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== The Main Event ==
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<font color=#004422>If everyone is done with the foreplay, let's get on to the main event. We have a ''term'' that means something specific in usage, yet it means ''nothing'' very specific at all in our Misplaced Pages definition. We want to fix that. We want it to mean something specific. What has prevented us from doing so for all these years? Politics. It actually benefits some political organizations to have "terrorism" undefined, or defined so vaguely that it doesn't mean anything. When our leaders declare war on terrorism, the first thing we want to know is, who or what is our enemy? If we use Misplaced Pages as our source of definitions and it can't give us an answer, we have to rely on our leaders for a definition, "Terrorism is violence for the purpose of evil. It's pejorative and very technical. Just leave it to us. We know who the terrorists are."</font>
] ]
] ]
<font color=#004422>Obviously, the above definition does not work in a government of the people. It leaves the potential targets of our representatives open to be anyone. Those of us who saw how such power was abused in Nazi Germany and have vowed to never let such an atrocity happen again, will not allow our nations to adopt the same philosophy. '''Terrorism''' must have an objective definition. We must be able to universally identify when terrorism occurs and effectively communicate that information to others. The definition cannot be so loose that it could be interpreted to mean anything or anyone that our representatives want to target. Never again, always, and forever. '''--] 18:54, 31 August 2005 (UTC) ''' </font>
] ]
:So wikipedia and "our leaders" are the only sources of definitions of terms like this? Gosh it's too bad nobody has invented a ] or even better, an that could help people understand such terms. And it's a shame there are no academic departments of or that might focus on such questions and develop definitions based on original research. It's too bad we don't already have a good start on ] that list some of the definitions already in use by experts. I guess it's up to us Wikipedians without any expertise in this area to do original research and come up with fancy new jargon to use to describe these phenomena, otherwise, if I follow your logic, we will be sending people to gas chambers any minute.--] 19:08, 31 August 2005 (UTC)
]
::<font color=#004422>Thank you Commodore Sloat. I think you proved my point about some people not wanting this thing to move forward. ''Wo planen Sie, die Gaskammer zu installieren? '' '''--] 19:33, 31 August 2005 (UTC)'''</font>
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:::Uh-huh. You're the one proving Godwin's Law on a discussion about definitions. And you're the one proving your insincerity and bad faith by instead of responding to them. You only respond to the above after another user restored my comment. Why has your userid not yet been banned I wonder? I want this page to move forward, but without your "input", thank you.--] 20:47, 31 August 2005 (UTC)
== State Terrorism ==
::::<font color=#004422>I think you know as well as I why my userid hasn't been banned: people want a definition for terrorism and I'm helping to give them one. As for your userid—-someone who's entire agenda seems to be to vandalize, disrupt, war-edit, and revert good definitions that are in the process of getting better—-your guess is as good as mine. I've seen people subvert the article discussion process much less than you and get banned. I guess your status at Misplaced Pages is keeping you afloat. But prove me wrong, please. Show us how you can actually do something productive for this definition. I've only seen you destroy things so far. Is it possible for you to help us build? '''--] 21:40, 31 August 2005 (UTC)''' </font>
Anonymous removed my edit at the end of of definition of ''State Terrorism''
*My edit stated
*Seems to me this article is going to stay locked forever. Pity. The approach of "overwhelm the other editors with verbiage and cute fonts and smiley faces" doesn't strike me as very good way to achieve consensus. Neither does the approach of clearing entire talk pages and then setting oneself forward as the only reasonable disputant. Neither does throwing around language about "userids being banned" without actually doing anything to accomplish that end. --]] 22:07, 31 August 2005 (UTC)
<blockquote>
:*<font color=#004422>Thanks JP!! That contributed a lot to the definition. Is there anyone here besides me who has an interest in writing an introduction that conveys information? '''--] 22:19, 31 August 2005 (UTC)'''</font>
''However a state and its government has been established to defend the nation and enforce the law of the land by using violence, if needed. Therefore, every single state and government could be labeled with State terrorist label. So this definition is meaningless.''
::*I am totally disinterested in the content of the article; I am, instead, wearing my admin hat and monitoring the processes involved in creating and maintaining the article. Articles should not stay locked; and arguments should not be won or lost by attrition. I'm looking for opportunities to unlock the article; you are providing the opposite. --]] 22:27, 31 August 2005 (UTC)
</blockquote>
:::*<font color=#004422>I think you misunderstand the purpose of your admin hat. It is not for lording over ''lesser editors''. It is certainly not to be used to give you and your clan an advantage in editing articles. Your powers as admin are for the exclusive purpose of making definitions better. That is the only reason you or I or anyone else is here. '''--] 22:39, 31 August 2005 (UTC)'''</font>
::I repeat it. The state is created for the only purpose - to defend people and to ensure some kind of order and justice. In order to execute these functions it is authorised to use violence according the Law, when needed. (If one does not understand that, it is too early for him/her to read political articles. Not to say to write them.)
::::*Well, actually, no. First of all, Misplaced Pages isn't about "definitions"; this is an encyclopedia, not a dictionary. But that's neither here nor there. As an admin, my responsibilities certainly include those of any Misplaced Pages editor -- improving the content of Misplaced Pages. However, as an admin, they also include the responsibity of applying the decisions made by the community. That means I have to determine what those decisions are. Since Misplaced Pages works by consensus, I have to determine what the consensus is. --]] 05:26, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
:::::*<font color=#004422>I don't know how to break this to you, JP, but encyclopedias define words too. Good articles start out with a ], like a dictionary, for the introduction, adding ] and ] to the article main. You are also dead wrong about your alleged hierarchy of Misplaced Pages editors, but I'll just let you figure that one out for yourself. --] 14:32, 1 September 2005 (UTC) </font>
:::::*<font color=#004422>Just because I'm such a nice guy, I'll give you a clue as to why your behavior at Misplaced Pages is self-destructive. It comes from the father of my country, George Washington, in his farewell address, ''"All obstructions to the execution of the laws, all combinations and associations, under whatever plausible character, with the real design to direct, control, counteract, or awe the regular deliberation and action of the constituted authorities, are destructive of this fundamental principle, and of fatal tendency. They serve to organize faction, to give it an artificial and extraordinary force; to put, in the place of the delegated will of the nation the will of a party, often a small but artful and enterprising minority of the community; and, according to the alternate triumphs of different parties, to make the public administration the mirror of the ill-concerted and incongruous projects of faction, rather than the organ of consistent and wholesome plans digested by common counsels and modified by mutual interests. However combinations or associations of the above description may now and then answer popular ends, they are likely, in the course of time and things, to become potent engines, by which cunning, ambitious, and unprincipled men will be enabled to subvert the power of the people and to usurp for themselves the reins of government, destroying afterwards the very engines which have lifted them to unjust dominion."'' -GW '''''--] 15:35, 1 September 2005 (UTC)'''''</font>


::So, according the article's definition of State Terrorism, every state may be labeled as a ''state terrorist''. --] 03:17, 4 July 2006 (UTC)


*I received a message
::*No, there isn't. You're the only Wikipedian who wants to make any kind of a useful contribution. Thank goodness you're around. ] <sup><font color="Purple">]</font></sup> 22:23, August 31, 2005 (UTC)
<blockquote>
::I think you misunderstand the purpose of an encyclopedia, Zephram Stark. It is not the promulgation of original research (i.e.; stuff you made up). It is certainly not to be used to give you opportunities to play domination games and blither about "advantages" and "clans". Your job as an editor for the exclusive purpose of making an encyclopedia better for everyone, not for self-promotion, self-glorification, elevation of nonsense, and general trolling. Making an encyclopedia better for everyone is the only reason we are here: why '''you''' are here is an open question. --] | ] 00:32, September 1, 2005 (UTC)
''Misplaced Pages is an encyclopedia, and so its editors' opinions do not belong here. Please review our point of view and original research policies, so that you know what type of material can and cannot be included. Dylan 20:19, 2 July 2006 (UTC)''
</blockquote>


::It is not an editor's opinion, however this requires some middle school level of education. I believe that virtually every wikipedia reader has it. Meantime, it requires some logic. I believe that virtually every wikipedia reader is able to use it.
:::I'm glad you think your purpose is to make Misplaced Pages articles better. Could you give us a demonstration of your purpose right here with this article? '''''--] 14:32, 1 September 2005 (UTC)'''''


Finally, I am not happy with a war around obvious ideas. So I put a "Fact" request near the ''State Terrorism'' definition and I wait a definition by highly reliable, by Misplaced Pages standards, source.
::::Well, my existing contribution list should be sufficient proof for non-trolls, but for this article, I'd say removing the contamination of nonsensical original research qualifies as improvement. --] | ] 21:54, September 2, 2005 (UTC)
:I was the anon (I hadn't logged in), and I was also the one who left you that message. No one is arguing that you're ''wrong'', only that this is not the place to voice your opinion in that regard. Again, please read about ]. Using logic and reasoning, no matter how valid, doesn't belong on Misplaced Pages: by reasoning something like that out, you're coming to a new synthesis of information, which is squarely original research. However, what you ''can'' include is '''other peoples'''' analysis of that issue. If some political theorist or outside commentator has remarked that "state terrorism" is a meaningless term, then great -- cite it, and put it in the phrasing "Some people have argued that 'state terrorism' is meaningless." However, stating as ''fact'' "'state terrorism' is a meaningless term" is simply your own opinion, one with which not everyone would agree, and so it can't be included here. Regarding the <nowiki>{{fact}}</nowiki> tag you placed, that sort of issue might be better resolved at the ] article, since in this article, state terrorism is sort of an ancillary subject.--] 03:17, 4 July 2006 (UTC)
:Again, the point is ''not'' that your reasoning is faulty, only that this particular kind of material cannot be included in Misplaced Pages. ] 17:40, 3 July 2006 (UTC)


Well, let me ask a question.
=== Ground Rules ===
Suppose, Mary has 2 apples and Ann has 3 apples and everybody knows that. Or should know. Is it an original research to write that the girls have 5 apples?--] 03:17, 4 July 2006 (UTC)
Due to the controversial nature of this definition, I would like to propose some ground rules for editing the intro to terrorism:
:Yes, because if you can't cite an outside source that's already pointed that out, it doesn't belong here. Read ], and note at the bottom of each edit page that "Content...must be based on verifiable sources." ] 03:34, 4 July 2006 (UTC)
#I propose that we only make positive changes to the article—-things that make the article better
::Well, so could you clairify what should be verified
#I propose that we let everyone have a voice in deciding if it is better—-that we don't bad-mouth and block people for giving their opinion.
::# The fact that Mary has 2 apples and Ann has 3 apples (It is suggested that everybody knows that, or should know)
::# The fact that 2 apples and 3 apples is 5 apples (It is suggested that everybody knows that, or should know)
If you have any problem with these ground rules or would like to add some, please speak up now before we get started. '''--] 22:39, 31 August 2005 (UTC)'''
::# Other (please specify)
--] 12:10, 4 July 2006 (UTC)
:'''WE'''? Are you royalty, a newspaper editor, or suffer from tapeworm?
:::You cannot include "any new analysis or synthesis of published data," such as adding 2 and 3 together for yourself. This is clearly against ], as any other editor familiar with the policy will testify. You will find yourself getting into grey area ''very'' quickly if Misplaced Pages editors have to start making judgments about what people "should know." We re-produce information that has already been published, and nothing else. ] 15:09, 4 July 2006 (UTC)
]
:The first ground rule, really, should be that editors with a proven track record of unilaterally held tiny-minority opinions, bad-faith edits, nonsense-peddling, system gaming, and transparent sockpuppetry don't get to set the ground rules. The second ground rule should be that editors as described above should be ignored, and said editors should go get their own Geocities site instead of trying to borrow the well-earned authority of Misplaced Pages. And you have already given your opinion, and it has been universally rejected. Don't like it? Deal.
:If any of that was unclear, perhaps I could dress it up in multi-colored type or<font face="Comic, Comic Sans MS, Sand, Monospace"> garish display fonts</font>, because, after all, you seem to believe that dressing up your mostly content-free blather gives it some authority -- much like putting lipstick on a pig. --] | ] 00:32, September 1, 2005 (UTC)


