Yes it has, first you claimed Bobboau only said people demanded death and didn't do it, and accused me of being a liar for saying so, then, when I proved that he had said that, you've simply tried to take another tack.
I can distinguish hyperbole from Bob, which you should probably be able to as well. (Considering that in previous threads he's even admitted he has a problem with doing it, it would be wise not to bring up a "you didn't read x" argument considering you're betraying that very problem.) Bob gave up on talking to you to convince because you refused to engage with his arguments; much as you have utterly refused to engage with mine.
So. You're right about people dying. (Sort of; of those the actual direct influence on many of them is shakey. I count two incidents that are semi-clear in direct relationship; several others are the result of protesters killing other protestors; one doesn't even offer evidence of relationship at all.)
Now for the grand question.
So what?
People have died for all kinds of causes. Dying over depictions of the Prophet is admittedly not very high on the list of things people ordinarily care about, but you're not presenting a valid argument for stopping simply by saying "people get killed over this". People get killed over all kinds of things related to pictures, some of them considerably less high (gang tags, graffiti) on the give-a-damn meter than a major religious figure.
The concept that people are threatening to kill other people over an action and doing that very action as a form of protest against such killing has a long history in human endeavor. India's independence movement; civil rights and voting rights for blacks in the US; Tahrir Square again; pretty much every civil war in history. The mere fact they're killing people over it goes a long way towards rendering them discredited and discredible. The fact they can't kill everyone means it isn't going to help them to kill people, only hurt them.
Again, it was never about free speech.