Saudi Arabia. You can't reasonably argue that failure to use a non-obtainable weapon is evidence that there's no interest in using it. I'm not trying to make the above argument. Where and why did you get the impression I had? It's the argument you're effectively making when you drag the foreign bombings in. The point is, this is a group which has demonstrated an interest in using car and truck bombs. It's a group which has demonstrated a willingness to use truck bombs when aircraft aren't available. If you limit your argument to al-Qaida attacks within the US they used commercial airliners (i.e., airplanes) 50% of the time (assuming both WTC attacks were made by al-Qaida). -- Paul Baechler |
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#3
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"Paul Baechler" wrote in message
news ![]() It's a group which has demonstrated a willingness to use truck bombs when aircraft aren't available. If you limit your argument to al-Qaida attacks within the US they used commercial airliners (i.e., airplanes) 50% of the time (assuming both WTC attacks were made by al-Qaida). Even using your own screwed up logic, 50% of the attacks in the US were done using something OTHER than airplanes. Seems to me, by your own line of reasoning, trucks should be subject to at least as much restrictions as airplanes. |
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