Henry, you are wrong as a conceptual matter. Many states are violent, launch wars not in self-defense, etc. But violence does not equal terrorism. The definition of terrorism includes the violent targeting of civilians for a political purpose. Many states have sponsored terrorism. If you find sources showing states that committed acts consistent with this definition, then I might agree that they should be listed here. In general, since so much of the terrorism in the world is state terrorism, this section should be much LARGER than it is. --] 17:10, 5 July 2006 (UTC)
::Yawn''!!'' I grow tired of your attempts to convince others that you are somehow better than them. Let your contribution to this article speak for itself. '''''--] 14:04, 1 September 2005 (UTC)'''''


==Non-Combatants==
:::I'm only convinced I'm better than you, at least where actually contributing to an actual encyclopedia with actual facts is concerned. Not a high standard admittedly, given your contribution history, but I'll take it. --] | ] 21:54, September 2, 2005 (UTC)
The problem lies in defining who is a non-combatant. For example is a civilian police officer a civilian or a combatant? Is an off-duty police officer a civilian or a combatant? Is a member of the internal security service a civilian or a combatant? If an army, uses civilian infrastructure for observation (e.g. civilian traffic cameras) and the civilian cellular phone network for communications, are the civilians who maintain this infrastructure non-combatants?


:Don't know who wrote this (no signature!), but here's an idea: in October of 2000, when the USS Cole was attacked, the sailors aboard were not permitted to fire upon the rubber dinghy that approached them, filled with explosives. The result was that 17 sailors lost their lives. The reasoning: the ship had not been fired upon, and thus the people in the dinghy were considered non-combatants. Authority to fire has been extended to all water vessels failing to stop for US Naval vessels, when hailed via loudspeaker. Needless to say, we've learned our lesson in this regard. Non-combatants are those who are not actively engaged in combat, or who are trying to avoid combat altogether. It should be noted that it is sometimes difficult to determine who are and who are not non-combatants, and for this reason if there is a question, most people tend to err on the side of caution in this regard. Thus, if we're under attack from within the infrastructure, we would treat these civilians as combatants, and if any of them made any move that were considered threatening or sudden, our troops would likely not hesitate to shoot. However, if there is no reason to believe that the civilians are combatants, they are non-combatants. Kinda. This is the "quick and dirty" explanation, and should give kind of any idea. ] 16:33, 30 June 2006 (UTC)
::::<font color=#003311>Is your definition of improvement from the DoubleSpeak dictionary: Destruction is Improvement? When '''''I''''' say improvement, I'm talking about comparing the two articles, side by side, to see which is better. Here at Misplaced Pages, we do that by consensus. However, when we see an article locked, and everyone voting for one version blocked, we know that corruption has subverted consensus. '''''--] 16:41, 7 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


::I would like to add to this that rules of engagement usually state that men of military age (usually 15-50) are always suspect, especially if in groups; and women, children, and old men are usually not suspected. An armed civilian police officer, if engaged on the battlefield, would be considered a combatant if he did not immediately surrender. An unarmed police officer would probably not be considered a combatant, unless he was to be considered a possible spy, then he could be taken prisoner. The rules change when an area is being occupied by an army, then the rules of marshal law apply to the civilian population and the army becomes a military police force until redeployed. --] 18:37, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
:::::Zephram, if you're truly serious about improving the article, you can start by focusing on the content. Responding sarcastically to comments from five days ago is '''not''' progress. On a more positive note, I thought that one of your recent comments was a step in the right direction. It described what you want to see in the introduction and gave your opinion of what a great article is. Let's keep moving in that direction. ] | ] 16:50, 7 September 2005 (UTC)


:::The more interesting question (to me) around the Cole incident is whether the attack was terrorism. It was my job in a previous life to oversee publication of a compendium of worldwide reports on terrorist acts, which meant I had to decide whether an act of violence was to be considered terrorism. (The decisions had political implications, as you can imagine.) The definition we finally arrived at, which seemed to work, is pretty much what I added to the definition of terrorism here. The keys are INTENTIONALLY targeting violence against NON-COMBATANTS, the latter term needing much care and elucidation, as attempted in the terrorism entry. To the extent the sailors on the Cole were part of the effort against the terrorists, the terrorists' action was one of self-defense, undeclared war, unconventional war, etc, not terrorism. Heinous crimes such as beheading a captured SOLDIER with a knife or executing a dozen bound Iraqi POLICEMEN are not terrorism just because they are heinous or use certain methods.
::::::<font color=#003311>Is it okay if I hold you to the same standard? Pretending that another editor is your pet project whom you need to reform is '''not''' progress. On a more positive note,... ...uh... ...well... I can't seem to find anything that ''you've'' done to improve the article. '''''--] 17:04, 7 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


The definition leads us to conclusions some of us may be uncomfortable with. Hiroshima, the firebombing of Dresden, etc, were terrorist acts. We can plead that they were judged to be the lesser of two evils, that a calculation was made that they would in fact result in fewer deaths than the alternatives. But if we go down that road, people who intentionally blow up kindergartens can say that it is for the greater good as well. I feel strongly that we must clearly define terrorism as INTENTIONAL targeting of (what I will call here for the sake of brevity) "non-combatants." Only then will such statements as "Oh well, one man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter" be answerable. Only then can we isolate this activity and take coherent action against it. ]
:::::::My previous comment was some advice followed by a compliment. I honestly liked the direction you were heading in. I had hope that it was a start to this article being unprotected. Then you respond with an insult. Maybe we have different ideas of progress. ] | ] 17:22, 7 September 2005 (UTC)


== causes==
::::::::<font color=#003311>I'm quite sure that we do. There is a much bigger issue here than an article. '''Terrorism''''s non-definition is just one example of what can happen when some editors think they are the policemen of Misplaced Pages. Editing by consensus works to the extent that editors consider themselves equal to each other. When you adopt the notion of punishment, the system falls apart. Obviously, if all editors are equal, one editor can't possibly have the right to punish another. As a consequence, we start seeing people argue that some editors are more than equal, that their opinion counts for more because they have administration powers or a long list of edits. That certainly is a valid argument for a proposed hierarchy, but a hierarchy loses the power of consensus, and leaves the lowly editors without choice or real purpose.</font>
I would love to know why you think Seperatism and Democracy are legitimate explanations of the cause of terrorism. ] 02:11, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
::::::::<font color=#003311>What happens here at '''terrorism''' will set a precedent for Misplaced Pages in the future. If ] wins, I see Misplaced Pages largely replacing all other definitional sources. Conversely, if ''oppression'' wins here, I don't see any way for Misplaced Pages to be taken seriously. --] 17:41, 7 September 2005 (UTC) </font>


I'm thinking that you misinterpreted something, as I don't understand where you're getting this from (EDIT: I'm agreeing with Headsock, for what it's worth... these sections don't make a lot of sense). Also, the claim that "the countries with the least amount of terrorism tend to be the most democratic" seems to not be NPOV, as this is a subjective statement on its face. ] 15:34, 30 June 2006 (UTC)
== Discussion on Voting Methods for Definition ==
:'''Objection''': There hasn't been any discussion of voting on a definition by breaking it down like this. I prefer if someone propose a modified paragraph that we can tinker with. This is too artificial; the whole is not a mere sum of its parts. I don't want to further stall changes by asking for a vote on the vote, but can we at least discuss whether this sort of multipartite voting is useful in any way? (Esp. given the announcement that votes will freely change; when can we consider this vote finalized?)--] 01:47, 1 September 2005 (UTC)


== major edits ==
::I see your point, that the combo of criteria is important, not just the individual criteria. However, I view this first vote like a "primary", where we will hopefully eliminate the least popular criteria. Once we have a general consensus, we can do a "pass/fail" vote on that combo. If that fails, we will have to consider some other mechanism, or just leave the definition alone. I realize that this method isn't perfect, but it's better than nothing, which is what we have now. If you would like to create a new section with an alternate voting method, please do. I would be glad to vote there. PS: Since your discussion isn't a vote, but rather a discussion of voting methods, I moved it to a section with that name. ] 02:13, 1 September 2005 (UTC)


Please note that all of the major additions and deletions to the entry I have been making are part of a larger attempt to restructure the article to make it more readable, consistent, accurate, readable, and shorter. In essence, I'm trying to make it more like an encyclopedia article and less like a forum where everyone constantly adds their two cents over and over again on a topic.] 00:17, 22 June 2006 (UTC)
::As for when to close the vote, I added another section where we can vote on that. Unless you want a vote on the method of voting on when to close the vote, LOL. ] 02:58, 1 September 2005 (UTC)


== Goodbye to lone wolves ==
:I agree with csloat. A vote on the definition will not solve our problem, because our problem is not the definition. Our problem is a single editor who mindlessly persists in claiming that there is something deeply and fundamentally wrong with the article, and seems incapable of understanding that nobody agrees with him.


This is my reasoning for my most recent edit of the lone wolf section, deleting the first two paragraphs. I believe the only function such a sectio has in our entry on Terrorism is to dispel the myth than individual fanatics acting alone should be considered in the same breath as terrorist organizations. The causes, effects, and means of handling lone wolf attacks are entirely different than terrorist acts perpetrated by groups. As I mentioned in the article, Boehlert's discussion of terrorism vs. hate crimes reflects how the ] of an attack determines it's classification. To understand and prevent terrorism, it is vital that we deconstruct both kinds of attacks to see what causes them and what effectively counteracts them. ] 18:33, 6 June 2006 (UTC)
StuRat, what do you think of the article as it is now? &ndash; ]\<sup><font color="gray">]</font></sup> 17:18, 1 September 2005 (UTC)


:Even so, wouldn't it make sense to include this information on a section about Lone Wolves, as they are engaging in terrorist activity? ] 15:48, 30 June 2006 (UTC)
:It's not bad, but seems to "try to be all things to all people". I would like to get it down to a precise definition, not all of this "may or may not" language. The EU apparently gave up defining it and just listed specific acts, for example. After a precise def, all the other alternate defs could also be included. ] 20:36, 1 September 2005 (UTC)


== section on "psychological factors" ==
::The "may or may not" and "usually" language is poor and was introduced relatively recently. What do you think of ?


