RE: Critical Thinking Exercise: Why is Terrorism so Hard to Define?
You bring up a good point: we have seen this in play
From my earlier post "Crime Theory, overcriminilization, and technology"
You can see politicians pushing new “bullying” laws, which they will use to silence their opposition or any criticism. “An incumbent legislator has threatened cable companies with litigation if they run advertisements citing his voting record in the Texas House. Meanwhile, the same lawmaker’s chief of staff demanded that a website publishing his votes be shut down, citing a law designed to protect teenagers from cyber-bullying on social media websites. “ (Gutowski,2014, para 1)
Your own post brought up some complementary issues:
- The islamic ideology against gays
- Arabs and Jews are ethnically the same people (See Paul Johnson's excellent "A History of the Jews"); an easy difference to see when they were clothing defining themselves culturally, not so easy to tell apart
otherwise) - There is a movement against anonymity coming from "the elite"; the same people that prevent direct action against known terrorists seem to want to keep everyone else in line
I have a post in mind concerning the strelsky, bandits the Chekists used to terrorize the Russian people into compliance with "security" measures.
Thanks for the contribution!