They are most visually involved in civilian policing but, as Horatio pointed out, they wear many hats.
Just these, surely:
They are most visually involved in civilian policing but, as Horatio pointed out, they wear many hats.
I was thinking about this.Irrelevant.
The question is one of motive. Was he a simple madman, or was he a terrorist as such, with a political motivation, however deranged?Originally Posted by Bikewer My thought was... Is a single, and by all acounts loony idiot "terrorism"? Or simply a mentally-disturbed fellow who has seized on Jihadist ideology as a vent for his lunacy?
It also fits "Bomber" Harris, and many another military commander, if we are to judge from his and their actions. Are these terrorists, in your sense? People can become inured through ideology or training to commit the most frightful deeds. I'm not sure if they can all be called psychopaths. I wish I could say they are all mad, but unfortunately I can't.I'm not arguing that all psychopaths are terrorists, so much as I am arguing that all terrorists are psychopaths!
Psychopathy is traditionally defined as a personality disorder characterized by enduring antisocial behavior, diminished empathy and remorse, and disinhibited or bold behavior. It may also be defined as a continuous aspect of personality,
This profile sure fits ISIL and terrorists pretty closely!
<snip> It also fits "Bomber" Harris, and many another military commander, if we are to judge from his and their actions. Are these terrorists, in your sense?
In 2006, the so-called "Toronto 18" planned to detonate truck bombs around Toronto and take hostages including Prime Minister Stephen Harper, in al-Qaeda-inspired plot. Some 11 men were convicted of terror-related offences.
As recently as 18 September, Hiva Alizadeh was jailed for attempting to organise a jihadist cell in Ottawa. Tunisian Chiheb Esseghaier and Palestinian Raed Jaser are awaiting trial over an alleged plan to derail a train between Toronto and New York. Others have been involved in overseas terrorism. Since 9/11, dozens of Canadian citizens are thought to have travelled to the Middle East and beyond to join militant groups. Link
There were no mass bombing raids on London in the 1930sI have always had a bit of a problem with criticism of Air Marshall Arthur 'Bomber' Harris. He clearly illustrates the ideas about:
Nonetheless, to understand what drove Harris I think you need to watch a documentary about the German nighttime bombing raids over London in the late 1930s
- When we do that it's payback. When they do that it's barbaric.
- The victors write the history.
Then smartcooky's definition of psychopathy is far from evidently accurate, because by the criteria he invokes people who like you who "cheer on" mass slaughter would be classified as total psychos.and 1940. IMO they were essentially industrial-scale terror attacks. After watching the documentary I think most people would be quite ready to cheer Bomber Harris on. I know I was.![]()
He may be right. Ask my wife.Then smartcooky's definition of psychopathy is far from evidently accurate, because by the criteria he invokes people who like you who "cheer on" mass slaughter would be classified as total psychos.
Also, your argument might be taken to justify individual terror against innocent citizens of countries which involve themselves in the bombing of civilian areas. May I counsel you to be careful with that argument? Personally I find it quite unconvincing.

You'll need to take that one up with smartcooky. It looks like you're extolling the logic of psychopathy.He may be right. Ask my wife.
The argument that "You bomb our civilian areas we kill citizens in your country," seems to have a certain undeniable logic to it. Like you I don't really agree with it, but I do see the logic. It's a tactical decision to raise the price of intervention. To make the 'other side' pay a price they don't want to pay.
I was in Grosvenor Square, London, UK.As a wise man once said: War is hell. Once the genie's out of the box you can't get him back in. I served in the military in Vietnam. I was stationed not too far away from the town of which American commanders explained, "We destroyed it in order to save it." That probably sounds like something straight out of Orwell's 1984 but I understood what they were saying.
I guess you woulda had to have been there.![]()
<snip> I was in Grosvenor Square, London, UK.
It's a reference to this. http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/march/17/newsid_2818000/2818967.stmI don't know what that means.
It's a reference to this. http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/march/17/newsid_2818000/2818967.stm
I'm not being emotional; I just mean I participated in that demonstration. That's all. I was not intending to prevent you from seeing the thing from these different perspectives, and not to offend you. Just trying to say that my experience of the Vietnam War was different from yours.I know what happened there I don't know what you mean when you say you "were there."
Obviously you're angry and you're not ready to discuss these issues without getting emotional. I am trying to be objective, to make some attempt to see these events from both perspectives. I apologize for trying to engage you in that discussion.
Have a great day!![]()
I have always had a bit of a problem with criticism of Air Marshall Arthur 'Bomber' Harris. He clearly illustrates the ideas about:
- When we do that it's payback. When they do that it's barbaric.
- The victors write the history.
