|
|
|
|
8 Registered (Chocolategenii, Dax, Helice, Kellycakes, Lawmage, Myrddin, Ray, tutti),
83
Guests and
0
Spiders online. |
|
Key:
Admin,
Global Mod,
Mod
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#276346 - 07/23/08 08:50 AM
Re: The Making Of A Terrorist
[Re: lizbeth]
|
War on Terror Moderator
Registered: 07/03/03
Loc: varies from day to day
|
Aus, certainly blaming another group provides a target for terrorism. However, does it provide the essential motivation necessary to spawn the act? You seem to suggest it does. I would argue it does not. Again, using your own examples...We do not see any Vietnamese terrorism directed against the US as a result of the museums you mentioned. Nor do we see Israeli terrorism directed against Germany as a result of the Holocaust museums you mentioned. Nor do we see Native American terrorism inside the United States as a result of the museums you mentioned.
You did however touch on something that seems relevant...injustice. It seems to me terrorism requires a number of conditions and one such condition is the possession of a profound sense of injustice among the actors. This ties in with what Liz asked about some sort of Jungian archetypal fear or being shot in the toe. I personally do not think fear alone is the motivating factor. However, a sense of powerlessness that leaves the individual with a sense that nothing else can be done may serve as a motivation toward terrorism. The sense that no other remedey toward justice is available. In short, a sense of injustice.
Consider...the Palestinians arguably believe that Israel is essentially unjust. They beleive it was foisted upon them, it supplanted their ancestral homeland, and exists only with the assitance of powerful outside forces. The Palestinian terrorist groups argue they sought a peaceful solution to their grievances through the UN and the world community and were rebuffed. In short, they claim to suffer from a profound sense of injustice and that sense of injustice seems to create a powerful rage. That rage, rather than fear, seems to be expressed through terroristic activity. SImilarly, if we consider the Oklahoma City bombing we see something similar. McVeigh, and too a lesser extent Nichols, seemed to envince a profound alientation from the federal government. McVeigh seemed to think it had treated him and others like him unjustly and refused to repent its treatment. He seemed to think he had no other recourse toward justice and so he lashed out with violence.
So...the suggestion of "just don't do it anymore" is not of immediate utility but it does hint at something. Perhaps it is important to consider justice and the perception of justice in our activities so as not to leave an already at risk demographic with the sense of injustice that seems to correlate with terrorist activities. We must of course bear in mind that the issue is not truly injustice but the perception of injustice. In some cases in may be sufficient to present a farcical version of justice and satisfy the potential terorrist. In other cases, even the availability of true justice may not dissuade the individual who has, for whatever reason, already decided injustice reigns.
_________________________
"A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have."--President Gerald Ford
|
|
Top
|
Reply
Quote
Quick Reply
Quick Quote
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#276417 - 07/24/08 01:25 AM
Re: The Making Of A Terrorist
[Re: Lawmage]
|
veteran member
Registered: 11/29/06
Loc: PNW
|
May we take this into the abstract, since the Palestinian terrorists, the Israeli reprisals and Timothy McVeigh are all different? Before doing so, however, may I give my understanding of Palestine, Israel and McVeigh? Palestine was never a country. It was an area of the Land of Israel originally populated by Europeans called Philistines. Palestine is a latinization of Philistine. Following WWI, England partitioned Israel and allowed the Jewish people to, once again, live there. Those Jews were the remnants of the Diaspora Hebrews who left Israel as the result of Roman conquests and the destruction of the first temple. Following the Holocaust and WWII, Britain moved survivors into the Land of Israel. What is Semitic and who are the Semites? Firstly, Semitic is a languange group linked by related languages including Arabic. So, Arabs are Semites--supposedly the descendants of Shem, one of Noah's sons. So are Israeli's, since Hebrew is a Semitic language. As I recall, Timothy McVeigh was protesting two things: the Waco Massacre and gun laws. Bringing him into The Making of a Terrorist thread brings in another possible characteristic of a terrorist. So now we have fear based on the loss of something, perceived injustice, rage and obsession--all of which can lead to terrorism, particularly given that progression. Given this, Law, is it possible to teach either an American soldier or an Iraqi policeman that, The proper treatment of the community is essential in any effort to stop terrorism or to wage what we in the military term COIN, or counter-insurgency operations. What is the 'proper treatment of the community,' in this situation? How should a War Against Terrorism be fought? How do we right perceived injustice when that 'injustice' may only exist in a possibly obsessed mind? And who are we to say what or what is not an injustice? There's one more thing. How can we prepare for terrorism if we don't recognize terrorism?
_________________________
Tomorrow's just your future yesterday. Craig Ferguson
|
|
Top
|
Reply
Quote
Quick Reply
Quick Quote
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#276438 - 07/24/08 09:21 AM
Re: The Making Of A Terrorist
[Re: lizbeth]
|
War on Terror Moderator
Registered: 07/03/03
Loc: varies from day to day
|
SPM wrote; Until we provide all people with good education, healthcare to take of their sick families, and decent homes ( instead of shacks ) to live in, there will alway's be terrorist and unrest in our world, it's just a fact of life.
That is not exactly the case, SPM. Consider the European terrorism of the 1970s and 1980s. Groups like the Italian Red Brigades and the German Bader-Meinhoff Gang all had access to quality education, quality government provided healthcare, and decent rent controlled homes. Their membership was solidly upper middle classs. Contrast those examples with the teeming poverty stricken masses in India or Bangladesh. We see almost no terrorism spawned from those demographics. Similarly, though to a much lesser scale, we can consider the rural poor of America...I am speaking of those who truly do live in shacks, have no access to health care, and seldom progress into much less through high school. Places like the back hollows of Hazard County, Kentucky. those places similarly fail to spawn terrorists. Why is that? Liz asked: How can we prepare for terrorism if we don't recognize terrorism? This is why we have laws that clearly define terrorism.
_________________________
"A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have."--President Gerald Ford
|
|
Top
|
Reply
Quote
Quick Reply
Quick Quote
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
8481 Members
37 Forums
11257 Topics
233914 Posts
Max Online: 2631 @ 03/18/08 12:30 AM
|
|
|
|
|
|
|