The definition you get out of a dictionary
Again, the crazy factor doesn't disqualify something as an act of terrorism. Arguably, Muslim terrorists have delusional thinking going on too.
Yea, but the type of terrorisim we are more familiar with are conducted by radical elements, such as islamic extremeists or right/left wing extremeists such as McVeigh or eco-terrorists, are much more systematic and organized. There is usually a group or organization with an organized political theme or agenda behind the terrorists or acts. These organizations recruit, indoctrinate and the terrorists perfom thier acts in the name of or furtherance of that agenda. As I mentioned before Stack's suicide note indicated that his actions were more motivated by personal revenge than a political agenda. Stack just threw in the political mumbo jumbo to make his act of personal revenge something a bit more noble or political motivated.
I think that is why the killer professor is not considered a terrorist. Her motives were personal rather than agenda based.
The fact that he did what he did speaks to the likelihood of pathology, but so do most or all terrrorist acts. Going out on a limb, I'd guess one or more of the thugs that instigated 911 may have had Antisocial Personality Disorder, Paranoid Personality Disorder or Paranoid Schizophrenia. And it seems Mr. Stack the terrorist may have had one or more of these too.
True, but the intention is different. A traditional individual terrorist may be pathological but his motives are still politicaly based. The act is done for an agenda greater than his personal interests.
Now, for the case of an Palistinian whose wife (or similar situation) was killed by an IDF soldier joining Hamas for the perpose of seeking revenge via suicide bombing, a fine line has to be drawn. To the Palistinan, the act is one of personal revenge, not an ideological act. To the rest of us who do not know his story, the act is on of terrorisim because of the group he has joined does these acts for idiological reasons. Does that make him a terrorist? It depends on wether you know his story or not. It's not a clear cut case. The bottom line is the same but the reasons and intentions is not.
It's like the case with the killer professor. We do not call it a terrorist act because we know the motivations were different. The bottom line is the same; a person entered into a facility and shot and killed several people. The intention was different; she killed for persoanl reasons not linked to a idealogical or political agenda.
Stack crashed his plane into the IRS building because he felt he was personaly singled out by them. He says as much in the first paragraph of his statement. The political mumbo jumbo was a red herring.
So I guess the 911 terrorists didn't commit terrorist acts either by flying into buildings the way Mr Stack did, since we never heard them specifically blame themselves for their actions publically.
Hey, just because an airplane was a weapon in both cases does not mean that the reason for doing so were similar. We do not know what the individual motivations were for each individual hijacker but we do know that the act was initiated and responsibility was claimed by a terrorist group. Therefore.....
"This is for Palestine", stated Osama Bin Laden, in one of his subsequent taped diatribes, following the 911 hits. I guess he and his ilk are simply vengeful; not terrorists.
... it's no different than the Muslim "martyrs" who sit there in front of a camera and talk about "waking the sleeping giant" prior to blowing up people in a public place, killing themselves too.
OBL is taking an idiological and political stand not a individual or particular stand. His motives are clearly politicaly and idologicaly based. He does not site any personal incidences of grievences but rather a general "Palistine" statement.
Stack did what he did out because of a personal grievance. the political stuff was just window dressing
Not sure what this means.
Terrorists usually don't consider themselves terrorist.
Guess what England called those who supported independance in some thirteen colonies a couple of centuries back.