Human Nature Trumps Homeland Security 304
netbuzz writes "Security expert Bruce Schneier suggests this morning that 'there might not be a solution' to our post-9/11 penchant for making domestic anti-terrorism decisions based on the basic human desire to cover one's backside. He might be right. But shouldn't we at least try to figure out a better way? For example, wouldn't 'Commonsense Homeland Security' be a winning political banner, not a risky one? "
Causes, not symptoms (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Causes, not symptoms (Score:5, Insightful)
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I thought it was because of the beautiful Fnords!
Re:Causes, not symptoms (Score:4, Funny)
Your post would be more comprehensible if there was a word between "beautiful" and the excalamtion point.
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Must be that damned slashdot filter
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*whoosh* (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Causes, not symptoms (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Causes, not symptoms (Score:5, Insightful)
That sounds a lot like the US administration when they try to scare the public by saying that just because we haven't been attacked since 9/11, doesn't mean that the terrorists won't attack tomorrow...
Re:Causes, not symptoms (Score:5, Insightful)
20,000 people die each year from the flu, perhaps there should be some sort of war on virii declared - maybe we'll get universal health care funding
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It seemed like you were trying to counter the idea that the US is drawing the attention of terrorists by sticking it's nose in others' business with the fact that even Norway, who has not been attacked, has been threatened. Being threatened is not
Re:Causes, not symptoms (Score:5, Insightful)
Second of all: If we would wage war on every potential killer of yours, we would have to concentrate the forces first on you, then on your mother, then on your stepfather (if you have one), then your biological father. Those four persons are the most probable to take your life. They are responsible for about 50% of all homicides. (I am not sure, but I think either your husband/wife or your own children come next.)
Third: There is no direct relation between cause and effect in terrorist attacks. The most recent attempt to a terrorist attack in Germany I know of was a man who planned to carbomb a bank. Not for political reasons, but because of bad service. What's next? Battle against the Customer?
That's why I think the idea of an 100 percent protection against terrorist attacks is just silly. You never know what or who causes the urge to attack someone, and you can't foresee the method they will be trying. That's why there is the call for Common Sense. Eliminate the foreseeable threads by protecting infrastructure that causes much havoc if attacked and is a quite easy target.
Don't try to thwart every single plot that has been discovered or can be thought of individually. We are back to the old problem: "Enumerating badness" is never complete and seldom a sensible way to deal with threads. Try to be secure by design, not by eliminating threads.
Re:Causes, not symptoms (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Causes, not symptoms (Score:4, Interesting)
Now, this is just me, and of course I don't approve of this being used politically by Bush&Co to scare people into voting for them, but in a way I think he is right. I think Dick Cheney was right when he said that the Democrats taking control of the country could result in more terrorist attacks on U.S. soil.
The basic reason is that as of right now there is still no need to attack the U.S. 9/11 got Osama bin Laden just about everything he could have ever dreamed for in response. We not only invaded one Muslim country but two, and think about what great P.R. that makes for his brochures! "U.S. wants to invade Muslim states and destroy them!" is much more convincing when you can point to a T.V. showing American troops occupying a Muslim state, right? "U.S. is full of depraved pyschopaths who hate us!" is much more convincing when you see pictures from abu Ghraib, no? Then there's the fact that we are being bloodied so badly in Iraq. The quagmire there is weakening us, just like Russia's failed occupation of Afghanistan weakened them. Not to mention Iraq is now a fantastic recruiting and training ground for more terrorists, who have grown multiplied faster than we can kill them. No single attack on us could hurt us as badly as what we are doing to ourselves in Iraq.
So as long as the "War on Terror" continues full force, al Qaeda et al don't really need to bother with us directly. The War on Terror is exactly what they want.
Now lets say that a new president comes in and starts rolling back the war on terror, pulls our troops out of Iraq. Well that won't do! Recruiting is a lot tougher when "America wants to kill Muslims!" is merely a hypothetical argument. So what's the obvious thing to do? Poke the tiger again! Another 9/11 so that even the most peacenik Pres of all time would have to bomb the shit out of somebody.
