Suicide bombing isn’t Islamic or cultural, it's strategic. It became widespread as a tactic in the 1980s, popularized not by Muslims, but by the Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka. They were secular, not Muslim. Christian and Buddhist suicide attacks have happened too, but they don't get the same press or political framing.
Your historical analysis is severely lacking, as usual. If you’re saying certain tactics are common among Muslim groups today, ask why. Maybe it has something to do with a century of colonialism, Western-backed dictators, U.S. invasions, drone strikes, sanctions, and proxy wars across the Muslim world. That’s not a culture; it’s the result of being on the receiving end of global violence.
The conversation about Hamas and Israel isn't about moral equivalence. It's about power. One side is an occupying nuclear state with U.S. backing; the other is a stateless, blockaded population. That doesn’t excuse Hamas’ actions, but it explains why reducing everything to ‘Muslim terror culture’ is not only racist, it erases the historical and political realities at play.
There is a cultural element to Islamic terrorism, just like there is a cultural element to MAGAism. There was a cultural element to the Japanese using kamikazes in the way that they did during World War II. Trying to play "whataboutism" and diminish the immense impact that Jihadist terror has had on the world is merely an attempt to gaslight us into not believing what our own eyes and ears have told us over the last two and a half decades.
Let's recap from 2001 onwards:
Islamic terrorists on 9/11 killed 3,000 Americans.
Islamic terrorists killed 202 in bombings of a tourist district in Bali in 2002.
Islamic terrorists killed 193 people in a series of bombings in Madrid in 2004.
Islamic terrorists killed 52 people in a series of bombings in London in 2005.
Islamic terrorists killed 88 people in bombings of a tourist district in Egypt in 2005.
Islamic terrorists killed 40 people in a series of bombings in Moscow in 2010.
Islamic terrorists killed 3 people and injured hundreds more at the Boston Marathon in 2013.
Islamic terrorists killed 12 people at Charlie Hebdo in France in 2015 for publishing a drawing of Mohammed.
Islamic terrorists killed 137 people in a series of attacks in Paris in 2015.
Islamic terrorists killed 14 people in an attack on an office Christmas party in California in 2015.
Islamic terrorists killed 35 people in a series of bombings in Belgium in 2016.
Islamic terrorist killed 49 people in an attack on a nightclub in Orlando in 2016.
Islamic terrorist killed 87 people in France in an attack on a parade in 2016.
Islamic terrorist killed 12 people in an attack on a Christmas market in Germany in 2016.
Islamic terrorist killed 22 people in an attack on an Ariana Grande concert in the UK in 2017.
Islamic terrorists killed 15 people in an attack in Spain in 2017.
Islamic terrorist killed 8 people in an attack on pedestrians in New York City in 2017.
Those are just the major attacks, and just those on western civilians. I didn't list the numerous other smaller attacks in which one or two people were killed. And let's not talk about the unsuccessful or thwarted attacks: bombs on airliners over Detroit and Miami, in Times Square, plots against fuel farms and Christmas markets in the United States.
Those aren't one-offs, nor are they coincidences. There are cultural differences between Islamists and Westerners. It isn't Islamophobic to state that, because most Muslims aren't jihadists.