]Bertster7 wrote:
I don't think a mugger counts as a terrorist. Because the mugger is only influencing his victim through intimidation. A terrorist needs to be influencing others through intimidation, in general governments. I might call kidnapping and hostage taking terrorism, but I'm not sure.lowing wrote:
Ummm yeah, A mugger is a terrorist, so is anyone that tries to intimidate a juror into a certain vote, or a home invader, or a kidnapper etc.............now we are just talking about degrees of severity are we not??Bertster7 wrote:
Indeed, that's the whole point. It's extremely unlikely to be repeated the same way. The US is a very well defined concept with very specific things that make it the US. Not an abstract concept like terrorism.lowing wrote:
Yeah, but a govt. set up like the US for 230 years ago was defiantly thinking "outside the box".Fair enough. Go after the terrorists. I have no problem with that. It's a good idea. The whole war on terror thing just seems a bit silly. All the media attention is what terrorists crave, it's being handed to them on a plate, creating more support for terrorists. People are stupid, they do stupid things when they see and hear them in the media all the time.lowing wrote:
For me, the "line in the sand" was drawn, I do not care what reasons they have for committing terrorism because there simply is no rational reason on this earth to commit the acts these animals have committed.
I am almost certain that if there was less media coverage of terrorism, there would be fewer terrorists - certainly home grown terrorists.
That's what I said. You said they influence the civilians they attack, they do in part, but that is not the point of the attack. By your definition a mugger is a terrorist.
It's just semantics really your definition is really very similar to mine.
Again, now we are only talking about degrees, how many victims need to be terrorized by a mugger before his status changes?