{ This reminds me those several wedding airstrikes but that’s another story. }
It's not really another story, it perfectly exposes the problem with ever our super special advanced modern aircraft. After the Wech Baghu wedding in 2008 the Afghan President blatantly said, "We cannot win the fight against terrorism with airstrikes -- this is my first demand of the new president of the United States -- to put an end to civilian casualties." The US admitted after the 2009 Granai airstrike that we just do not have the capability to discern civilians from non-civilians in captured territories, and we don't have the capability to limit collateral damage from airstrikes in a situation where terrorists hide in civilian houses and schools when jets approach specifically for that reason.
This situation will never end if we don't start treating the war we're actively participating in like an actual war.
{ The free speech/draw Muhammad conflict mentioned in the opening post or the viability of US military involvement in the mideast? }
This thread was never about the free speech event, that was just a recent tie-in event to open the discussion, which was supposed to be why we use "religious tolerance" to justify ignoring fundamentalist Islamic countries that support terror and violate human rights while supplying them with aid and business. The reason "we're casually ignoring it because we don't want to fight in another large war" came up which prompted the whole "we're already in a war" so what we should be doing to stop ISIS instead of relying on the "religious tolerance' excuse.
Seems like a fairly natural direction for the discussion to go, these things are all linked. Religious tolerance isn't a good enough reason to ignore horrific human rights violations, and those violations are only increased by our current hands-off method of fighting ISIS. If these countries can get rid of the violent fundamentalists once and for all, they'd at least have to pretend to be willing to compromise on basic rights or they'd genuinely risk global ramifications.
It'd probably be easier if we all approach my topics as ever-evolving discussions rather than single topic debates. I prefer the open format, talk through your ideas and we might all learn something even if we disagree kind of short essay format rather than an I say this because this specific source said so well no I say this because this specific source says so kind of debate which ultimately goes nowhere. It kinda requires a little more effort to fact check what someone else is saying but it's really not that big a deal and you usually end up reading something related that they may have missed or you didn't know.