If my edits on the "causes of terrorism" section are acceptable, i propose deleting the psychological factors, section, as it is rendered largely irrelevant given the sociological understanding of terrorism. ] 21:08, 1 June 2006 (UTC) <---what does "UTC" mean?
::Why not just propose something better, as is done on every other page I've ever participated in. I've never seen a sentence-by-sentence vote on anything, and then a vote on how to vote? It's kind of surreal. I understand the need to vote on things occasionally when there are disputes, but most things such as this can be more easily discussed in context, arriving at a collectively edited paragraph through consensus rather than by having people check boxes on a list.
::A serious discussion about this had begun but it was immediately disrupted by Mr. Stark. Unfortunately the page will likely remain locked as long as that user continues his antics. I have posted a note on his page imploring him to stop, and I see another user has as well. I think there is a strong case for ] or even disciplinary action if he continues the disruption. But in any case, while the page is locked, we can only discuss and tinker with the definition we have, or discuss alternate definitions. We can even take this checklist vote if people think it will be useful, but I would rather hear what specifically is wrong with the current definition and discuss alternatives. I also don't understand why we need to reinvent ] in this case.
::Generally when I have seen votes on wikipedia they are begun after a long discussion and dispute over a specific item where there are people on different sides. The vote is generally proposed by someone who has been active in the discussion. I haven't been here that long but this is the first time I have ever seen an editor come to a discussion and demand a vote without having participated in the actual discussion leading up to a vote. I'm not trying to say this is illegitimate; just that it is unusual in my experience, and it seems like an odd way to go about doing things. But again, none of this matters while we have the other problem of a user disrupting the page. The page is likely to remain locked until there is no risk of Mr. Stark starting another edit war trying to coin new words.--] 21:32, 1 September 2005 (UTC)


I support your proposal for deleting the section on psychological factors, or at least consider a serious revision of it. While it may hold true for some cases, terrorists are typically not "loners," but involved in vast social networks, or groups, that encourage and support their belonging to such orginizations.
:::I didn't "demand" a vote, I proposed one. I just thought somebody neutral (not part of the apparently vicious arguments here) would be in the best position to get things back on track to an actual discussion of proposed changes to the page. If, on the other hand, everyone voted that no change was needed, then there is no longer a need for any discussion at all. Either way, this would hopefully end, or at least, reduce, the bickering. BTW, I have been here before, mostly just reading the discussions, but also made proposals in sections 22 and 23 of archive 5, on August 9-10. I was planning on waiting until the tempers settled down before participating again, but it was looking like that would never happen. As for the definition I would like, you can figure it out by the items I said I support in the voting list, but I will also combine it in paragraph form here, as you like:


This was my rational for essentially deleting the section on psychological factors, and just briefly discussing why such factors do not belong in an article on terrorism. I would love to hear any contrary argument there might be, in light of evidence provided on the social origins and explanation for terror, for why a discussion of psychological factors belongs here. ] 18:56, 6 June 2006 (UTC)
:::'''Terrorism is life-threatening violence directed against civilians, perpetrated by a non-state entity (or covertly by a nation) and not contained within the geographic region it is designed to "liberate" (from the POV of the perpetrators).'''


:I would like to see a section on psychological factors that assist in the furthering of terroristic aims, such as the grooming of psychological traits that promote any or all of the five stages theory, as well as recruitment and other activities that require a focus on the psychological makeup of the individuals who are members of such organizations. There are roughly 5% of any society (according to the American Psychiatric Association) who are active dissidents, but very few (if any) of these ever engage in terrorist activity. Rather, terrorists (from my own observation and nothing more) tend to come from a gradual recruitment process that builds on things like poor education, political hatred, susceptibility to suggestion, and a host of other traits. This gradual process would then be necessary for inclusion if it can be substantiated (which I cannot do, as it would be considered OR and thus unsuitable for an encyclopedic entry). --] 19:16, 30 June 2006 (UTC)
:::] 22:26, 1 September 2005 (UTC)


== Votes on Definition == == terrorism in the modern sense ==


Re: edit by Peter McConaughey - edit summary was "History - POV removed. Who says that "terrorism in the modern sense seems to have emerged around the mid 19th-century" and "it does not correspond to the modern use of the term state terrorism?"" I don't know about the "state terrorism" line but the sentence about terrorism in the modern sense -- that is a generally established notion in counterterrorism literature, though there is some dispute over how clear a line can be drawn between premodern and modern terrorism. But the key factor is the invention of dynamite in 1866, after which a new form of terrorism appears that is characterized as the individual or small group attacking a larger group rather than mob action against an individual or group of individuals (e.g. KKK or Sons of Liberty). Many have written about this but a good touchstone is David C. Rapaport's typology of modern terrorism.--] 01:51, 10 December 2005 (UTC)
OK, let's not argue, let's vote on the definition. I listed my votes, please add your own, with brief reasons only (list long discussions as separate sections and refer us there, please). Also, feel free to change your votes at any time, as I will:


:Perhaps we should say that, ''according to David C. Rapaport's typology of modern terrorism, terrorism in the modern sense seems to have emerged around the mid 19th-century.''
'''Terrorism criteria currently in the article:'''
:I don't think that Rapaport's "modern terrorism" is indicative of all "terrorism" currently in use. Until we have another word to use in the description of ''state terrorism'', for instance, we still need the strict sense of "terrorism" in order to communicate the original idea of a system of terror. --] 17:42, 12 December 2005 (UTC)
* A terrorist act is generally unlawful.
:*<font color=#004422>'''Both Support and Oppose'''. Almost all official government definitions of terrorism include that it is unlawful. When referencing documents such as the ], it is correct to say that they define terrorism as unlawful. Also, all propaganda used to support government definitions of terrorism would inherently include the constraint that it be unlawful, otherwise, the governments themselves would be guilty of terrorism. Other than the definitions created by governments, or used pejoratively for government propaganda, no use of the term has ever included the constraint that it necessarily be unlawful. Obviously, we need a separate government propaganda definition of terrorism that includes this usage. '''''--] 18:32, 2 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>
:*'''Oppose'''. This term is too vague to be useful, as there are laws against just about anything, somewhere. ] 01:27, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
:*'''Oppose'''. Unlawful by whose laws? ] 14:26, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
* It is violent and may be life threatening.
:*'''Support'''. I would reword it as simply "It is life threatening." This excludes terrorism against property, such as by ], which is my intent. ] 01:27, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
:*'''Oppose'''. I agree with StuRat, but as I see it that means I oppose the stated version. I would change it to his suggestion. ] 14:26, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
:*<font color=#004422>'''Both Support and Oppose'''. Almost all official government definitions of terrorism include that it is violent and/or life-threatening. When referencing documents such as the ], it is correct to say that they define terrorism as life threatening. Therefore, all propaganda used to support government definitions of terrorism would inherently include the constraint that it be life threatening. Other than the definitions created by governments, or used pejoratively for government propaganda, very little use of the term has ever included the constraint that it necessarily be violent or life threatening. For example, sanctions that kill hundreds of thousands of young children are not necessarily violent by themselves, but they are often referred to as acts of terrorism because the seek to coerce through the systematic use of terror. Obviously, we need separate definitions of terrorism to delineate these distinctions. '''''--] 18:32, 2 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


::Do you know of other scholars who disagree with this assessment? Rapaport is the one who invented this typology, and it has been criticized for being too rigid, but the general distinction between modern and premodern terrorism is pretty common in counterterrorism scholarship. "State terrorism" is acknowledged by such scholars but it is called "state terrorism," not just "terrorism." I just think it would be appropriate to make clear distinctions that are generally acknowledged in the field.--] 18:26, 12 December 2005 (UTC)
* The violence is politically motivated.
:*'''Oppose'''. It may also be religiously or ethnically motivated. ] 01:27, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
:*'''Oppose'''. Saying that terrorism is politically motivated is an attempt to cheapen those causes with which we do not agree. ] 14:26, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
:*<font color=#004422>'''Both Support and Oppose'''. Government definitions of terrorism like the ] do not include the stipulation that the act be politically motivated. Since the ] is widely used to investigate and prosecute ], it certainly is not constraining itself to only politically motivated investigation of future crimes. All future crimes can be investigated under the ] and its enforcement amendment, the ]. Other than the government, however, hardly anyone uses the term '''terrorism''' to mean anything other than politically motivated attacks. Obviously, common usage and government usage of the term are polar opposites in many respects. '''''--] 18:32, 2 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


:::I agree that it is good to make the distinctions, but when they are disputed, even among non-scholars, they should be cited. There is nothing wrong with stating '''''who''''' makes such assertions. When the source is strong, citing it adds credence to the argument. When the source is weak, citing it maintains NPOV. Either way, sources should be cited if there is any chance that the reader would question the conclusion. --] 18:36, 12 December 2005 (UTC)
* The direct targets are civilians.
Hello this is corey i live in iowa!!!
:*'''Support'''. This also includes actions by many countries during WW2, so this criterion is "necessary, but not sufficient" for us to call it terrorism. ] 01:27, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
:*'''Support'''. This means that attacks on military targets, such as the Pentagon on 9/11, or a soldier throwing a grenade into a tent full of officers, would not be considered terrorism, correct? ] 14:26, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
:*<font color=#004422>'''Both Support and Oppose'''. Since the government declared that 9/11 was an act of terrorism, people have been trying to figure out a definition of terrorism that fits the example. Obviously the definition we used for the past 200 years, since it was coined, wouldn't work, so we tried to come up with a new one. The stipulation that it necessarily targets civilians was one of the more pathetic attempts at redefining '''terrorism''', but it seemed to stick since the President of the United States supported it. Obviously, we need to separate newer definitions of terrorism from the ones we used before 9/11. '''''--] 18:32, 2 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


Terrorism has been a part of man's history dating to the dawn of time. War is often confused with terrorism: They are definitely not the same. Attila the Hun: Was that war? No, that was terrorism of people in the territory he wished to claim. Hitler? No, that wasn't war either (against the Jews): That was terrorism against a religious group (no, I am not Jewish). Pol Pot and Lon Nol in Thailand: Terrorism against their own people. In the modern world though, it appears to me that all (90%+) terrorism is by Islamic people that I feel are trying to impose Islamic rule on the world. I hold no particular religious belief, but the possibility of a holy war instigated by radical Muslims is a distinct threat to the Western world. Indonesia, London, the USA, we're all targets of zealots who feel that their way is the only way. This has no place in the current, modern world, but is a fact nonetheless. I am most definitely not a prejudiced person, and I believe that all people of faith have the right to observe their own religion. But the undeniable fact that most all of the "terrorist attacks" occur at the hands of Islamic radicals makes me feel that this should be the target of US action. For the record, I am against the US occupation of Iraq and the Bush Administration's evedropping policies. Rant over...... <small>&mdash;''The preceding ] comment was added by'' ] (]&nbsp;&bull;&nbsp;]) 22:17, 28 January 2006.</small><!--Inserted with Template:Unsigned-->
* The direct targets may not be the main targets.
:*'''Oppose'''. Too vague. ] 01:27, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
:*'''Oppose'''. Direct targets are themselves ''part'' of the main target, or the acts would be pointless. In other words, American airplane passengers are all supporters of the American government, however indirectly. ] 14:26, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
:*<font color=#004422>'''Hu?''' '''''--] 18:32, 2 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


Hi Corey, i meant to reply to your rant earlier but for some reason this page was protected, am a muslim and on behalf of all muslims i would like you to know that we don't give a shit about what you & your people believe in, you can worship Jesus, jehovah,allah, buddha.. the only nation trying to impose its beliefs on others is the USA, when your countries troops gets attacked in iraq or yemen or saudi, its not because they are christians, its because they are occupying others lands. as for ''(90%+) terrorism is by Islamic people''allow me to justify that, when a group of usa soldiers rape a 13 year old girl in iraq, kills her along with her family & try to accuse the resistance in iraq, this is not considered as terrorism, had the iraqi resistance been accused of it, this would have been considered as terrorism, so you see, any crime done by americans, israelis, or their allies is never considered as terrorism, hence you won't find an american terrorist even if he butchered a whole country, so sweatheart, please stop believing the lies you hear from your media & your monkey-face president, cause your people's ignorance is causing the death of my people.
* The main targets may be one or more nation-states, governments, or societies; or a political, ethnic, or religious group, or an industry or commercial operation, within those societies.
:*'''Oppose'''. Too vague. ] 01:27, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
== "terrorism expert"? ==
:*'''Oppose'''. That covers pretty much every form of organization in the world. ] 14:26, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
:*<font color=#004422>'''Do you really need to ask?''' This is getting silly. That obviously doesn't convey any information. '''''--] 18:32, 2 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


