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Myths About Terrorism

Blindgroping

U mad 'bro?
5 Myths About Terrorism

By Alan B. Krueger
Tuesday, September 11, 2007; 12:00 AM


Six years after 9/11, all too many Americans still have only a vague idea of what does -- and doesn't -- motivate terrorists. It doesn't help that many politicians exploit the anxiety that terrorism evokes to promote their own agendas. Here are five key urban legends:
1. Terrorism is a random act carried out by irrational people who hate our way of life.
If only it were that simple. In fact, terrorists are typically motivated by geopolitical grievances, not blind hatred. The agendas of individual terrorist groups vary, but their tactical goal is always more or less the same: to sow fear and confusion by deliberately targeting civilians in order to intimidate a country into changing its policies and ways.
So political calculations are key here. Citizens of countries that occupy other countries, for example, are more likely to be targeted by terrorists. In addition, wealthy democracies are more likely to be the targets of terrorist strikes than are totalitarian regimes, which suggests that terrorists deliberately strike countries that are susceptible to public pressure.
Another reason not to see terrorist attacks as random: They're often timed to occur when they can have maximum impact, such as the eve of pivotal elections. In Israel, for example, attacks by Palestinian terrorist groups bent on sabotaging peace talks are more frequent before elections when left-wing governments hold power, in hopes of pushing Israeli voters in a more hawkish direction, according to research by Claude Berrebi of the Rand Corporation and Esteban F. Klor of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
There's even a cold logic to the time of day that terrorists pick for their attacks, which also suggests a rhythm that's far from random. My analysis of U.S. government data from the National Counterterrorism Center reveals that terrorists are most likely to strike in the morning -- in time to enter the day's news cycle.


2. Terrorists are no different than ordinary criminals.
Wrong. Criminals tend to be poor and uneducated. But terrorists tend to come from families with above-average means and are often well-educated. For example, Jitka Maleckova of the Russell Sage Foundation and I found that members of the military wing of the radical Shiite group Hezbollah who were killed in action in the 1980s and early 1990s were better educated and less likely to be poor than their Lebanese countrymen. Other researchers have found similar results for other terrorist groups. People who join terrorist organizations often have legitimate, well-paying jobs, unlike common criminals.


3. Terrorists are likely to cross into the United States from Mexico.
This is a favorite chestnut of some activists and politicians keen to tighten immigration and build a fence on the Mexican border. But the historical record doesn't bear it out. Of course, the past may not be a good predictor of the future, but terrorists have rarely crossed into the United States from Mexico. In a recent Nixon Center study of 373 Islamist terrorists, Robert Leiken and Steven Brooke concluded: "Despite widespread alarms raised over terrorist infiltration from Mexico, we found no terrorist presence in Mexico and no terrorists who entered the U.S. from Mexico." By contrast, the authors found "a sizeable terrorist presence in Canada and a number of Canadian-based terrorists who have entered the U.S." For example, Ahmed Ressam, the Algerian terrorist who tried to blow up Los Angeles International Airport in December 1999, was caught trying to cross the border from Canada into Washington state.


4. Terrorism is mainly perpetrated by Muslims.
Wrong. No religion has a monopoly on terrorism. Every major religious faith has had followers involved in terrorism. (Sri Lanka, for instance, has grappled for decades with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, a separatist group that pioneered suicide bombing as a terrorist tactic and hopes to create a homeland for the country's mostly Tamil minority, who are largely Hindu.) Although radical Islamic terrorists are the worry du jour because of 9/11 and Iraq, the data show pretty clearly that the predominant religion of a country is not a good predictor of whether its people will become involved in terrorism.
After all, it was not long ago that homegrown villains such as Timothy McVeigh and the so-called Unabomber were the most notorious terrorists. That makes sense; the vast majority of terrorist incidents are local, motivated by local concerns and carried out by natives. Even international terrorist events tend to be local affairs, most frequently carried out by local militants who target foreigners who happen to be in their country. (Just think of last week's foiled plot to attack U.S. targets in Germany.) This suggests that the likelihood of attack by homegrown terrorists is far greater than the threat of another 9/11-style attack by foreigners.


5. Terrorism never succeeds.
If terrorism didn't work, it would be far more rare than it now is. Sometimes terrorists do achieve their goals, which is why others continue to try the tactic.
Of course, it's not always easy to determine what the terrorists' objectives are, but sometimes their goals are pretty clear. Consider the devastating commuter-rail bombings in Madrid in March 2005, three days before Spain held congressional elections. The Islamic radicals who set off the bombs reportedly hoped to change the Spanish government. It worked. A new study by Jose Garcia Matalvo, an economist at Universitat Pompeu Fabra in Barcelona, compared absentee ballots cast before the bombings with votes cast after them on a province-by-province level. His work convincingly shows that the shock of the bombings led the Socialist Party to defeat the incumbent conservative government. Upon assuming power, the Socialist Party immediately withdrew Spanish troops from Iraq.
 