We are vulnerable when we are crazy-scared of terrorism, running around doing stupid things and basically becoming our own worst enemy. So if we stop doing that, I say expect another attack to try to get us riled up and crazy again.
The key thing to note is that this is the reaction they want, and thus it is imperative that we don't do it.
Re:Causes, not symptoms (Score:5, Funny)
Norwegian Nose(s) In Afghanistan/Iraq (Score:3, Informative)
No, we have not had bombings in Norway yet. However we have had attacks on the only Synagogue in Oslo by Pakistan
Re:Causes, not symptoms (Score:4, Informative)
>Check France, Holland, or Spain recently?
WRT sticking their noses in other people's business, both France and Spain have a long and bloody history of mucking about in (Islamic) north Africa on the one hand and squashing the Basque between them on the other. The Netherlands have their history in the east Indies, but I can't see that Holland is a big terrorist target these days. Random nut-cases aside, of course.Re: (Score:2)
Ironicly, the US and Briton has had a better track record on this when dealing with territories and the fall of the ottoman empire. More terroritories to date were under local control fa
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Why are most terrorist groups claiming grievences that are long dead history? If several generations ago, you lost you homeland in a war. Guess what? It's gone. Get over it. I don't go around killing Navajo, just because they moved in on Hopi land. Maybe if we could get the mainstream Arab p
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Why are most terrorist groups claiming grievences that are long dead history?
Because it allows them to take the easy way out and lay the blame for their currently fucked-up situations at the feet of others, rather than doing the hard work to fix it themselves.
The only time people advance socially, culturally, artistically and technologically, is when they spend more time trying to remedy the problems in their lives themselves than they do tring to use others as scapegoats.
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France has a pretty good image in the middle east nowadays, despite the fact that it also considers terrorism as one of its first sec
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And this makes me wonder if any "common sence" approach to national security could ever come about. It seems that everyone wanting something else doesn't understand the picture or the threat that is being presented to us. Bin Laden cowtails to some extream reli
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Because, you know, suggesting that the universe is comprehensible, that actions have consequences and effects have causes beyond "They're EEEEEVIL!!!" is tantamount to treason these days.
They hate use for our FREEDOM. End of discussion.
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An interesting take that minimizes religion as a driver:
http://www.newyorker.com/printables/fact/061218fa
Re:Causes, not symptoms (Score:5, Insightful)
Are you really that uninformed?
Re:Causes, not symptoms (Score:4, Insightful)
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There's a difference between facts and moral judgments. US, Spanish, and English involvement in the Middle East is a motivation behind those acts of terrorism. That's a fact. Whether or not they deserved to be bombed is a moral judgment that is partially informed by that fact. If these governments were in fact doing absolutely nothing and were bombed without any provocation, that would lead us to one moral
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See Indonesia.
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So when are you thinking of converting? Your first method is impossible unless you propose genocide - because the more "islamic terrorists" you kill the more "islamic terrorists" you create.
Do not agree (Score:5, Insightful)
Certainly, we are not without sin, but the current rift is more complex than you portray. At the very least, it is due in part to a clash of cultures and religions that are almost diametrically opposed to one another. Freedom of speech, expression and, yes, religion are basic tenets of American society. We have grown so used to these basic freedoms that we assume that they are universally true...and they are not...regardless of how much we (or others) would like them to be.
I am not attempting to flame, but I think that it is fair to say that some societies (especially some of those in the Mid-East) hold a specific religious dogma to be of principal importance to their society. All other laws and rules of behavior flow from that religious dogma...or, at the very least, cannot conflict with it. I think that it is also fair to say that the level of tolerance for conflicting beliefs is fairly low. Doubt it? Try carrying a stack of bibles into Saudi Arabia and see how far you get through customs. I'll tell you how far - to the line that leads to jail:
http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/ENGMDE230022
http://travel.state.gov/travel/cis_pa_tw/cis/cis_
In America, the squeaky wheel gets the oil. I worked in Japan for some time and realized that a somewhat similar Japanese phrase crystallizes the difference between our two cultures - the nail that sticks up gets hit. The clash of philosophies between Islam and the West make the differences between the US and Japan look trivial.
