PixyMisa
Persnickety Insect
Yes.Is or was he a terrorist?
Oh no, no, the bombs that killed three of his colleagues were just for... 4th of July celebrations! Yeah, that's the ticket!
A terrorist, and an incompetent one.
Yes.Is or was he a terrorist?
Yeah, the fine points become embroiled in semantics. I think the word "terrorist" should be reserved for heinous activities, i.e. attacking and attempting to kill non-combatants. If it becomes a cherry-bomb in a mailbox, it stops being a thing that deserves international outrage.Point taken. Graffiti containing threats is terrorism: spraypainting swastikas in a synagogue, for instance. And firecrackers placed as pranks are, as you say, vandalism. If, however, you right an inflammatory letter to the editor of the local paper and someone places a cherry bomb in your mailbox, it is terrorism: using violence to threaten a critic into silence.
Well, the property was not destroyed in a way likely to cause injury. However, an argument could be made that the Tea Party was a terrorist activity. Not the most heinous, but it has been argued that the Sons of Liberty were a terrorist organization.
One man's freedom fighter...
It is certainly your decision whether or not to investigate his life. He is hardly an iconic presence in American history. His only real relevance today is that he was used as a tool to try to smear Barak Obama.
He is a college professor and an author. He is involved in charitable work. His words, while you may disagree with them, are easy to parse and understand.
He probably doen't try to sum up complex personalities with three words.
He is not an idiot.
First time I heard about Bill Ayers was one week before September 11, 2001. By a strange (and very unfortunate, for him) coincidence, Ayers and Dorhn made a public speech in which they proudly described their 1970's activities as terrorism, said their only regrets are that they did not do more of them, and that US is an oppressive state which deserves to be attacked.First off, I haven't investigated his life. I hadn't heard of him until the "connection" with Obama. I never thought much of it, and it certainly didn't influence my vote. I only heard one of his post-election interviews because they were playing it on the Roe Conn show, a humorous radio talk show that I like to listen to on my way home from work.
Yeah, the fine points become embroiled in semantics. I think the word "terrorist" should be reserved for heinous activities, i.e. attacking and attempting to kill non-combatants. If it becomes a cherry-bomb in a mailbox, it stops being a thing that deserves international outrage.
If he is locally relevant to you, then you might not want to dismiss him so quickly.
So you knew a professor whose intelligence you didn't respect. How does that make Ayers an idiot?
Most people who can express themselves clearly are not idiots
You read a selected quote and you figure that's all he said?
He also disputed whether the actions of the Weather Underground could be considered terrorism: "In trying to end [the war], we did cross lines of propriety, of legality, maybe even of common sense. But we never committed terror."
Ayers also remained unapologetic for his actions during that time.
"I've been quoted again and again as saying, 'I don't regret it,' and saying, 'I don't think we did enough.' And I don't think we did enough," Ayers said. "Just as today I don't think we've done enough to stop these wars and I think we must all recognize the injustice of it and do more."
It sounds to me that you are basing your judgment on his "idiocy" on the fact that he did something long ago that you find reprehensible. If that is truly "all you need to know", good for you. Don't expect it to win you many points with skeptics. They usually request a little more evidence.
It doesn't. You were the one who brought up the fact that he was a professor and an author to support your point. I was just pointing out that that means little.
The night before the demonstration Diana's boyfriend, Bill Ayers, went to the moratorium headquarters and tried to shake down the group for $20,000 to help cover legal expenses incurred by the Days of Rage. In return for his token "Fraternal Solidarity," Ayers said, the Weathermen would not provoke a violent battle with police.
Ayers was asked what the Weathermen program was.
"Kill all the rich people," Ayers answered. "Break up their cars and apartments."
"But aren't your parents rich?" he was asked.
"Yeah," Ayers said. "Bring the revolution home, kill your parents, that's where it's really at."
The moratorium said it didn't have $20,000 to spare and the following day Ayers and Diana, their faces decorated with war paint, joined in a march on the Department of Justice after the main rally. The brief collision was more a revolutionary theatrical than a serious street action, marked by shouting and scuffles with police and clouds of tear gas.
It was the last time the Weathermen found a kind of fun in politics, their last action before turning to a politics of terror which had no place for the humor that called for war paint.
