Terrorism in 'Murica (aka The Homeland)

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (281 of them)

imo the most important factor in u.s. foreign misadventuring isnt necessarily the creation of crazy angry people but the encouraging of tolerance for their loco views - if the absolute nutters are screaming death to the great satan a much bigger chunk of normals is going all whatevs ive got bigger problems than trying to defend some country of assholes

ice cr?m, Monday, 28 December 2009 14:50 (fourteen years ago) link

you're making me wonder if there's an iranian version of lolspeak and for that i love you ice cr?m

Tracer Hand, Monday, 28 December 2009 14:56 (fourteen years ago) link

All my Nigerian friends are from Christian families and funnel their post-colonial ambivalence through things like being annoyed about Shell Oil and globalism.

days of wine and neuroses (suzy), Monday, 28 December 2009 15:01 (fourteen years ago) link

imo the most important factor in u.s. foreign misadventuring isnt necessarily the creation of crazy angry people but the encouraging of tolerance for their loco views

otm. and this works in both directions, obviously -- the actions of al qaida open up space in the u.s. domestic discourse for dick cheney and the mad torturers of Neoconnia. and really this suits the interests of radicals on both sides and can end up trapping everybody in endless cycles of retaliation.

hellzapoppa (tipsy mothra), Monday, 28 December 2009 15:06 (fourteen years ago) link

not really sure about that. the last time i checked pretty much everybody hated al qaeda and dick cheney.

Tracer Hand, Monday, 28 December 2009 15:09 (fourteen years ago) link

well cheney never cared about personal popularity because he understood that it didn't matter much to what he was trying to do. 9/11 gave him the opportunity to push government in a lot of directions that would have been impossible under non-9/11 circumstances, and he took advantage of it.

hellzapoppa (tipsy mothra), Monday, 28 December 2009 15:14 (fourteen years ago) link

fuck knows how to prevent these bastards from doing what they do, but this is mad. rights or wrongs of the afghanistan war aside, you can't do foreign policy based on whether it will annoy radical islamists/any other crazy motherfucker.

what i said was kind of a throwaway comment, and fuck if i know how you pulled this from it

dome plow (gbx), Monday, 28 December 2009 15:27 (fourteen years ago) link

it is endlessly demonstrable that foreign occupation, violence and torture radicalize people. remember that quttub was tortured. so was zawahiri. either by the cia or cia-trained agents.

― Tracer Hand, Monday, December 28, 2009 1:19 PM (1 hour ago) Bookmark

both of them were tortured (which im not defending, obviously) because they were already radicalized and were deemed a threat to the egyptian state. zawahiri in particular was a violent radical before his imprisonment.

perhaps left to its own devices, the muslim brotherhood would have settled down to harmless nutterdom; perhaps without the cold war, the CIA would never have supported bad regimes the world over (and regimes in general would have been naturally good); perhaps if, in the present, the US refused to arm israel, then we wouldn't have young idiots trying to blow up jets.

but perhaps it would take more than that?

maybe when this guy recovers he can talk us through his thinking -- what it would take to assuage him, his vision for a peaceful afghanistan, etc.

i wish US foreign policy were cleaner, but i'm not convinced that it's possible or in every case desirable to run it without making enemies.

All my Nigerian friends are from Christian families and funnel their post-colonial ambivalence through things like being annoyed about Shell Oil and globalism.

― days of wine and neuroses (suzy), Monday, December 28, 2009 3:01 PM (19 minutes ago) Bookmark

yeah my housemate is christian. none of the nigerians i've lived with in the uk have been annoyed by globalism to my knowledge -- i mean, our entire situation, their being educated here, is a product *of* globalism. (and so indirectly, often, of the oil industry.) we all feel ambivalent about the material bases of modern western-style society, of course.

Dean Gaffney's December (history mayne), Monday, 28 December 2009 15:28 (fourteen years ago) link

perhaps left to its own devices, the muslim brotherhood would have settled down to harmless nutterdom; perhaps without the cold war, the CIA would never have supported bad regimes the world over (and regimes in general would have been naturally good); perhaps if, in the present, the US refused to arm israel, then we wouldn't have young idiots trying to blow up jets.

but perhaps it would take more than that?

not sayin that yr doing this, but: that last part is what's often leveraged by the US media (don't know about UK) and talking heads and bloviating holiday relations into ugly generalizations about ragheads and apologies for actual, regrettable, shouldn't-have-happened foreign policy missteps. "it" taking "more than that" so often scans (to me) as "there's just no changin those ~muslims, they'll NEVER be happy," as if that applies to normal, non-radicals and not just obsessive nutters.

dome plow (gbx), Monday, 28 December 2009 15:35 (fourteen years ago) link

but the point isn't about *all* muslims, but about the actual terrorists we've seen from 9/11 onward in the West. Look at what motivated *them*; and ask to what extent changing Western foreign policy would have assuaged them.