RonCram added a theory by Christopher L. Brown that claims that al Qaeda attacks after releasing two videos. Someone should add that this theory has been rejected by other terrorism experts and that the CIA refused to even comment on it (that's from the article Ron links). Mr. Brown is not a "terrorism expert," regardless of what the neocon website CNS News says. Interestingly the site only says he works for a Washington-based think tank but refuses to tell us which one. As far as I can tell, this guy's only publication is about British theories of human rights in the 18th century. I've never seen his name listed on any list of essays by terrorism experts and I've never seen his name on the program for any conferences about terrorism. A yields 112 hits for both "Christopher L. Brown" and "terrorism" - very few of which actually refer to this person and even fewer (I can't find a single one!) that refer to his theories on terrorism. Compare a similar search for for example. I don't think it's a good idea for wikipedia to hilight every crackpot theorist as an "expert" just because some right wing website calls him that.--] 17:59, 11 January 2006 (UTC)
* The objective is usually to intimidate the main targets.
:*'''Oppose'''. This is also an objective in politics, traditional warfare, etc. ] 01:27, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
:*'''Oppose'''. I think I could support this if it was changed to something like "...to intimidate the civilian public and in turn weaken popular support...". ] 14:26, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
:*<font color=#004422>'''Support'''. All usage of the term seems to include this constraint. ] specifically targets an opponent's ability to fight, not his will to fight. Terrorism is the opposite of ]. '''''--] 18:32, 2 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


:Most of the sites that I can find that refer to Mr. Brown's theories on terrorism tend to be very much on the crackpot side of things, and spin out conspiracy theories that don't have a solid basis in fact, or which distort facts in a manner consistent with propagandism. The term "expert" however is a subjective one, as anyone can publish a book that says anything they want to, as long as it would sell. Sales are very much a part of who is and is not considered an "expert" in any field, and thus subjectivity in the academic world must be attributed for anyone without academic credentials. Take Kerry Boren, for example, who has multiple books published on various historical topics: very much an "expert" in the classic sense, but most of his work is theoretical at best. I doubt very much that he's personally surveyed most of the subjects he writes about, though his writing reflects a realism that makes an otherwise dry subject very appealing. I don't think he has much in the way of academic credit, however, and is simply a "well-selling" author. This distinction is perhaps the most important when determining who can or cannot be considered an expert. I'm afraid that Mr. Brown might qualify, despite the fact that any theory advanced would be automatically suspect by anyone who is well-studied in the area.] 15:46, 30 June 2006 (UTC)


== Trolling... ==
* There may or may not be a claim of responsibility.
:*'''Oppose'''. Doesn't help to define it. ] 01:27, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
:*'''Oppose'''. "Tomorrow it may or may not rain." ] 14:26, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
:*<font color=#004422>'''Duh'''. This is the reverted definition that the Wikistapo gang wanted to start with? '''''--] 18:32, 2 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


...I usually refrain myself from editing articles. As such, I will leave it to the rest of the community to deal with this line (at the end of Examples of Major Incidents):
* The perpetrator is usually a non-state entity. Where there is direct state involvement, the state actors are clandestine or semi-clandestine. See State terrorism.
:*'''Support'''. I feel it is critical to distinguish between actions by governments, which can be found and defeated by traditional warfare, and secret organizations, which can't. ] 01:27, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
:*'''Abstain'''. I disagree with the current notion of "State Terrorism", but we have enough on our plate right now, so I will simply not vote on this one. ] 14:26, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
:*<font color=#004422>'''Oppose''' Where did this one come from? I've never read any definition or heard anyone use terrorism in this context. We can't create definitions for the purpose of precluding the possibility that the authors might be implicated in the definition. '''''--] 18:32, 2 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


"Terrorist are cowards that can't fight a real fight and win. They have to make up for their small penises by blowing up innocent people."
'''Proposed terrorism criteria to add to the article (feel free to add your own here):'''


* It is not contained within the geographic area it is designed to "liberate". This criterion only applies to "wars of liberation" (from the point of view of the perpetrators). The actions of al-Queada in the original war in Afghanistan against the Soviets would not be considered terrorism, using this criterion, as these were largely contained within Afghanistan. The actions by Chechen militants against the Russian Federation would be considered terrorism, however, due to the numerous attacks outside Chechnya. ] 01:27, 1 September 2005 (UTC)


You might want to try Chris Brown or Christopher Brown and terrorism before you make such broad stroked statements
:* '''Support.''' ] 01:27, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
:*<font color=#004422>'''Oppose''' Are we creating definitions for the purpose of showing how The '''''Soviet Union v. al-Qaeda''''' is the different than '''''The United States v. al-Qaeda'''''? '''''--] 18:32, 2 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


Please sign your comments with four tildes. ] 10:20, 27 May 2006 (UTC)
== When to close the vote on definition ==


: i'm quite sure there are quite a few terrorists who have NO penises. as in, they are women. ] 07:23, 26 July 2006 (UTC)
This is the minimum number of votes on each criterion to "close the vote". At that time I propose a "pass/fail" vote on the combo of criteria which received a majority vote. If that passes, we can then request that an admin make the change:


== according to==
* 5 votes


According to Mark Juergensmeyer, ''Terror in the Mind of God,'' the definition of the latin word: ''Terrre'' is defined as "to cause to tremble," not "to frighten."
* 10 votes


* 15 votes


== Terrorism definition... ==
* 20 votes
:*'''Support.''' ] 02:46, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
:*'''Support.''' ] 14:04, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
* 25 votes


Although I feel it is important to know the history of terrrorism, I do not feel that it necessarily belongs in the "defintion" section of the article. The "different definition" section of this article has been broken down into legal/state definitions. This rules out opinions of the definition of terrorism and also makes the article much easier to read.
* 30 votes


It might be nice to put the word in perspective with some examples of how its been used historically. If you want to take what I added and put it a tier down thats fine. We also need to deal with the fact that we now have a Democratically elected terrorist state in Hamas, that has been recognized by President Bush, albeit with no great pleasure, but still some redefinition of terms is required.
* 35 votes
] 23:02, 26 January 2006 (UTC)


:That'll be tough since one man's terrorist is often another man's freedom fighter. The definition might depend on which side you're on. The British probably considered George Washington to be a terrorist.] 18:40, 2 February 2006 (UTC)
* 40 votes


The United Nations has proposed at least one definition for terrorism and this may be contrasted with that of, say, the United States or other countries. Readers may infer the self interest inherent in each definition if they wish, or the writer can point it out to them. Either way, defining it is a central issue/bone of contention, politically. But that shouldn't stop an encyclopedia from showing the diverse range of definitions out there. RM
* 45 votes


I think this is the crux of the problem with the word terrorist: there is no set criteria that makes a group a 'terrorist organisation.' It is an entirely subjective label applied by states to groups that oppose them by violent means. There is no real difference in the end result if a bomb is detonated by a 'terrorist' group, a state security service or a country's military.] 13:17, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
* 50 votes
::support--] 17:31, 2 September 2005 (UTC)


Just had a thought: what is we included a definition section that stated: ''Although widely disputed by many governmental and civil organizations; for the purposes of this article, terrorism will be defined as <blah>.'' This should remove any need for disputing which definitions are valid or not, and the state-related definitions can be dropped into the "Other Definitions" section. (Oh, and, for what it's worth, Mormons are on the list of cults around the world, but most Mormons consider their beliefs a religion with a solid foundation... it's a matter of whom you ask, and the same holds true of terrorism, terrorist organizations, and terrorist activities just as it does for cults and religions.) --] 18:32, 30 June 2006 (UTC)
* 60 votes


== "Recruitment" section ==
* 70 votes


<blockquote>Tactics vary between groups. Islamist terrorist groups use the promise of a "martyr's" reward in the afterlife. In addition, Saddam Hussein's Iraq was known to offer money to Palestinian martyrs' surviving family members after a successful attack.</blockquote>
* 80 votes


I reworded these two sentences, but that doesn't change them still being crap. I don't know much about terrorist recruitment, but I doubt that the promise of 70 afterlife virgins is ''the'' Islamist terrorist recruitment method. The gratuitous mention of Saddam Hussein while ignoring Iran, by far the largest state sponsor of terror, again reflects the continuing Western obsession with Iraq after a U.S. PR blitz during the 1991 Gulf War. There's no mention of non-Middle Eastern terrorism, nor is there any detail or good information given about much of anything, really. I've moved the section from the article to here so that either it can be improved, or at least be out of the article. --] 04:53, 30 January 2006 (UTC)
* 90 percent agreement of those actively involved in improving the introduction.
:*<font color=#004422>'''Support''' --] 17:21, 2 September 2005 (UTC) </font>


:Recruitment for any organization still has a very common foundation. Criminal and terrorist organizations still require some measure of "proof" in order to be able to believe that someone is not an infiltrator. Additionally, the higher up in the organization an individual goes, the greater the proof that is required (in well-organized groups). The exception to this is in cellular organizations (al-Qaeda falls into this category) where there is only a single central authority with wide distribution of information--information which can be smuggled through a variety of different means. Cutting off the head of such an organization might certainly cause a splintering, but the desired effect of causing the organization to crumble from within would effectively result in two organizations with different aims (in effect two sets of cellular groups), called the "Hydra Effect" after the serpent of Greek mythology. Recruitment, therefore, is a careful screening process resulting in far fewer numbers than anyone would give credit to believe, with regard to organizational leadership. It is, in fact, very difficult to gauge how many are in an organization when the organization itself doesn't keep any kind of record about this, and basically anyone who upholds its aims and which claims an alliance in such an organization cannot be verified. However, in organizations that do keep tabs on their members (even if only verbal tabs), contact networks can usually verify and authenticate the activities of its members with a fair amount of speed. In addition, higher levels typically know more about an organization's operation, whereas foot solders tend to simply follow orders until their superiors need replacing. And a foot soldier typically cannot be distinguished from a superior simply by sight. Thus, terrorist organizations are free to recruit from within other organizations, and even from within prisons, schools, etc., without the recruit ever knowing that they'd been recruited. Terrorist recruitment follows an ideal that is very different from other criminal organizations in this respect, and operates more like an intelligence agency. --] 19:16, 30 June 2006 (UTC)
*100 votes


==al Qaeda==
*110 votes


Bin Laden was, though, a product of a monumental miscalculation by western security agencies. Throughout the 80s he was armed by the CIA and funded by the Saudis to wage jihad against the Russian occupation of Afghanistan. , was originally the computer file of the thousands of mujahideen who were recruited and trained with help from the CIA to defeat the Russians.] 01:45, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
*120 votes


: The fact that bin Laden was being armed in the 80s by the CIA is in dispute. Yes, the CIA and the Saudi's (among others) were pouring money into Afghanistan, but it was going to the Afghan mujahidin that were fighting the Russians, not bin Laden. The other thing is that the CIA funneled its funds through the Pakistani Inter-Services-Intelligence Directorate (ISID). This meant that there was no direct contact between the CIA and mujahidin. You also have to remember that during the 80s bin Laden was not the guy in charge of the recruitment and training of the Muslim volunteers, plus, Al Qaeda never even existed at that time. The man in charge was bin Laden's mentor, Abdullah Azzam, who was responsible for the formation of Mektab al Khidimat (MAK or Afghan Services Bureau), the organization bringing the volunteers into Afghanistan. It wasn't until the late-80s that al Qaeda was formed. Azzam was assassinated by a car bomb in mid-89 by unknown persons. Finally, bin Laden could tap into his fortune that was reported to be in the millions. At the sametime he was also receiving a lot of money from various people throughout the Middle East. These donations brought in further millions. ] 18:52, 17 MAr 2006 (UTC)
*130 votes