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Sunuva
You've ruined Homeland Security for me!
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Try this on for size: Try carrying a stack of Taliban-endorsed religious texts into the United States of America and see how far you get through customs. For bonus fun, get a deep tan, grow a beard, and wear traditional middle eastern attire. You might make it through... eventually.
In America, the squeaky wheel gets the oil. I worked in Japan for some time and real
Re:Causes, not symptoms (Score:5, Insightful)
Instead we let Republican Presidents (yes, it was ALWAYS Republicans that did this, Carter and Clinton did not make this mistake) search out and finding the most vicious, obnoxious, totalitarian, Facists we can find, giving them large amounts of aid, helping them to gain power. Then when we looked at who are friends were and what they were doing, we abandon them, often when they have grown dependent on our aid. This pissed them off, and either they declare us traitors, or they get thrown out of power and the revolutionaries hate us. We did it with Iran (Shah/Khomeni), Panama (Noreiga), Iraq (Hussein), and Afganistan (Bin Laden)
Re:Causes, not symptoms (Score:4, Informative)
In the words of Boots Riley (Score:3, Insightful)
It's poor people dying so the rich cash checks.
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Actually, bailing on Iran was Carter's doing. The other two you can "blame" Republicans, but notice how Panama and Afghanistan have been "fixed".
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I think the situation is a little more complex than that. "Arranging things" so that one group has no motive will very likely give another group motive, especially in the fiercely diverse belief systems throughout the middle east.
Nonetheless, military strikes are clearly not the solution in most cases, except to combat another agressive military. Random acts of violence are crimes, not military offensives, and should be trea
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Against WHO, God damn it? You don't even know who your enemy is. Stop trying to pretend you're fighting a "war"!
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Australia is a western nation. Nothing can, will or should alter that fact. As such, in this new world, we are a terrorist target. Those who assert that through some calibration of our foreign policy we can buy immunity from terrorist attacks advance a proposition which is both morally flawed and factually wrong.
It is morally flawed because this nation should never fashion its foreign policy under threat.
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What has Indesia [npr.org] done? How are they interfering in Islamic politics?
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History does not agree with you, for reasons others have pointed out. This has been going on for centuries. The only thing that has changed in the past few decades is that oil wealth and technology have finally made it possible for Islamic terrorists to
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The US has made a number of enemies by interfering, not just in the Middle East, but also South America. But to say that's the reason Islamic terrorists hate the US is wrong. Denmark has reason to fear terrorists, and all they did was print a cartoon!
Fun
Reasons and rationales (Score:3, Insightful)
Ceasing interference with their politics in order to stop terrorism is a bad idea. It proves that terrorism is an effective tool against the US. (See also, Barbary Pirates [wikipedia.org].)
Ceasing interference with their politics because its the right thing to do is a great idea.
Convincing anyone that our reasons are the latter is an impossible idea. :)
Granted, I've given no solution here. Perhaps the best solution is to cease interference with their politics (for the right reason of course), but if they take this as
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Certainly; we could adopt sharia and allow them to exterminate the Jews. Islamic extremists are not otherwise rational people who are only striking at us because of our injustices. In their own countries they're stoning homosexuals and adulterers/rape victims, forbidding women from learning to read, and violently suppressing other religions. We didn't make them do that. We could cease all military
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I love it when people imply things they are too cowardly to state flat out. Are you denying that US actions have any impact on Muslim attitudes towards us? If you mean it, say it.