Euler, Monday, 28 December 2009 15:38 (fourteen years ago) link

i know it isn't! i said that that point (about the actual radicals) is very often used by domestic morons to tar *all* muslims. which is why it gets my hackles up, etc.

dome plow (gbx), Monday, 28 December 2009 15:41 (fourteen years ago) link

obviously a lot of things, internal and external, led to the rise of fundamentalist islam over the last several decades. and it's not a morally straightforward story in any way, not least because there aren't many real good guys you can point to either in the middle east or in other countries' dealings with the region. but i think the fundamentalists themselves are essentially at this point a cult -- it's a big cult, with a lot of cultural complexities in different countries, but the point is that having come into existence it is not going to fade just because or even if the conditions that helped bring it into existence start to change. it is running on its own gas (literally and figuratively) and it's going to be a problem at some scale for a long time to come. the problem is that we (i.e. the west) has to somehow separate how we deal with the death cult from how we deal more broadly and diplomatically with the region at large.

hellzapoppa (tipsy mothra), Monday, 28 December 2009 15:45 (fourteen years ago) link

as for whether or not changing foreign policy would have assuaged some now blown-up terrorists: it is a mystery. i'm not at all suggesting that we conduct foreign policy in a way specifically designed to not annoy terrorists, but the idea that our mistakes don't ~really~ have that much to do with radicalization (or popular support/tolerance of radicalization) is patently absurd.

this may be apples and oranges, but the guys setting road side bombs in Iraq and Afghanistan are not doing it because women go to nightclubs in London.

dome plow (gbx), Monday, 28 December 2009 15:46 (fourteen years ago) link

but some of the people supplying the money that buys the bombs are doing it because of that. or they're doing it to ingratiate themselves with the local religious leadership. or who knows, it's all complicated and it's not an either/or situation.

hellzapoppa (tipsy mothra), Monday, 28 December 2009 15:50 (fourteen years ago) link

xp right---Bush's assurance that we were fighting them over there so that they don't fight us over here conflated two different kinds of terrorists. They're not unrelated, but they're not motivated by exactly the same concerns, either.

Euler, Monday, 28 December 2009 15:50 (fourteen years ago) link

i'm not convinced that it's possible or in every case desirable to run it without making enemies

lol who has even tried to convince you of this? you sound like rumsfeld - "do i think you can have a foreign policy that doesn't create a single enemy in the entire world? no."

all we're talkin about here, history mayne, is what makes pseudo-qaeda nutters think it's a good idea to kill western civilians. there is obviously not one answer. it's a big, weird subject. but your take appears to be that they get radicalized all by themselves, somewhere deep in their own minds, by some ineluctable process. ok, but that seems to ignore a whole pile of evidence that correlates violent occupation and you know, decades of repression and torture training techniques, with hmmm a bunch of people who have violent impulses towards those they feel are responsible.

Tracer Hand, Monday, 28 December 2009 15:54 (fourteen years ago) link

(though i doubt the thought process is that clear)

Tracer Hand, Monday, 28 December 2009 15:58 (fourteen years ago) link

(and in the case of a wealthy nigerian there has to be a lot of odd vicarious sympathy action goin on somehow)

Tracer Hand, Monday, 28 December 2009 16:10 (fourteen years ago) link

but perhaps it would take more than that?

naturally i assume you are talking about cultural exchange programs and education initiatives here

Tracer Hand, Monday, 28 December 2009 16:13 (fourteen years ago) link

well resentment is a complicated thing. just look at the american south. there's still a lot of cultural resentment there, which still drives the politics and religion of the region in a lot of ways, but the sources of it are hard to separate out. there are legitimate grievances -- the population is historically poorer, less healthy, less educated, has been economically exploited by outside interests -- but then there are a lot of grievances that outsiders are less likely to think of as legitimate. and in any given person, those resentments are likely to be all bound up together.