::Your disputation that bin Laden was "armed" by the CIA is kind of a misconstrual of the facts. The truth is that bin Laden was a part of the mujahidin in Afghanistan. The dispute that bin Laden has been heard saying (if memory serves) is that the Afghans were abandoned when the USSR pulled out, and then we (Americans) interfered with the internal order of things in the Middle East by invading Saudi Arabia (1990-91, in response to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait), an action that bin Laden opposed because of our treatment of Afghanistan. We as a country did indeed train and arm bin Laden through the CIA in the 1980's, though this was not a direct action and the monies did not go directly into his pocket. The claim should be that we trained and armed him inadvertently, by training the people he was involved with at the time. ] 16:06, 30 June 2006 (UTC)
*140 votes


==terrorist surveillance==
*150 votes


*160 votes


Few terrorist attacks are executed without pre-operational surveillance of the desired target. Surveillance is done to determine target suitability, security and noticeable patterns in the targets movements, physical security, and the surrounding environment.
*170 votes


Key activities suggesting possible terrorist surveillance is in progress may include:
*180 votes


Foot surveillance involving 2-3 individuals working together.
*190 votes


Mobile surveillance using bicycles, scooters, motorcycles, sport-utility vehicles, cars, trucks, boats or small aircraft.
*200 votes


Persons or vehicles being seen in the same location on multiple occasions; persons sitting in a parked car for an extended period of time.
=== Outline ===
<font color=#004422>The best articles I've seen at Misplaced Pages start with a general and widely accepted definition and work toward the specific and more controversial offshoots and implications of it. '''''All''''' of the things we are voting upon above are used in some context of the word, but in every instance '''terrorism''' means something along the lines of the ] definition that Smyth suggested: "a policy intended to strike with terror those against whom it is adopted; the employment of methods of intimidation; the fact of terrorizing or condition of being terrorized." Since this definition encompasses every usage of '''terrorism''', it, or something like it, should come first. After that, each of the things we are voting upon should be listed in the context in which they are used. For example, a terrorist act is necessarily unlawful when defined by a government (since they obvious don't want to include themselves in the definition). Instead of deciding whether or not to include the constraint, we should say what context makes each constraint relevant. '''''--] 03:33, 1 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


Persons not fitting into the surrounding environment, such as wearing improper attire for the location, or persons drawing pictures or taking notes in an area not normally of interest to a tourist.
:I thought one of the principles of a definition was that it shouldn't use any form of the word in the def. If you don't know what "terrorism" is, then will you know what "terror" or "terrorize" means ? Their def seems so broad it would even apply to a schoolyard bully. ] 05:16, 1 September 2005 (UTC)


Persons using possible ruses to cover their activities, such as taking on a disguise as a beggar, demonstrator, shoe shiner, fruit or food vendor, street sweeper, or a newspaper or flower vendor not previously recognized in the area.
::I agree that using "terror" in the definition of "terrorism" is weak. I greatly preferred one of the OED's other definitions that was there for a while, but Zephram changed it to this one. &ndash; ]\<sup><font color="gray">]</font></sup> 06:42, 2 September 2005 (UTC)


Persons videotaping or photographing security cameras or guard locations. Unusual or prolonged interest in security measures or personnel, entry points and access controls, or perimeter barriers such as fences or walls.
::<font color=#004422>Not using any form of the word is a high priority in creating a definition. It is a priority that almost all dictionaries and encyclopedias '''''do not''''' follow in relationship to this term. If we look at the underlying reasons for making this a priority, we can see why.</font>
::<font color=#004422>The purpose in writing a definition is to help the term more efficiently convey information. To do this, a beneficial definition must be:</font>
::*<font color=#004422>in accordance with popular usage</font>
::*<font color=#004422>concise and objective</font>
::*<font color=#004422>consistent with facts independently provable via the scientific method</font>
::<font color=#004422>Using a form of the word being defined generally goes against the stipulation that a definition be concise and objective. Objectivity, however, must be weighed against considerations of popular usage and truth. In the definition of a panacean word like '''''terrorism''''', '''''terror''''' is one of very few things that all definitions have in common. Finding a unifying point for such a far-reaching definition is an essential starting point for the article. '''''--] 13:54, 1 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


An increase in anonymous threats followed by individuals noticeably observing security reaction drills or procedures. Questioning of security or facility personnel by an individual(s) that appears benign.] 01:45, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
:::: I still oppose use of that def, Zeph, they just "weaseled out" of defining it, IMO, because it was too much work. ] 20:49, 1 September 2005 (UTC)


:(I thought I'd posted this earlier, but apparently I must have closed the window before hitting Save Page).
:::::<font color=#004422>How about we start out with "Terrorism is the systematic use of intimidation for the purpose of coercion" and expand from there? '''''--] 21:35, 1 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>
:Few terrorist attacks are committed without getting dressed in the morning, but getting dressed in the morning is not a terrorist attack. Surveillance aids many terrorist attacks, but surveillance itself isn't a terrorist attack, and it doesn't make any sense to list it as such. I've edited some of your additions and left others as they are. --] 22:17, 10 February 2006 (UTC)


::Are you a terrorist? Do you know any terrorists? If not how would you know?] 16:49, 12 February 2006 (UTC)
::: I've been watching this page with interest, and it's nice to see someone else actually come in and attempt constructive dialogue, StuRat. Thumbs up. --] 14:19, 1 September 2005 (UTC)


::Posted in anonymity... bah. I'd respond to that last post, but it's just silly. For the real post: Mr. Billion, I'd like to say that your logic is sound, though I have to say that surveillance itself is an activity that most people don't engage in, and thus it is a good indicator as to whom to watch when you discover surveillance. It also matters ''what'' you're surveilling, and in what quantities. For example, several Middle Eastern nationals were found to be in possession of detailed surveillance of the Panama Canal, which has for years been said to be a potential target for terrorist activities. The surveillance was not itself a terrorist act, but in the wrong hands it could have led to successful placement of improvised explosive devices, attacks on ships, and potentially hundreds of lives lost, not to mention a loss in international revenues due to increased turnaround times for trade on perishable goods. The fact that surveillance activities are counted in terrorist precursor activities is a very real idea, though I believe extra care should be taken to avoid the observing of security reaction drills by those who are unauthorized to do so. Just my two cents. ] 16:19, 30 June 2006 (UTC)
::::Thanks. Unfortunately, nobody seems to be willing to vote the way I proposed or to propose a new way to vote, so I suppose I won't be able to help after all. Sigh. ] 20:49, 1 September 2005 (UTC)


==Al-Qaeda means "the base," not "the list"==
:::::<font color=#004422>The Wikestapo gang isn't going to vote because they don't care about a good definition. Everyone else is too scared to go up against the Wikestapo gang—-even when they use anonymous IPs, they still get blocked. That just leaves you and I (and EKBK if he wants to help). With only two of us, we hardly need to vote. Let's just talk it through and ignore anyone who isn't here to help. '''''--] 21:26, 1 September 2005 (UTC) ''''' </font>
The meaning of the phrase has been thoroughly discussed on the ] article. --] 17:52, 10 February 2006 (UTC)


Its silly for someone who doesn't speak arabic to make statements like that.
::::::Even if we were in total agreement, a consensus of 2 would never persuade an admin to unlock the page and/or make the changes we request. We need '''EVERYONE''' here to work together, and calling them NAZIs isn't going to get that to happen. Please let's all tone down the dialog.] 22:33, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
Take a look at the triliteral semitic roots.(qda)
AlQaeda


means ENTRY: qd.
:::::::<font color=#004422>All I want to do is create a great definition. When I say that Jayjg's buddies aren't here to further that cause, I'm stating the obvious—-something that anyone can see by looking through the archives and the dozens of times I have challenged them to say something productive.</font>
DEFINITION: To be(come) holy, sacred. 1. Kiddush, from Mishnaic Hebrew qiddû, sanctification, purification, from Hebrew qidd, to consecrate, sanctify, derived stem of qda, to be(come) holy, sacred. 2. Kaddish, from Aramaic qaddi, holy, sacred,''' from qda, to be(come) holy, sacred''' (so called after the first words of the prayer: yitgaddal w-yitqadda meh rabb, may His (God's) great name be exalted and kept holy).


The list of those who will become holy or sacred ] 04:09, 11 February 2006 (UTC)
:::::::<font color=#004422>I have a little secret for you: JP isn't God. He isn't even interested in making "terrorism" a good article. He only locked the definition because he could see that more people liked the one the one that his buddy Jayjg was opposing. If he hadn't locked it, we would be editing it right now, instead of arguing over why we can't edit it. All you have to do is look in his contribution log to see how many times he has done the same thing on other definitions.</font>
::::::::*When you take a break from the ], you might reflect on the fact that there are ] besides me. Any one of them can unlock this article any time. Feel free to ask over at ]; it would be a relief to have someone else here to take your abuse. --]] 00:30, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
:::::::::*<font color=#004422>I'm quite sure that all of the other 548 administrators would not lock a definition and then refuse to work on it. You have no idea what I'm talking about though, do you? In your mind, we're the workers and you're the overseer. You are the one who makes decisions, while we are the ones who carry them out. Can't you see that your attitude subverts the power of Misplaced Pages? Instead of millions of people making small contributions to definitions, a few admins become the only real editors. Do you suppose that you are more qualified for this position than Webster or any of the other great creators of definitional sources? Do you really see no conflict of interest in locking your buddy's definition over another one without even becoming acquainted with the issues? I'm just trying to explain why controlling others doesn't work. You can choose to see this as constructive criticism or as abuse—-it makes no difference to me—-but I can tell you that life gets a lot easier when you consider others to be ]. --] 02:34, 2 September 2005 (UTC) </font>
::::::::::If you're "quite sure", then please go to ] and ask that ] be unprotected. --]] 03:14, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
:::::::::::<font color=#004422>Could you take that "quite sure" any more out of context? You know as well as I that the RFPP encourages people to work article locks out with the admins that locked them. If an article should '''''not''''' have been locked, it becomes easier to get the admin demoted than to get the article unlocked by anyone else. --] 14:41, 2 September 2005 (UTC) </font>
::::::::::::If an article shouldn't have been locked, it will be easier to convince another admin that it should be unlocked. There's no reason reason why the locking admin needs to participate in the discussion. In fact, it's often better if the admin is as uninvolved as possible. If you can show that the dispute is settled, a quick note on RFPP will get the page unprotected. ] | ] 14:58, 2 September 2005 (UTC)


:That's interesting, and as always I'll grant the possibility that I'm wrong. But what's your source for that? Do you speak Arabic?
:::::::::::::<font color=#004422>Thank you for your opinion. I disagree, so I won't be acting on it. The bottom line is that the ] specifically states, ''"Any reversions beyond this limit should be performed by somebody else, to serve the vital purpose of showing that the community at large is in agreement over which of two competing versions is correct."'' When JPs buddies were in danger of hitting the 3RR limit, he subverted the process by locking the definition. Not only did the principle of Misplaced Pages equality suffer as a result, but take a look at the definition he locked<FONT face="Times New Roman, Times, Serif" size=5>''!!''</FONT> Is it really in the best interest of Misplaced Pages to promote that subjective grab-bag of vague and contradictory meanings over the concise, objective, and much more source-citing definition below? --] 15:07, 2 September 2005 (UTC)</font>