He's clearly trying to gain support for a violent revolution, there wasn't anything peaceful about his intentions.Bill Ayers said:We are a guerrilla organization. We are communist women and men, underground in the United States for more than four years. We are deeply affected by the historic events of our time in the struggle against U.S. imperialism.
Our intention is to disrupt the empire, to incapacitate it, to put pressure on the cracks, to make it hard to carry out its bloody functioning against the people of the world, to join the world struggle, to attack from the inside.
...The only path to the final defeat of imperialism and the building of socialism is revolutionary war. Revolution is the most powerful resource of the people. To wait, to not prepare people for the fight, is to seriously mislead about what kind of fierce struggle lies ahead.
Revolutionary war will be complicated and protracted. It includes mass struggle and clandestine struggle, peaceful and violent, political and economic, cultural and military, where all forms are developed in harmony with the armed struggle.
Without mass struggle there can be no revolution.
Without armed struggle there can be no victory.
"I've been quoted again and again as saying, 'I don't regret it,' and saying, 'I don't think we did enough.' And I don't think we did enough," Ayers said. "Just as today I don't think we've done enough to stop these wars and I think we must all recognize the injustice of it and do more."
Did I miss the news that Ayers was getting a job in Obama's cabinet or moving permanently into the Lincoln bedroom.
Nevertheless, you cannot simply extrapolate your beliefs into a definite future occurrance. That might have been a plan. That plan might have changed. There is simply no way to tell for sure. Best do go on what actuall DID happen, and what DID happen was nothing, as far as killing non-combatants goes.The bomb that killed his g/f was intended to go off at a dance in Ft. Dix NJ. It was packed with nails, and was powerful enough to blow a townhouse and his g/f to smithereens.
The only reason that bomb didn't kill any innocent people was because it blew up the WU asshats who were making it instead.
"The plan might have changed"? And what evidence is there of that? This wasn't a bomb that anyone would use merely to cause property damage. It was packed with nails, and designed to kill as many people as possible. Certainly not even the type of thing you'd construct to go 'boom' in an empty field on the 4th of July. If the "plan had changed" why on earth were they building it?Nevertheless, you cannot simply extrapolate your beliefs into a definite future occurrance. That might have been a plan. That plan might have changed. There is simply no way to tell for sure. Best do go on what actuall DID happen, and what DID happen was nothing, as far as killing non-combatants goes.
So you think an anti-personnel bomb (which is exactly what that device was) has any use other than indiscriminately killing as many people as possible? You think it was to be used as home defense?You wouldn't call a man a murderer because he ows a gun, would you? Sure, it COULD be used to murder, but to extrapolate would be an error.
I am not excusing them. I am saying no terrorist act was committed with this bomb. Yes, they were wrong to build it and should have been tried and punished (the ones left alive) for owning illegal weapons, but in order to be a terrorist, you have to commit a terrorist act, which in my mind means attacking non-combatants."The plan might have changed"? And what evidence is there of that? This wasn't a bomb that anyone would use merely to cause property damage. It was packed with nails, and designed to kill as many people as possible. Certainly not even the type of thing you'd construct to go 'boom' in an empty field on the 4th of July. If the "plan had changed" why on earth were they building it?
So you think an anti-personnel bomb (which is exactly what that device was) has any use other than indiscriminately killing as many people as possible? You think it was to be used as home defense?
Not even Ayers goes so far to excuse this particular act Tricky. You know what Ayers has said about this? He speculated that Oughton blew herself and the 2 others up on purpose, because she didn't want to go through with the plan to detonate it at the Ft. Dix dance. He even says this in the NPR interview! And yet, here you are so desperate to excuse the WU for this that you find an excuse Ayers hadn't even used.
Unbelievable.
I see. So you don't think Ahmed Ressam is a terrorist, correct? After all, his scheme, like the WU dance bombing scheme, was thwarted before it actually happened.I am not excusing them. I am saying no terrorist act was committed with this bomb. Yes, they were wrong to build it and should have been tried and punished (the ones left alive) for owning illegal weapons, but in order to be a terrorist, you have to commit a terrorist act, which in my mind means attacking non-combatants.
Given what the WU did and said and given Ayers lack of remorse and what sounds like a call for more terrorism:
I have to ask WTF was Obama thinking?