hellzapoppa (tipsy mothra), Monday, 28 December 2009 16:14 (fourteen years ago) link

resentment, anger, grievances = one thing
terrorist acts = another

Herodcare for the Unborn (J0hn D.), Monday, 28 December 2009 16:46 (fourteen years ago) link

not loving the implication that just because scaling back american militarism wont cure terrorism completely we should stop trying

max, Monday, 28 December 2009 16:48 (fourteen years ago) link

xpost

sure, and obviously it takes a lot of factors to get from one to the other. it's just, even if you're going talk "root causes," there's rarely the kind of clarity that anyone on any ideological side would prefer.

hellzapoppa (tipsy mothra), Monday, 28 December 2009 16:51 (fourteen years ago) link

otm. and this works in both directions, obviously -- the actions of al qaida open up space in the u.s. domestic discourse for dick cheney and the mad torturers of Neoconnia. and really this suits the interests of radicals on both sides and can end up trapping everybody in endless cycles of retaliation.

― hellzapoppa (tipsy mothra), Monday, December 28, 2009 10:06 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

not really sure about that. the last time i checked pretty much everybody hated al qaeda and dick cheney.

― Tracer Hand, Monday, December 28, 2009 10:09 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

u must admit they had a good run

ice cr?m, Monday, 28 December 2009 16:59 (fourteen years ago) link

i know what you mean, but they both narrowly missed defeats that would have resulted in them being forgotten completely - cheney with the '00 election and al-q having been shunned by basically everyone and driven into the hinterlands of afghanistan. naturally once assholes like this succeed in grabbing the spotlight they will attract other assholes, like some kind of asshole magnet, but after the initial bump as far as i can tell cheney's actions have brought only deepening derision and mistrust, and al-q's only substantial friends these days appear to be certain ratfuckers in the pakistani intelligence services

Tracer Hand, Monday, 28 December 2009 17:16 (fourteen years ago) link

i personally find it v heartening that people somewhat tired of the bush/qeada codependent shitstorm after a while - and i think yr right that there was a perfectly inauspicious moment that made it all possible - but theres still a mighty appetite in america and worldwide for all sorts of dire conquest

ice cr?m, Monday, 28 December 2009 18:16 (fourteen years ago) link

ok phew dont hav to vote 4 palin http://www.businessinsider.com/live-tv-is-back-on-jetblue-flights-2009-12

ice cr?m, Monday, 28 December 2009 19:40 (fourteen years ago) link

Yeah, ABC Radio just reported that the DHS/TSA were hastily scaling back the additional restrictions

kingfish, Monday, 28 December 2009 20:09 (fourteen years ago) link

in case anyone is wondering why we dont have a TSA head its because some republican senator has a secret hold on the nomination

once again a+ to the framers of our constitutions for creating the most useless body in modern politics

max, Monday, 28 December 2009 20:10 (fourteen years ago) link

i've been asked to arrive four hours before departure for check-in

caek, Monday, 28 December 2009 20:12 (fourteen years ago) link

tbf the senate at this point has mostly created itself - iirc the only weird thing thats constitutional per say is unproportional representation

ice cr?m, Monday, 28 December 2009 20:13 (fourteen years ago) link

Customers traveling from any Canadian destination to the United States should be advised that effective December 28, Transport Canada (a department of the Canadian government) put into place a ban on any carry-on baggage that customers would have access to during flight.

Items that are excluded from this restriction include small purses, cameras, coats, items for care of infants, laptop computers, diplomatic or consular bags, crutches, canes, walkers, containers carrying life-sustaining items, medications and medical devices, musical instruments and special-needs items. This directive is in effect until 9:00 p.m. EST on December 29, 2009, although it may be extended.

caek, Monday, 28 December 2009 21:40 (fourteen years ago) link

o u too now canada

ice cr?m, Monday, 28 December 2009 22:58 (fourteen years ago) link

I'd love to see a Thick of It style dramatization of the "decisions" that lead to these policies.

Tracer Hand, Monday, 28 December 2009 23:02 (fourteen years ago) link

But my main concern is whether airplane cabins have finally been equipped with rolls of duct tape. It is nearly 2010 people.

Tracer Hand, Monday, 28 December 2009 23:06 (fourteen years ago) link

Update: my writer friend who was concerned about profiling found that BA moved a white guy into his exit row seat and shunted him up to the middle of the plane. If they are going to do this to people with 'funny names' (his words) maaaaybe they should get one education and learn about the difference between Hindu and Muslim?

days of wine and neuroses (suzy), Tuesday, 29 December 2009 00:41 (fourteen years ago) link

"The warning that the bathrooms would be shut down led to lines 10 people deep at each lavatory. A demand by one attendant that no could read anything either elicited gasps of disbelief and howls of laughter.