:All the sources I've seen say "The Base." and ] both said it meant "the base" until you changed the Misplaced Pages entry just now, again without providing a source. As I noted earlier, the Federation of American Scientists entry on al-Qaeda says it means "the base". gives "Base" as a synonym. Another dictionary site gives this etymology from the : '''"Arabic al-q'ida, the base : al-, the + q'ida, foundation, base, feminine participle of qa'ada, to sit."''' The says it means "the base." Search Google for "al-Qaeda means the list" and you get two message boards. Enter "al-Qaeda means the Base" and you get 265 results, among them another BBC article, a in which he says it means "the base," a article, and many others. The says it means "the base."
(Resetting indent)First, could you please refrain from using a different font and/or font color. It's very distracting to read discussions that have mixed colors. Second, if you believe the page was protected improperly, asked for it to be unprotected on RFPP. If you believe an admin is acting improperly, ask for review on ]. Complaining here is not very useful. ] | ] 15:17, 2 September 2005 (UTC)


--] 02:14, 15 May 2006 (UTC)It does mean the Base. the origin of the name Al-queda originally comes from the base Bin Laden established in Afghanistan in order to train the Muhaydeen to fight against the Russians.
:<font color=#004422>You're just full of advice today, aren't you? I can locate my comments easier if they have a slight hue, and I don't find it distracting at all, but your suggestion is certainly noted. I also noted your suggestion regarding the RFPP the first time you said it, and I'm aware of the review process for admins, but ''homey don't play those games''. We're all adults here and can discuss things without running to the teacher every time our feelings get hurt. In fact, our group has a decided advantage over the rest of the world: we all want to create better definitions. I admit that there might be a few who have ulterior motives, but they are easily spotted. They're the ones that pretend to be better than others, lock inferior articles, revert definitions as punishment, and do everything in their power to confuse the issue so that an objective description cannot be written. In short, they're the ones that concentrate on destroying things instead of building better definitions, and their actions speak louder than their words. '''''--] 15:48, 2 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


:Googling around, it looks like your source is The American Heritage Dictionary, but you've wildly misread what is written. is not for ''the word combination'' "al-qaeda," giving its "Semitic Roots," it is for an actual Semitic root phrase '''qdš.''' that forms a part of the language. Above you copy/pasted what was probably the Bartleby.com text, but didn't get the "š" because you can't paste an image as text. The word "list" doesn't appear anywhere in that entry, so I'm guessing you added that yourself.
::I really don't appreciate your sarcastic tone. I'm trying to help you focus your energies because so far it doesn't appear that you've been too productive. If you want to ignore advice, that's perfectly fine with me, but it might actually help your case to change your tactics.


:Copy/pasting that text into the Al-Qaeda article without quote marks or a source was a copyright violation, by the way. --] 05:38, 11 February 2006 (UTC)
::It doesn't matter that ''you'' can find your comments easier if you color them, this isn't your user space. Take a look at any discussion page and I highly doubt you'll find any other editors using odd colored text. Make your sig stand out if you'd like, but whole paragraphs of green text are just annoying.


::''"Do you speak Arabic?"''
::As I've already said, this isn't the place to rehash your tired arguments of improperly propected articles, etc. Take those complaints elsewhere because they don't belong here. ] | ] 16:09, 2 September 2005 (UTC)


::Mostly Egyptian Arabic, although my accent is probably Iranian. I'm fluent enough to be able to survive in areas where no other language is spoken.
:::<font color=#004422>Do you think that by restating the same thing, it becomes truer? '''''--] 17:18, 2 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


::Why do you prefer Dick Cheney's explanation to that of Bartleby's semitic roots?
::::::::::::::::Maybe the current state of affairs would in fact be best addressed by interested parties "working article locks out with the admins that locked them." After all, we don't want to get the reputation of not playing well with others, Zeph. ] 14:48, 2 September 2005 (UTC)


::You might want to familiarize yourself with the use of triliteral roots in semitic languages.
:::::::::::::::::<font color=#004422>Your implied threat came across loud and clear, you sly devil. ;) '''''--] 15:07, 2 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>
::"qdš or qdsh represents a set of consonants which are used in words with similar meanings.(kadesh = high place and kodesh = holy) The literal meaning is holy and sacred."


::'''The list''' of those who are prepared to do what it takes to become holy and sacred through martyrdom. To give that a secular meaning without recognizing what it means to al Qaeda is worse than misleading.
:::::::<font color=#004422>You might think I'm hitting my head against the wall, but I had to go through this same locked-article scenario to get an NPOV introduction for al-Qaeda. In the end, it was worth it. We have a great definition and no more NPOV disputes.</font>
:::::::<font color=#004422>I have high hopes for Misplaced Pages. With a little tweaking, I think it could replace all other definitional sources in the next six to ten years, but that will only happen if we can create a system where the best article wins out over the influence of bands of biased editors with confessed external agendas.</font>


::First recognize that triliteral semitic roots don't include vowels, then recognize that "al" is the equivalent of our definitive article.
=== Proposal for a New Introduction ===
:::::::<font color=#004422>I'm going to post the last definition that all of us worked on before this edit war began, with the proposed changes that Sloat suggested. I would appreciate any positive edits by anyone—-changes that make the definition '''better'''. --] 00:19, 2 September 2005 (UTC)</font>
Jesus, are we already back to this again? The editorial changes that I suggested were to delete this definition and work with the other one. Your agenda is as transparent as it is absurd. I propose a return to the discussion that you disrupted, where some progress was actually being made. --] 02:57, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
:<font color=#004422>Nobody has a problem with you proposing changes that make the article better. We just don't want you making it worse as a means of punishment for not getting your way. Let your proposed changes speak for themselves. If you honestly feel that you can make the following article better, please do so. I think I speak for most Misplaced Pages editors when I say that the more positive help we have, the better. '''''--] 14:35, 2 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>
::I could care less about punishing you Mr. Stark I just want you to stop disrupting the discussion. I have and you immediately ridiculed them and started posting your bogus definition again. I don't want to make the article below better; I want it deleted entirely and I want to work with the article that we had before you started your little taxonomic jihad against it. If we want to talk about "state terrorism" or other categories '''that are commonly used in the literature on this topic''' that is fine but it isn't part of the definition. We don't need to talk about "pejorative" terrorism or your not much better "terrorism as propaganda" and concepts like "criminal terrorism". The notion of "terrorism defined by government agency" is not much better than the ludicrous "FISA-terrorism" was. Again your definition seems more like an attempt to hijack the discussion than an attempt to actually get to some useful work done here. Nobody has suggested anything specifically wrong with the current definition nor has anyone suggested why we can't handle this more on the ]. So please put this definition to rest and let's work with what we have.--] 18:10, 2 September 2005 (UTC)


:''Copy/pasting that text into the Al-Qaeda article without quote marks or a source was a copyright violation, by the way.''
:::<font color=#004422>No, nobody has suggested anything specifically wrong with the currently locked definition. We have five archived pages of people saying that it's just fine. ''May or may not do this. May or may not do that. Pick the things you want it to mean.'' It's kind of like a mix-n-match definition. It's all things to all people and doesn't offend anyone. The only teensy-weensy problem with it is that '''IT DOESN'T CONVEY INFORMATION'''. Do you know what an encyclopedia is for? It's for definitions that convey information<FONT face="Times New Roman, Times, Serif" size=5>''!!''</FONT> --] 19:31, 2 September 2005 (UTC) </font>


::Since you clearly don't speak the language or have any familiarity with linguistics, you might want to remedy those deficiencies before speaking further about this.] 16:52, 12 February 2006 (UTC)
::::Again you're trying to evade the issues here. I didn't say the current def was perfect. I suggested specific changes and points of discussion. You go back to whining that it "doesn't convey anything". Then you try to get another user to buy into your bogus definition. when will this end?--] 02:53, 3 September 2005 (UTC)


Extensive familiarity with linguistics is not required to recognize a copyright violation, and anyway I'm not confident of the extent of yours.
:::::<font color=#004422>It will end when the definition conveys information. There are many people working toward that end. You are not one of them. '''''--] 16:12, 7 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


I don't prefer Dick Cheney's explanation for much of anything, but I do prefer to believe facts that are supported by the vast majority of sources. Your response apparently tries to ignore all the other sources I mentioned while attacking Cheney specifically because he's fairly widely accepted to be a greedy, corrupt politician. It doesn't follow, though, that Cheney would likely lie about the meaning of "al-Qaeda," nor even if his statement was discounted would it affect the credibility of the several other sources I've mentioned. I've provided many sources that say that the phrase in question means "the base," while you yourself have provided ''no sources'' at all. All you've done is pasted some text that didn't contain the word "list" (without bothering to mention the source) and added "list" in yourself. I remain unconvinced.
=== This Definition Conveys Information ===
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<!-- ATTENTION! Please feel free do make any positive changes you want between this and the next horizontal line. When making a change, please consider:
Does this change make the definition more closely follow actual usage?
Does this definition enable people to more concisely convey meaningful information?
Thank you for your positive contributions. -->


The text you pasted was copied from Bartleby.com, but "Bartleby" is not the original source. Bartleby.com hosts dictionary information from The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. That dictionary's is where your text came from. Its etymology of al-Qaeda, though, is the one I gave above. This is not complicated.
The ] defines terrorism as "a policy intended to strike with terror those against whom it is adopted; the employment of methods of intimidation; the fact of terrorizing or condition of being terrorized." Additional constraints are added depending on the context of the usage.<br>
:*''''']''''' adds a constraint that terrorism is used to further a political cause. Whereas ] seeks to reduce an opponent's physical ability to fight, ] seeks to coerce compliance in an opponent, either directly through fear of losing life and luxury, or indirectly by prompting the opponent to reduce liberties and increase military/police spending.
:*''''']''''' is terrorism overtly used by a government to intimidate or coerce its own citizens, or the populace of an opposing force.
:*'''''State-sponsored Terrorism''''' is a tactic of ] that seeks to bring the complacent citizenry of an opposing force into a conflict through the covert support of third-party terrorist groups.
:*''Terrorism'' defined by a government agency adds a constraint that it is illegal, thus making it impossible for that government to fall under that definition of ''terrorism''. For example, the definition that ''terrorism'' appears to intimidate or coerce, breaks criminal laws, and endangers human life, was used to create the ], the ] and, the ].
:*''Terrorism'' used as propaganda adds a constraint that it is inherently ]. ''Terrorism'' is widely used in a pejorative sense to promote the ], the ] of various nations, and the ]. When used as propaganda, ''terrorism'' dons a vague, subjective definition that means little more than ] for the purpose of ].
:*'''''Criminal Terrorism''''' is terrorism used for personal enrichment rather than for the more common purpose of political gain. The official state-recognized definitions of terrorism for many countries do not make any distinction between '''Criminal Terrorism''' and '''Political Terrorism''' (see ] for example). This makes it possible, through expanded law-enforcement powers such as the ], for alleged hypothetical criminal activity to be considered a potential act of terrorism, and subject to investigation, before the fact.


sources on Bartleby.com also say "the base."
----

In the future, for the sake of clarity, please keep your comments separate from other editors'. Inserting your own messages in the middle of other people's makes it hard for observers to tell who's saying what. I've separated your comments from mine. --] 18:35, 12 February 2006 (UTC)

== Crummy edits ==
I dont know who did it, but starting an article with ''"The exact definition of terrorism is highly controversial"'' is about as amateurish an edit as Ive ever seen. It's a bit disappointing to see actually, considering the work I and others have put into the article over the last few years. Thanks, newbies. -]|] 20:51, 14 February 2006 (UTC)
:Why don't you fix it? ] 17:49, 22 February 2006 (UTC)

:::I incorporated the ; it's definitely better. ] 02:54, 2 March 2006 (UTC)

== approved terrorists section ==

This "Approved terrorists" section is not very clear as what it is saying. It needs to define what is meant by "approved terrorists" and be clearer in how this effected the anti-terror legislation that would ban verbal support of terrorists. --] 02:23, 18 February 2006 (UTC)

I deleted this section. It was an inaccurate description of the proposed offence of glorification which was overtaken by events - the government agreed to remove glorification as a distinct offence and instead made glorification an element of encouragement to terrorism (clause 1). The proposed offence of glorification was ridiculous, but the text didn't reflect how it would actually work.] 17:15, 22 February 2006 (UTC)

==Regarding definitions of terrorism==

I find notable bias in the following "actors who don't belong to any recognized armed forces, or who don't adhere to their rules, and who are therefore regarded as 'rogue actors'." The definition is inherently biased in the favour of the state, for according to this definition all that is required in order NOT to be a terrorist is a uniform denoting membership in an armed force. Clearly this would mean any army or nation-state could not commit terrorism and that's an unfortunate bias in the writing.