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Re:Causes, not symptoms (Score:4, Insightful)
Thailand has been through so many governments since the overthrow of the monarchy in 1932, including several brutal military dictatorships, that it does not surprise me that Thai muslims might want in on all the action. As for the Philippines, they have been in a similar position. One does not have to be a super power to meddle, and it's not only meddlers that attract insurgencies. You might want to check how many non-muslim insurgencies a country has had before using them as an example of how Muslims are violent.
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You mean, except for the several hundred years during which the Islamic states (other than Turkey) were taken over and run as client states by the Europeans, right?
Not so hard to find, there's one living at 1600 Pennsylvani
Re:Causes, not symptoms (Score:4, Informative)
What makes you think OBL, Hezbollah, or any of the others are any different? Religion as a tool to manipulate the base goes back to the beginning.
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Meanwhile, it's hard to find any Christians who are trying to bring back the Byzantine Empire.
Let's see.... Christians taking drastic actions to injure or limit the rights of non-Christians.... Abortion clinic bombings, the "Provisional IRA" bombings in Great Britain a few years back, the KKK, "God's Army" in Myanmar....
For that matter, even if we ignore groups that are committing atrocities in God's name, it's still not hard to find people who are trying to bring back the Roman Empire in one form o
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No, the Egyptians struct the first blow. The Greeks did a fair bit of damage too.
Sure, that was before either religion existed, but they did, but these wars were based on empire building as much as religion. The fact is that as a whole, the history of Islam shows far more tolerance of other religions than Christianity. There are _still_ missionaries travelling the world "saving" savages for fucks sake!
I understand that this view will not be popular here, because this is a US based site, most Americans are
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Re:Causes, not symptoms (Score:5, Insightful)
Yep. As an agnostic conservative/libertarian, I condemn all forms of religious extremism, and it's blatantly obvious that the Muslim world has a particular problem in that area. (And no, the rare abortion clinic bombing by a deranged lunatic doesn't remotely compare to government-sanctioned stoning of homosexuals). It's amazing how so many on the left will defend the most illiberal regimes on the planet, in order to avoid admitting that conservatives might have a point. If Bush being pro-life upsets you, you should be absolutely infuriated with the treatment of women under Muslim theocracies. The enemy of your enemy is not your friend.
Re:Causes, not symptoms (Score:5, Insightful)
To paraphrase the man who everyone claims is on their side when they justify this horrific foreign policy. How can you tell your brother he has a mote of dust in his eye when you have a log in yours? We got ourselves in this situation...and fighting through it won't make it any better. Cure the disease, not the symptoms. The current state of affairs are just symptoms of our unbelievably awful international policy. Fix our behavior and many of the problems will start to lessen if not disappear over the years. This isn't appeasement like the ultra conservatives like to claim, its called setting the example. We are supposed to be the beacon of light on the hill, lets act like it for a change.
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So you say that Christians had Inquisition and Crusades? Sure enough, but in this day and age, I - as a pagan - am much more comfortable with Western Christianity, which leaves me in peace, rather than Islam, for which I do not even belong to the "People of the Book" (since I'm not a monotheist), and as such, have no rights at all. Note how all the terms I've linked to actually have relevance in modern Islam. That is
Re:Causes, not symptoms (Score:4, Insightful)
I gotta blame (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I gotta blame (Score:4, Funny)
Not just the media's fault (Score:3, Insightful)
A hundred years ago the average American was a hell
Re:I gotta blame (Score:4, Insightful)
It is a no-win situation (Score:5, Insightful)
But shouldn't we at least try to figure out a better way? For example, wouldn't 'Commonsense Homeland Security' be a winning political banner, not a risky one?
Scenario 1:
Scenario 2:
With options like that, it doesn't matter what they do, as they are always going to be wrong.
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Not exactly. (Score:4, Informative)
Politicians who run on fear don't have any thing else.
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"I want this country to realize that we stand on the edge of oblivion.
I want everyone to remember *why* they need us!"
Exactly. (Score:2)
In a Democracy, the government will still be the government. You might not be re-elected to it, but it is still the government.
The politician is not the government. The politician is not the nation. The politician is not the people.
