The person who originally claimed that “they hate us for our freedom” was probably referring to a Western, enlightenment notion, called by that name.
The thing that the Muslim university student praises and calls freedom is apparently an Islamic religious idea, corresponding very roughly to the sort of freedom a recovering addict craves from his addictions.
If the words were tabooed, then you would probably see the coherence of both points of view, and I think, could fairly assert that Islamists really do “hate our freedoms” in a sense, so long as you don’t allow this approximation to carry more than its fair burden of explanatory weight (as certain former POTUSs have done).
The person who originally claimed that “they hate us for our freedom” was probably referring to a Western, enlightenment notion, called by that name.
The thing that the Muslim university student praises and calls freedom is apparently an Islamic religious idea, corresponding very roughly to the sort of freedom a recovering addict craves from his addictions.
If the words were tabooed, then you would probably see the coherence of both points of view, and I think, could fairly assert that Islamists really do “hate our freedoms” in a sense, so long as you don’t allow this approximation to carry more than its fair burden of explanatory weight (as certain former POTUSs have done).