Note that Kofi Annan's (Toronto Globe and Mail 11 March 2005) definition and the UN definitions for terrorism are lacking from this piece.

--Rick MacLaren

"ctors ..." seems to be addressing not so much definition of terrorism as definition of "combatant". Terror can be by the State or by non-State actors, and the only difference is whether responding to it constitutes "war" in an international-law sense. (Distinguishing between "state", and "state-sponsored" terrorism hints at the difference. And the "war on terror" is not a war so defined; it's a slogan as others doubtless have pointed out, and forgive me if I haven't read through the entire site.)

These (non-state actors) are issues well known to human/civil rights law and to refugee law. See, for example: http://uniset.ca/terr (a bibliographic essay with links to hundreds of archived law reports and newspaper accounts that I've been working on for a year and which will in due course be published in NYU's GlobaLex series). The problem is more obvious with "state" or "state-sponsored" terrorism when political actors and the police encourage, but do not participate in, militia-type violence against dissidents.

A very few judges have tried to define "terrorism". A UN (General Assembly) definition would probably be worthless unless it became accepted as consensus by nations and by international-law scholars. That takes time (the relevance of "doctrine" to law is better known in the Civil Law system than the Common Law one, and is something I wouldn't need to point out if I were writing this in French). For many, "terrorism" is a violent attack on the status quo, and proximity and personal risk are relevant. That's why I quoted Monty Python's "News for Parrots". The main concern of a Muslim or Jewish or Swiss or Korean (etc.) newspaper report on an air crash or terrorist attack is -- quite understandably -- whether any members of their constituency were victims.

Finally, there seems to be a paradox and the mere abstention from taking a view may constitute taking one. As in earlier research on Sharia law, I find that extremism tends to crowd out rationality and liberalism. There's a reason why so much of the real scholarship on Sharia is occurring in Germany and the USA and not in any Muslim land. Citing anything gives it credibility, but you have to cite -- or at least to sample -- varying arguments or one becomes an advocate and not a commentator or analyst. But one man (or woman)'s terrorist will always be somebody else's freedom fighter. And who but McDonald's would have accused Steel and Morris of "eco-terrorism"?

--Andy Grossman

I wouldn't omit the controversey over definition between the UN and the USA vis terrorism. Each has it's own idea of how to define it, and each has their own rationale and self interest.

Andy Grossman says "But one man (or woman)'s terrorist will always be somebody else's freedom fighter." Exactly. I submit that's at the core of why some nations don't want it to be possible for a terrorist to be defined as (potentially/possibly) a state. The UN definitions make it possible for states to be terrorists. That's a significant disparity of points of view, I contend, and not an uninteresting one.

--Rick MacLaren

== Terroristic Threats article ==

First, let me say that this is the first time I've added to a talk page. Ergo, if I commit a breach of etiquette, please let me know. That being said...

There seems to have been at one time a page, linked to other legal terminology, titled "Terroristic Threats." This page appears to have been either removed or absorbed into the general topic "Terrorism."

My concern is that there ''is'' a crime called, verbatim, "Terroristic Threats," and it is a felony. My question, then, is this: Shouldn't this be an article separate from the general topic "Terrorism," since its definition as a federal crime does not fall comfortably into the catch-all of the general topic article?

Just a thought...Misplaced Pages is something I feel quite strongly about, and I wouldn't want to commit an error in judgment that damages either credibility or accuracy.

==Merge ] into here==

I feel that this page might be better facilitated by being merged with ]. As it is this article is mainly from a US POV, minorly from a UK POV, and does not address domestic terrorism in other countries. Any thoughts? --] ] ] <small><font color="Black">Don't forget ]</font></small> 06:53, 11 March 2006 (UTC)
: ''''Agree''''. Little point in having separate articles.] 09:54, 26 March 2006 (UTC)
: '''Agree''', although I assume you meant to post this on ]. --] 01:26, 27 March 2006 (UTC)
: '''Very Agree''' (no speaka de English) - <font color="blue"><strong>] ] ] ]</strong></font> 04:24, 27 March 2006 (UTC)
:'''Obvious Agree'''! ] 22:57, 10 April 2006 (UTC)
:'''Disagree''' Terrorism should explain the basic definition of terrorism, then give links to the kinds of terrorism. it should also be cleaned of any redundancy. --] 02:19, 15 May 2006 (UTC)
:'''Agree''' and '''Disagree'''.
::'''Yes''', "Terrorism should explain the basic definition of terrorism" (though we'd have to accept definition'''s''' in the plural), and one of the major problems with this article is indeed '''redundancy''', as the main thread keeps getting lost in detailed discussions of individual groups.
::'''No''', "political terrorism" as a "kind" of terrorism is not obvious. I have argued in the journal ''Terrorism an Political Violence'' that terrorism is by definition political, and that so-called "religious terrorism" is basically political with religious elements. In thory, we could have a section on "'''purely''' religious terrorism," of which an obvious example (sometimes used) is the ]--except that then it's not clear that they were actually terrorists in the first place. --] 07:15, 6 June 2006 (UTC)
:'''Agree''' I think that we should merge "political terrorism" into this topic as a subsection. -] 16:40, 30 June 2006 (UTC)

== Massive POV Rewrite ==

I think that there is a compromise position between the two extremes of Jayjg's version and that of GregorB. Instead of having a revert war, let me try to take just the NPOV parts of both and make a better article. I am in the middle of doing that. I ask both sides to please let me finish before deciding it is acceptable. --] 15:40, 9 April 2006 (UTC)
:I don't have any "version". The article was completely re-written yesterday, in a highly POV way, by a sockpuppet. Previous to that the article had been in a stable state for months. You haven't compromised, you've merely reverted to a POV re-write. ]<sup>]</sup> 15:42, 9 April 2006 (UTC)

:I disagree with most of the "compromises" you've made. You've taken it back almost entirely to Jayjg's version (yes, that is the "Jayjg approved" version) already. Still you say that you are "in the middle" of making the compromise? What is left, to revert the last two parts of GregorB's version? --] 15:51, 9 April 2006 (UTC)
::Hardly a "Jayjg approved" version. I didn't write any of it; it was written and agreed to by multiple other editors. ]<sup>]</sup> 15:55, 9 April 2006 (UTC)

::I note your latest revert edit summary claims this article is "Jayjg/JPGordon/Slimvirgin Jewish propaganda like everything else they control"? I see your claim that there was "nothing personal" in your original revert was, in fact, completely false. Banned editors are not allowed to edit; please stop. ]<sup>]</sup> 16:06, 9 April 2006 (UTC)

:::Your excuse for reverting this article back to your version, locking the page, and banning the editor representing the other side of the dispute was "banned anti-semitic editor editing." The editor you banned never said anything against your faith. He only pointed out that your edits seemed to him to be "Jewish propaganda." How exactly is accusing you of something "anti-semitic?" --] 16:16, 9 April 2006 (UTC)

::::To begin with, the banned editor himself is well-known. Next, please recall, I do not have a "version" of this article, nor have I made edits to it; I've just reverted non-consensus POV changes. In addition, I didn't "revert to my version then lock it"; rather, I semi-protected the version that was currently in place. Regular editors can still edit it. And finally, why on earth would "Jewish propaganda" come into it, anyway? Why bring up alleged Jews at all, some of whom have never even edited this article? The banned editor was alleging something about specific editors, not about the article. ]<sup>]</sup> 16:19, 9 April 2006 (UTC)

:::::The banned editor is well-known? You semi-protected the version in place? That sounds like something out of a B Nazi film. "He is well-known to the SS as a subversive and a threat to the fatherland. We have not locked the document; we have only semi-protected it against editors who have not proven their loyalty to the Fuhrer." --] 16:37, 9 April 2006 (UTC)

:::::If you want an answer to your question about why the editor brought up Jewish propaganda at all, you would have to ask the editor. Except that you can't, because you banned him. --] 16:41, 9 April 2006 (UTC)

:::::Looking through your contributions and the history of this article, it appears that you and Jpgordon do this song and dance quite frequently. Jpgordon reverts the article to the one you clearly prefer and then you immediately lock or "semi-protect" it saying, "I just locked the current version." It looks like you often get this Slimvirgin, that 4.237.2.137 was talking about, into the act too. I have to admit, you're quite a showman. Now how about letting somebody else take a crack at editing this article? --] 16:52, 9 April 2006 (UTC)

::::::I'm not sure what article history you imagine you've looked at. Contrary to your claims, I've ''never'' semi-protected this article before, I have not banned the IP who was blathering about "Jewish propaganda", so he can certainly explain himself, and I'd already contacted a half-dozen editors with interest in the article to comment on it before semi-protecting. The last time I touched this article was twice on Feb 21, 2006, the last time before that was once on October 27, 2005, and once before that one October 14 2005, once on Sept. 19, etc. I am, in fact, letting everyone else "have a crack" at editing this article, since I've barely edited it, and have added no content. Now, why don't you get your facts straight, and use the Talk: pages for discussing content rather than ]. ]<sup>]</sup> 17:39, 9 April 2006 (UTC)

:::::::The editors of Misplaced Pages can look through your contributions and determine for themselves how often this same scenario happens, but they don’t have to go very far to see what you did this time. You had a disagreement over content with another editor. That other editor was willing to compromise, listen to the suggestions of other people and try to reach a consensus, but you weren’t. You used your position to control the definition of this term. --] 03:26, 10 April 2006 (UTC)

::::::::Because of the many falsehoods in your previous statements, your current ones have no credibility. "That other editor" (4.237.xxx.xxx) was spouting anti-Semitic conspiracy theories, and gave no indication he was willing to compromise. As for you, there's no reason why you can't propose changes on the Talk: page, is there? Please start discussing article content. ]<sup>]</sup> 04:12, 10 April 2006 (UTC)

== Picture ==

I see this article has no picture. I found this <nowiki>], ] ].]]</nowiki> that could be put in the text so it becomes better. The problem is that I can't manage to out it in right. This is just a reminder so that somebody else could put it in. --] 12:21, 16 April 2006 (UTC)
:I've also had trouble with this. The 'terrorism' box seems to mess up the formatting. Unfortunately, none of the other pages that use the box have lead images, so there's no standard on how to have both the box and an image. Is there a way to edit the box? It might work better as a bottom-oriented box. At any rate, I think that an image of the 9/11 attack would be a bit too obvious, would present a highly American view of terrorism, and would probably just set off all sorts of debate. I had planned to use the first image on the page for ], because the ] was an international crisis, as well as a pivotal event in the emergence of modern terrorism.
Well, that's what we have on -no. ]]] 11:45, 3 July 2006 (UTC)

== Introduction ==

I think the first two paragraphs are loaded with inaccuracies.
:Paragraph 1
:''The term terrorism is used to refer to acts of violence, or the threat of violence carried out for political motives by organisations/individuals who are not recognised as organs of the legitimate state within a given territory nor officially at war with that territory.''
Does not this definition mean that all those who fought as rebels in the ] were terrorists ("We must hang together, or assuredly we shall all hang separately")? What is an "official war". Does this make the 2003 invasion of Iraq an act of terror? As the United states had declared a "War on Terror" is that an official war? The US adminstation think that people they hold under the War Powers Act are "enemy combatants". So and do acts of violence are carried out by an enemy combatant in the territory of the U.S.A do not count as terrorism as they are part of an "official war"?