These have all existed before the politician and will exist after the politician.
But the politician will attempt to confuse them and portray himself/herself as the people, the nat
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$PRESIDENT and $EXECUTIVE_BRANCH_POLITICIANS do everything that they can to prevent anything even resembling a terrorist attack
Does that include duct tape on the windows and the banning of liquids on all non-private airlines? (God forbid if a terrorist has a enough money to charter private flights).
When your 'do everything they can' scenario actually happens as a viable and logical solution, maybe then your 'do everything they can' scenario will make sense. Or possibly be proven invalid.
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In that scenario, you come up with answers like yes, it makes sense to lock the cockpit doors. This prevents the plane from being hijacked and used as a missile. There's also very few implications of this policy, beyond creating and minor inconvenience for pilots. But you also come up with conclusions like attempting to blow up an airplane
No (Score:5, Insightful)
Republicans are genius marketers (Score:2)
Democrats suck at marketing, and the 2004 campaign is perfect example of that. R
We can't have any more politician politicians (Score:4, Insightful)
#1. If you start a war, you send your kids to the frontlines of whatever country you are attacking.
#2. Your kid stays there till your term is over.
#3. You cannot own any companies or be a shareholder of any.
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Let's see Bush actually complete his service.
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Of course all this will do is open a bureaucratic maze of legal loopholes to allow them to declare war without declaring war, to keep their own kids off the front lines. Ie, kind of like how Congress never officially declared war on Iraq, yet by any sense of the word we're at war.
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Majority of politicians with relatives in Iraq? There's only a handful of Senators and Congressmen that actually have their children or their siblings serving in the war. Many are just begging to count their 4th cousin twice removed that's serving, so they can claim they have relatives in the war.
Look at the biggest pushers for the war, and consider how many of them have children ser
Re:We can't have any more politician politicians (Score:4, Insightful)
I served so the Bush twins wouldn't have to. I'll gladly donate my service to them. That's why it's called a Volunteer Force. No one is in Iraq that doesn't want to be. If they wanted out, all they have to do is make a pass at their commanding officer (provided their commanding officer is the same sex they are)
#2. Your kid stays there till your term is over.
Did that... served in the MidEast under two administrations.
#3. You cannot own any companies or be a shareholder of any.
Their money is in a blind trust. They don't know where their money is. Besides, if they had to put their money into common interest baring accounts, they would get blasted everytime the interest rates went up. Or would you prefer that they just keep all their money under the mattress in the Lincoln bedroom?
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Completely missing the point to brag about your own military history = priceless.
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I read a book recently that touched on something similar to this. Part of the argument was if more of our leadership actually had any military experience, they might stop treating the military as a black box they can just throw any problem in and crank out any solution they desired. Also, if more of our leadership (cultural as well as political) had children who served in the military, they might think twice of using the military in some of the ways it's been used in the past decade.
The book was titled AWO [amazon.com]
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Reactionary, not preventative (Score:4, Insightful)
As a slogan, yes (Score:2, Insightful)
Unfortunately self interest interferes (Score:4, Insightful)
Everything remains until such time as the electorate get sick of all of it and kick out the party that is profiting by it and replace them with the politic party that will shift the focus away from terrorizing the public with bogus threats and focus on all those mundane issues that will affect the lives of the majority like, universal health care, universal education, the environment and the falling average standard of living ie they toss out the party that focuses on the wealthy minority and making them richer, safer and protecting them from the poor that the rich create and instead focus upon the working poor and on preventing the now shrinking middle class from sliding down to join the working poor.
You can always tell the most corrupt politicians because they will always pat themselves on the back for how much profit the corporations and the wealthy that control those corporations are making and completely ignore how many ex-middle class families have joined the ranks of the working poor.
Security? (Score:4, Insightful)
When I think of the term security, my first thought is as the first word in the term "security blanket". It's an emotional state for a person, not a logical state to be achieved in a system.
