luke warm, on May 21 2006, 10:57 PM, said:
no, the "spike" in terrorism is the direct result of the way in which terrorism is measured... as i mentioned in a previous post, the behavior of iraq toward its neighbors and its own citizens, in the hussein era, is terrorism by definition.. yet it isn't counted as such... do so and see how the numbers look
Sure. Then again, Sadam is an atteist, it was only during the second golf war when he desperatly needed to boost patriotism that he started pretending to be a believer. So this can hardly be what Peter refers to as moslem violence/terrorism. Of curse, one could argue that Islam is not the core issue, just a label to put on some other conflict.
While terrorism as such probably evolved some 500.000.000 years ago when the nervous systems of animals became advanced enough to feal (and respond to) fear, the present upsurge in Arab and/or Moslem violence against Western societies probably begun with the independance of Israel, allthough there had been some strugles against the colonial powers in Northern Africa earlier.
Wayne: It sounds as if you think it is ms. Ali's own fault that she's a terrorist target. In a way it is (like it's every victim's own fault that they became a victim because they could just have hired a bodyguard). But our society desperatly needs people like ms. Ali that dare to speak up for human rights. Saying that it is her own fault is saying that if we just all surrenderd to the terrorists and abandonded our belief in human rights, we would get peace. Even if this is true (it may be true in a narrow perspective) it is not a clever thing to say. The court's ruling is a victory for the terrorists and encourages them to continue their activities.
You don't seem to have much confidense in the wisdom of Dutch civil cervants. Are Dutch judges an exception? Or do you think the neighbours should just take justice in their own hand and throw ms. Ali out?
The world would be such a happy place, if only everyone played Acol :) --- TramTicket