Looks more like a monstrous ideological salad, mixing Mideastern salafist djihadism/Al Qaedism with American CTism/truthism, with antisemitism as bonding sauce. A new meaning for 'melting pot'?![]()
Source?
If accurate... holy crapballs. The right-wing is going to go even crazier now![]()
What is the problem with treating them as "just criminals"? After all, they are certainly that, regardless of what else they may be, and it avoids no end of semantic quibbling which fails to lead in any useful direction.
All of the tools to give them a fair trail are already in place, without navigating the minefield of what constitutes a 'just' prosecution which depends on nomenclature that seems to lack consensus.
The extra attention only adds to their celebrity. Treating them like burglars or rapists robs them of all that.
Is there a clear downside to treating them like common criminals which offsets that? It seems to me that there isn't. The only upside is posturing for the crowd by pols using an 'anti-terrorism' mantra to show their constituents what tough guys they are.
5. The 'other men with backpacks'.
A lot of connections are made between the backpacks they are wearing and the evidence found at the scene (notably the black fiber and the white square on the handle). It is implied the bag packs they are seen carrying contain the bombs that will be detonated moments later.
One of the problems with this is that there is no picture of the same "bad guys" pictured at the top, without their bags, running from the scene.
There is however a picture of the younger brother running from the scene without a backpack. At least it's how I'm interpreting the image. The same image contains the older brother, further back. It is too blurry for me to see if he's carrying anything. but we know he carried a darker backpack which can work with the evidence found at the scene. I have seen claims the backpack remains are too dark and don't work with the colors on the older brother's backpack. I know how judging the color of something through blurry security footage is a pain in the neck and often not reliable at all.
If they are, indeed, a member of an entity that is engaged in an armed conflict with your country, and they carry out an attack against the government or armed forces of your country, they haven't done anything illegal at all. That's the problem. Essentially you're redefining the laws of war in such a way that anyone who fights against you is an illegal combatant. I don't think that's a sensible idea. Mostly because it will discourage any future enemy from adhering to the laws of war.
Dismissing terrorists as common criminals is both stupid and dangerous, as it belittles and ignores the seriousness of the threat they represent.
They were just mad that their mom was arrested for stealing $1,600 worth of merchandise from a Lord & Taylor.
Are we at war? Has any nation declared war against the U.S.A.?
Are we at war? Has any nation declared war against the U.S.A.?
How does convicting and imprisoning the terrorist equate to ignoring them?
Your lack of historical understanding is shocking.
If one person publicly said, "I'm nigh certain this is the bomber," then we ought to say that he shouldn't have done so. This is true even if others immediately disputed the claim. I'm talking about individual, not group, responsibility here.
I've snipped the remainder, for the sake of space.
Yes, you're right, there are a degree of harms involved here, and by and large, the less harm, the less wrong done. Probably most persons identified by online sleuths as potential victims suffered only negligible harm.
But there's also a difference in responsibility. The police are supposed to find suspects. Inevitably, they will sometimes question an innocent person. That person suffers more harm than, say, those identified by internet sleuths, but if the police are doing their job well, then they have done no wrong. We recognize that this is their duty, and it's inevitable that sometimes, even when cops are performing their duties well, innocent persons are questioned or even tried.
The armchair sleuths had no similar responsibilities. I don't doubt that they meant well (though perhaps were also motivated by a desire for glory or at least self-satisfaction), but the fact is that when they publicly made accusations that turned out to be mistaken, we should be less ready to forgive them than we forgive police, because their accusations are gratuitous.
Again, I don't think that online sleuths are bad people, or that many of them did anything grossly wrong. I just think that one shouldn't make public accusations (or discuss suspicions of who the bomber is) without considerable care.
Neither a declaration of war nor nationhood is required for armed conflict.
Dismissing terrorists as common criminals is both stupid and dangerous, as it belittles and ignores the seriousness of the threat they represent.
That may just be the real reason. We'll never know.
BTW, the parents were grilled in Russia by the Russian authorities and FBI and are expected to be in the USA shortly. I wonder if we have agreed to overlook the outstanding warrant?
So does that mean a streetfight is a war?
Anyone else getting sick of listening to their mother?