The same holds whenever I hear the term 'homeland security' and 'national security' - these systems are not designed, oriented, or run in any way to make an impervious wall to potential damage - they are, and have always been, publicity measures to evoke the emotional state of security.
If we were to create a system of real 'functional' national security, it would be a nightmare all around. We would have to make it practically impossible for any damage to be done to the protected area - which isn't plausible unless you completely prevented living things from being in the protected area or anything in range. Even the middle of the Demilitarized Zone in Korea would not fit such a definition.
Beyond this technicality though, people don't want even limited functional security. They want a shield from external consequences - they want a daddy to look over them, a very biased daddy who will listen to their complaints and hurt the bad guys. This, to a degree, is the goal behind the current illusion of security.
At the same time though, I'm glad it is the merely political/emotional system it is. Because I'd rather have a bumbling mostly-absent daddy-figure in that space, than a system which actually had the power to implement a system of authoritarian measures beyond most people's 'convenience' threshold. I acknowledge that I'm in mild danger without some precautions (in any case, really) - but I find an entrenched abusable 'security' environment much more terrifying than all the horrible rebel terrorists in the world, in the same way that I'd find a poison labeled as candy more terrifying than all the poison in the world.
Ryan Fenton
Political Banners (Score:4, Funny)
> a winning political banner
Nope. The media won't understand it. That banner has too many words.
not a new problem (Score:5, Insightful)
Israel's approach is borne of being surrounded by enemies and inundated by non-friends. They deal with it by having intelligent people working in their security forces, including at the airport. They frisk you (usually with a metal detector wand) when you enter any gathering place - restaurant, bus station, theater, museum, post office, etc. They use profiling, political correctness be damned. Their security practices seem intelligent - you don't have to take off your shoes when you run their usual airport security gauntlet, and a grandmother traveling with her family isn't going to get run through the same ringer as a suspicious young person.
Israel deals with real terror threats every day. They defuse real attacks every day. Maybe they know what they're doing.
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Time for some definitions. Were the Fenians a "real terror threat?" And how about the French Resistance? Or the Algerians driving out the French? How about the ANC?
I have met people who have been on the receiving end of the attentions of the "intelligent" Israeli security forces and those of the equally intelligent and famously well-run Israeli military. I never want to see the US go down that road. Me, I'm still hoping Abu Ghraib and uncounted civilian c
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The woman didn't know there was a bomb. She was simply offered a sum of money to carry a bag.
Fortunately, Israel is smarter
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Can a people remain free and be 'protected'? (Score:4, Insightful)
I, for one, believe not. Perhaps for this reason that free people seem reflexively aggressive in foreign relation (US and GBR for example); the inability to sufficiently balance these two interests lends itself to the use of external direct force. As a free people desire that their authorities protect their interests and shield them from harm (via police, fire and rescue squads, ambulance services, and yes military) they will only allow so much intrusion upon their liberties (civil rights and liberties, privacy, dignity, &c). In order to achieve its mandate to 'protect' the citizenry the authority applies direct, sometimes extreme, force upon the external threat (be it a criminal, foreign power, bomb chucking anarchist, &c).
Unfortunately, authorities in the US have evidently determined that we have enough of neither. Rights, liberties, and simple human dignity is being lost while simultaneously a rather large and significant amount of external force is being applied.
Ever wonder? (Score:4, Interesting)
I wonder if the various agencies do this for would be terrorists? Here on US soil, even over in the big sandbox. I guess the more appropriate term would be sting, but the concept is the same. Setup a weapons depot, or something else the terrorists are interested in and wait for them to come get it, and bust their ass. Remember the old scam where cops sent people with outstanding warrants notices that they won a boar or something, then busted them? I think we need to get creative, and start to be a little more proactive.
ouch (Score:4, Interesting)
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Yeah, just like the war on drugs... oh wait.
Some problems can't be solved just by throwing enough money at them.
How do you teach an intolerant person tolerance?
--
How do you win a "war on terror" when you're the one creating it??
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With a bullet. But then what does that make you?