Book bombs, it was only a matter of time until someone in the government remembered they used to hide squirt guns and contraband in them in high school.

Removal of fake arms and legs ought to also be on the slate.

Colostomy and urostomy bags, too, because they have the capacity for some volume.

No using of the bathroom because you might be removing your 'plan' filled with something or other. (See Papillon.)

Running discussion and comment carried over from Sunday on the bomber's underwear bomb, efficacy, overreaction, weak leadership and the usual ease with which failed plots turn into wins when the country acts like it has a glass jaw.

At my blog:

http://bit.ly/74SqRz

Gorge, Tuesday, 29 December 2009 00:57 (fourteen years ago) link

Thanks for the link, Gorge / DD.

Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 29 December 2009 02:37 (fourteen years ago) link

Flew home from Knoxville today. No problems, nothing different, plane on map still there.

kingfish, Tuesday, 29 December 2009 07:22 (fourteen years ago) link

ok, i admit that if this kind of story came out under the bush administration, i'd be prone to "what a bunch of keystone kop"-type head-shaking. so fair's fair -- what a bunch of keystone kops. i know the communications problems and information-aggregating is more complicated than it always seems after the fact, but there were sort of an awful lot of red flags here. (and i also know that a lot of those problems are structural and institutional and transcend presidential administrations, and that the republicans are being complete idiot hypocrites in all their phony outrage, but that's just par for the course really. it's always been clear that in any attack under a democratic administration, there will be no rallying-behind-the-president, that's not how they play the game.)

hellzapoppa (tipsy mothra), Thursday, 31 December 2009 06:21 (fourteen years ago) link

The system clearly didn't work on several levels. The intelligence community didn't recognize this guy as a legit threat, the State Dept. was oblivious to some obvious red flags, the flight list vetting process probably should have prevented him from ever getting on the plane, and the airport screening system failed to detect a bomb. All of this is true, but the lesson here is that no system will ever be foolproof, or even particularly effective. We can pump billions of dollars into the problem and erode civil liberties and cause major headaches and inconveniences, and it still won't stop terrorism from happening. All this hand wringing and finger pointing misses that fundamental truth.

Super Cub, Thursday, 31 December 2009 09:14 (fourteen years ago) link

rip cia dudes (not in 'murica but still)

eagle tears was a popular drink and it still is (a hoy hoy), Thursday, 31 December 2009 09:35 (fourteen years ago) link

We can pump billions of dollars into the problem and erode civil liberties and cause major headaches and inconveniences, and it still won't stop terrorism from happening. All this hand wringing and finger pointing misses that fundamental truth.

― Super Cub, Thursday, December 31, 2009 9:14 AM (6 hours ago) Bookmark

this is obviously otm. with the depressing corollary that the bigger we build our "security" apparatus, the more dedicated the apparatus becomes to preserving and expanding its own institutional power and resources. terrorism is in a way a bigger gift to the military-industrial megillah than the cold war, because while it doesn't necessarily produce vast investments on the scale of thousands and thousands of warheads, it is also much less likely to evaporate as a persistent threat -- because all you need to keep it going is one guy with a bomb every couple of years. which makes the failures of the system work to its own advantage.

hellzapoppa (tipsy mothra), Thursday, 31 December 2009 15:36 (fourteen years ago) link

"terrorism is in a way a bigger gift to the military-industrial megillah than the cold war"

otm

Euler, Thursday, 31 December 2009 15:37 (fourteen years ago) link

according to my airline, security arrangements are back to pre-Dec 25 for UK-US flights

caek, Thursday, 31 December 2009 15:37 (fourteen years ago) link

also I'm kinda puzzled why the US government is in the business of providing airline security anyway, as opposed to the airlines themselves.

Euler, Thursday, 31 December 2009 15:38 (fourteen years ago) link

airlines cant even make bags go from one place to another reliably

ice cr?m, Thursday, 31 December 2009 15:39 (fourteen years ago) link

i can't imagine how insane security would be if the airlines ran it

that sex version of "blue thunder." (Mr. Que), Thursday, 31 December 2009 15:40 (fourteen years ago) link

If airlines are no longer giving me my free bag of cashews I at least want to know that my bags aren't packing shoe bombs.

Hell is other people. In an ILE film forum. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 31 December 2009 15:41 (fourteen years ago) link

I guess I'm thinking like a right-winger but it seems to me that The Market could provide a better airline security situation than the crazy, useless, time-waste we have now.

Euler, Thursday, 31 December 2009 15:55 (fourteen years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.