Blindgroping said:
5 Myths About Terrorism

1. Terrorism is a random act carried out by irrational people who hate our way of life.


2. Terrorists are no different than ordinary criminals.



3. Terrorists are likely to cross into the United States from Mexico.


4. Terrorism is mainly perpetrated by Muslims..


5. Terrorism never succeeds.

Anyone can invent an "urban legend" and claim it to be an urban legend and widely known, but look clearly at these examples – are they actually said in the media? If so cite quotes from political speeches or the media to back this up. That shouldn’t be too difficult considering the internet allows for a fast and easily attainable source of information on this.

I want clear references and evidence by some academically recognized study group that these are actual urban legends, and not mere fabrications invented by some political organization as a vehicle to pump out some politically motivated message.

“Common knowledge” just doesn’t cut it; I simply think it's a cheap.
 
In fact, terrorists are typically motivated by geopolitical grievances, not blind hatred. The agendas of individual terrorist groups vary, but their tactical goal is always more or less the same: to sow fear and confusion by deliberately targeting civilians in order to intimidate a country into changing its policies and ways.

Political/religious fanaticism often leads to hate.

Wrong. Criminals tend to be poor and uneducated. But terrorists tend to come from families with above-average means and are often well-educated.

They're also better trained.
 
. Terrorists are no different than ordinary criminals.
Wrong. Criminals tend to be poor and uneducated. But terrorists tend to come from families with above-average means and are often well-educated.
A piss-poor, dumb-as-shit Afghani Muslim who disagrees with the actions of the USA occupier can be classified as a terrorist, you ignorant slop. All of the Iraqi partisans who want Americans out of their country and show this by force can be classified as terrorists.


Lord Raffles said:
Anyone can invent an "urban legend" and claim it to be an urban legend and widely known, but look clearly at these examples – are they actually said in the media? If so cite quotes from political speeches or the media to back this up. That shouldn’t be too difficult considering the internet allows for a fast and easily attainable source of information on this.

I want clear references and evidence by some academically recognized study group that these are actual urban legends, and not mere fabrications invented by some political organization as a vehicle to pump out some politically motivated message.

“Common knowledge” just doesn’t cut it; I simply think it's a cheap.
Hi, moron. The typical way of things in our respective countries is that news which is approved by our governments is paraded, whilst the retraction to their false claims is buried in mountains of Paris Hilton spam.

Of course, an educated person like yourself would know all this.


jack said:
Sounds like more Fascist Neocon Republican planted BULLSHIT
You have always collapsed when it came to discussion about our most sacred Israel. Why should I have expected you to act otherwise now :jayzus:
 
Kitsch said:
What does? You're post seems to indicate that you do not believe these are myths but in fact true

Why don't you take that "mirror" and jam it deeply up your prolapsed rectum?
 
Tyrant said:
You have always collapsed when it came to discussion about our most sacred Israel. Why should I have expected you to act otherwise now :jayzus:

You know absolutely nothing about me that hasn't been directly spoonfed. I was onto you during Karmageddon, and it looks like I was right. You were as easy to play as any GutterDancer, as I can see by your "snappy comebacks" that you're just an opportunistic little hypocrite. So you know....fuck you.

Now, go get really, really drunk so you can tell me what you really really think, little geek. Or was it nerd? I forget which slight pissed you off enough to burn this bridge, but by all means, continue to be my fucking guest.

We could always spend some more time watching those neaty keeno venom clips on YouTube again, eh?
 
Your biggest mistake was revealing that you chased Gagh off the board by blackmailing him with personal info.
 
Too bad you don't have anything on me that isn't a troll that will blow up in your fucking face, eh?
 
Oh that's right, you're probably sleeping last nights little courage load off.

Can't wait til the next cycle.
 
jack said:
Too bad you don't have anything on me that isn't a troll that will blow up in your fucking face, eh?


LOL Mirah told me that when she spoke to you on the phone you seemed so forgetful, as if you couldn't remember any specific board stuff. Is this why? Do you just make up background as you go, and punctuate with that damn smilie? Then, when she was talking to you about stuff of course you wouldn't remember because there is obviously too much to remember.
 
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