Nonetheless, to understand what drove Harris I think you need to watch a documentary about the German nighttime bombing raids over London in the late 1930s and 1940. IMO they were essentially industrial-scale terror attacks.
<snip>
It's important to remember that logistical, operational, and technological limitations are what led to much of the nighttime bombing effort being conducted the way it was.
<snip>
The attacks against the battered RAF facilities were halted in favor of nighttime terror bombings against London to retaliate for the raids on Berlin and to break the morale of the British people so they would pressure Churchill to capitulate. Starting on Saturday, September 7, 1940, and for 57 consecutive nights, London was struck. History Place.com
I think that isn't likely because his primary inclination was daylight attacks on important targets. What shifted him away from this was the losses his bombers suffered during daylight at the hands of RAF fighters. The night bombing of cities was not his original intention; not because he was a merciful person, but because it was much less damaging to the UK war effort than pinpoint attacks on industrial and military targets.Unfortunately I don't think that's true. It was intended to be terrorize the British people and I think that was the reason Hitler chose nighttime bombing.
The Luftwaffe had no heavy bombers and no viable long range fighters in 1940.The US Army Air Force had joined the strategic bombing campaign in the summer of 1942. They had come committed to 'precision' bombing in daylight. However, their bombers proved easy prey for the German day fighters. Heavy losses convinced the Americans that they needed long-range escort fighters to protect their bombers.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/worldwars/wwtwo/area_bombing_01.shtmlThis was the time when Churchill began to think about the need for an 'absolutely devastating exterminating attack by very heavy bombers from this country upon the Nazi homeland.' When on the night of 24 August 1940 the German air force - the Luftwaffe - accidentally and against Hitler's orders - dropped some bombs over London, the British prime minister requested a retaliatory raid on Berlin. Hitler responded by going ahead with the Blitz, and the following months and years saw tit-for-tat raids on each country's cities.
<snip> I think that isn't likely because his primary inclination was daylight attacks on important targets. What shifted him away from this was the losses his bombers suffered during daylight at the hands of RAF fighters. The night bombing of cities was not his original intention; not because he was a merciful person, but because it was much less damaging to the UK war effort than pinpoint attacks on industrial and military targets.

Now you're defending Hitler? And the nighttime bombing of London? Against that madman Churchill? Seriously? And why were the Germans bombing England? To stop British aggression?![]()
One by one, comforting myths are demolished. Long-range bombing by Britain and later by the Allies is usually defended as a valid retaliation in response to the indiscriminate German bombing of civilians. “They sowed the wind, and now they are going to reap the whirlwind,” Bomber Harris is said to have remarked after Luftwaffe bombs rained down on London. (Notions of punishment, revenge and tactics were hopelessly entangled from the start.) Overy demonstrates, however, that the tactic of bombing urban areas had been put into action by the British before the Blitz.
Winston Churchill was an early and enthusiastic advocate of wholesale bombing as the best way to defeat Hitler. In July 1940, he wrote: “There is one thing that will bring him back and bring him down, and that is an absolutely devastating, exterminating attack by very heavy bombers from this country upon the Nazi homeland.” That belief was fully supported by America, for Roosevelt “shared Churchill’s uncritical view that bombing was a possible war winner in the face of German aggression.”
In a grim cycle of escalation, the lessons learned by Britain’s Bomber Command from the London Blitz would be put to use in bombing Germany. The Royal Air Force even used the Luftwaffe’s attack on Coventry as a yardstick to measure what damage British bombs might inflict on German cities: one Coventry, two Coventries and so on. An attack on the scale of “four Coventries” would be expected to kill at least 22,000 Germans.
Promoters of the bombing campaign insisted that targeting civilians would wear down German morale and economic resilience, leading to the inevitable collapse of the Nazi regime. By 1941, bombs were aimed, as the director of Air Intelligence said, at “the livelihood, the homes, the cooking, heating, lighting and family life of that section of the population which, in any country, is least mobile and most vulnerable to a general air attack — the working class.” Britain had not buckled under the Blitz, but instead of drawing a logical conclusion from this, Harris and his colleagues blithely assumed that Germans lacked the moral fiber to stand up to a concerted air campaign.
I have no idea what you mean. Are you sure you read what I wrote, and you quoted?Now you're defending Hitler? And the nighttime bombing of London? Against that madman Churchill? Seriously? And why were the Germans bombing England? To stop British aggression?![]()
How is that defending Hitler? He would have gained more from daylight precision bombing, but he had to abandon it because it was too costly. How is that defending the nighttime bombing of London? I'm completely baffled.The night bombing of cities was not his original intention; not because he was a merciful person, but because it was much less damaging to the UK war effort than pinpoint attacks on industrial and military targets.