Further is there not a contradiction to the first paragraph created by ] of GC ] and should that not be mentioned?
:Paragraph 2
:''"Terrorist attacks" are usually characterized as "indiscriminate," "targeting of civilians," or executed "with disregard for human life." The term "terrorism" is often used to assert that the political violence of an enemy is immoral, wanton, and unjustified. According to the definition of terrorism typically used by states, academics, counter-terrorism experts, and non-governmental organizations, "terrorists" are actors who don't belong to any recognized armed forces, or who don't adhere to their rules, and who are therefore regarded as "rogue actors".

Who are "civilians"? Are police civilians? What about part time police like the old ] in Northern Ireland. What about ] can they only be targeted at the weekend when they are in uniform? Was the murder of ] by the INLA a terrorist attack or an legitimate attack on part of the command and control of the British security forces?

The IRA targeted the City of London it to very large truck bombs (we are talking more than 10 tonnes of explosives in each bomb). These were made to do billions of pounds of damage so that the insurance companies despite political pressure would not pay out, this forced the British Government to pay for the damage, and so in a round about way acknowledge that the British state was in an armed conflict with the IRA. In both cases warnings were given. The intention of the attacks was not to kill people but to destroy the infrastructure of the City of London, The British press called these terrorist attacks, but the attack was not an ''"indiscriminate," "targeting of civilians," or executed "with disregard for human life."'' so does this mean that Misplaced Pages is claiming that targeting civilian infrastructure is not terrorism?

The first sentence of the second paragraph of the article does not bring any clarity to the points I have raised above and as such is not of any use because it appears to be a defintion (quotes and all) but on closer examination does not say anything.

The last sentence does not make sense unless one qualifies the word "actors" as "enemy actors" after all one does not usually call "]s" terrorists. --] 13:09, 5 May 2006 (UTC)
:Have you ever heard the expression "one man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter"? In case you don't know, there is no universally accepted definition of terrorism, and this is part of the reason why. In one of the notes in ], ] quips " political effectiveness rather than the use of violence is the defining characteristic underlying official use of the term ." ] 01:45, 20 May 2006 (UTC)

:Yes I have and Yes I do, and Ward Churchill's quip misses out the word "enemy" in front of "political effectiveness", friends who are politically effective don't often get called terrorists. --] 11:30, 24 May 2006 (UTC)


Proposed Criteria

The definition statements lack clarity and virtually anything can be construed as "terrorism". Terroistic tactics are not necessarily the most horrific or egregious, but instead describe tactics that are symbolic, target civilians (not the same as non-combatants which may include political leaders) and do not attempt to secure economic or geographic resources.

For example, Dresden while probably a war crime was not terrorism - not because the USA did it, but because it was leading to a surrender of a state and the acquisition of territory. Colombine, Oaklahoma city bombing, 9/11, Mombasa hotel bombings, car bombings in Bagdhad all pretty easily match this criteria. Israeli attacks on Lebanon also likely constitute war crimes but are not necessarily terrorism. On the other hand Hamas' missle attacks on Israel are not to secure resources or target combatants but to harm civilians and cause symbolic damage.

Many organizations use a combination of political, economic, military and terroristic tactics and an attempt to simply lable any organization with one term is futile. Terrorist organizations will generally have or be affiliated with other organizations that utilize the other tactics -- the IRA/Shin Fein and Hamas are good examples and in can be argued that the CIA and KGB, North Korea and Iran have historically provided various services to terrorist organizations.

To attempt to validate the morality of violent acts is futile and meaningless -- in the end, dead people are dead people. To say that there are enemy actors who "don't play by the rules" or lack "regard for human life" or that one act is worse than another is rather meaningless since being blown up by a car bomb is probably similar to being blown up by a 500 pound bomb -- it is instead a POV approach to defining your current enemy. To talk as if the Russians in Chechnya or Israelis in Lebanon are playing by accepted rules makes little sense.

If a recognized armed force is a primary consideration, then every revolution has been a terrorist act. Obviously not the case and that would be contradicted by the economic and geographic criteria.

] 20:06, 15 August 2006 (UTC)

== "Problems" section ==

What is the purpose of this opening monologue. Was this slipped in at the last minute or has this been a long-standing section? ]<sup>] ]</sup> 20:14, 21 May 2006 (UTC)


==American war of independence==

:''However, historically, neither the the term "insurgency" nor "terrorism" was used by Colonial England to describe the behavior of its American colonies during the Revolutionary War.

I would imagine that they were described as traitors. and that was a in the minds of the English at the time was a far more heinous crime than murder, hence the punishment for high treason (HDQ). At the ] no one was tried and found guilty of genocide, they were found guilty of "crimes against humanity". This does not stop most articles on the subject describing the Holocaust as an act of genocide. Is there any evidence that "insurgency" or "terrorism" were used in contemporary English to describe the actions of rebels of not then this sentence should go. --] 11:30, 24 May 2006 (UTC)

:''The comparison is further complicated by the complex legal framework within which the American Revolution was framed (see Declaration of Independence) and international aid and acknowledgment (from France.

What does this mean? A ] is not a complex legal framework. If independence is achived, it becomes a legal document (at least in the eyes of the new state), but few would argue that Smith's ]n ] was legal or complex. --] 11:47, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
== merging ? ==
it seems that both articles can be expanded; merging would create a semantic confusion --] 18:39, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
== What is to be done? ==
This must be one of the most messy articles in the whole of Misplaced Pages. Of course, this is a reflection of the difficulty of the subject and of the diversity of views that exist, but even so I think something needs to be done.

One problem is that irrelevant material keeps creeping in. One third of the opening section on "Problems" is now devoted not to problems but to a discussion of the American revolution. In the following section on "Etymology," the reader has to get through six paragraphs of discussion and official definitions before getting to the etymology. Then there are references to 50 U.S.C. § 1801(c), and the Strategic Foresight Group meeting in New Delhi, neither of which have anything to do with etymology either. In fact, of<strong> 15</strong> paragraphs in this section, I would say that <strong>only three</strong> actually deal with <strong>etymology</strong>!

Examples are meant to help clarify. But all too often in this article they lead to qualifications which then confuse. Fortunately, no one (so far!) has felt obliged to jump in to defend the Jacobin Club... But when we move on to the section on "Key Criteria," what starts as a simple statement about "Target" refers to the Irgun. So then we find a vaguely pro-Irgun statement followed by a vaguely anti-Irgun statement, and then of course someone has to mention Hamas... Ok, but what does all this add to anyone's understanding of the basic point that many think that targeting civilians is one of the key criteria?

I could go on. But I won't, because my key proposal is <strong> to try to slim the article down and make it as concise as possible by removing irrelevant discussions and including examples only if (a) they genuinely help and (b) are sufficiently generally accepted not to give rise to off-topic discussions.</strong> Any support for this idea? Deleted material could be put somewhere else--for example, a short disucssion of "Terrorism in the American revolution" or even "50 U.S.C. § 1801(c)." ] 08:14, 25 May 2006 (UTC)

:Nobody feels like responding to this proposal? I've just looked at "terrorism" articles in some other language versions of Misplaced Pages, and they're all much better than the English one... If there was some encouragement, I'd be happy to edit the current version of this article down to the minimum and post a draft here for discussion. ] 07:31, 6 June 2006 (UTC)

==header==
'Problems' is actually not too bad a header after all. -- ]<font size="1"> ] </font> 23:18, 30 May 2006 (UTC)

== Globalize tag ==

''Terrorism'' is rather U.S.-centric, particularily in the definitions section. Although it discusses one UN agency's defintion of terrorsm as war criles in peacetime (clever little rhyme) and goes on for some length about Columbia, it mentions three U.S. governmental agencies' definitions without citing a single one from another state agency. A little more balance is needed, it seems. --] ] 18:06, 1 June 2006 (UTC)

:Having US-centric definitions may be inevitable, given that it's the US, more than any other state, that guides official definitions world-wide. Here in Egypt official definitions (to the extent they exist) don't differ significantly from US ones. The two major definitions '''in actual use''' are (and I exaggerate only slightly):
::"A terrorist is anyone who threatens the current regime, including so-called 'peaceful' demonstrators" (informal government definition)
::"Terrorism is what Muslims are hypocritically accused of by people who don't like them" (informal popular definition).
:Actually, perhaps we need a section on "popular perceptions" as well as "official definitions"?! Any takers?
:] 07:25, 6 June 2006 (UTC)

==section on "psychological factors" ==
If my edits on the "causes of terrorism" section are acceptable, i propose deleting the psychological factors, section, as it is rendered largely irrelevant given the sociological understanding of terrorism. ] 21:08, 1 June 2006 (UTC) <---what does "UTC" mean?

:It means "]", about the same as Greenwich Mean Time. (Also, it would be good to make sure to post new comments on the bottom. Helps to keep things from getting confusing.) --] 17:21, 2 June 2006 (UTC)

:I support your proposal for deleting the section on psychological factors, or at least consider a serious revision of it. While it may hold true for some cases, terrorists are typically not "loners," but involved in vast social networks, or groups, that encourage and support their belonging to such orginizations. (Orignally posted at top by ] 6 June 2006 01:43 & moved here to keep discussion in one place)

::'''Agreed.''' And why not merge "sociological factors" into "causes" while you're at it, and then delete the whole "Common characteristics" section? ] 07:05, 6 June 2006 (UTC)

*OK, your edits need some changes, because you've gone in a non-encyclopedic direction with them (or the existing language you moved has done so.) For example, you need to leave out essayish fluff like ''it should be noted'' (well, yeah, you just noted it, so you don't need to say it should be noted, because otherwise, you wouldn't have noted it); we don't use language like ''When we understand that'', because we don't address the reader (and who is "we" anyway?). Likewise, ''we know that'' (we do?) needs to go; also, we don't self-reference or tell people what to think, as in ''Also, as in the Lone Wolf section of this article, violent acts committed by an insane or fanatical individual should not be considered terrorist.'' --]] 19:15, 6 June 2006 (UTC)

:I'm trying to come to some understanding so that I can uphold or oppose the consensus, but here is the problem I'm having: why not completely rewrite the "psychological factors" to reflect how the five-stage process interacts with the mind? Also, it would be handy to include how recruitment, etc., relies heavily on the pyschological makeup (and alteration thereof) for those who are interested in the invention of an enemy for political purposes. Why not include these items? I could be off-base with this, but I really don't understand why we don't simply disambiguate and/or remove the redundancy. -] 17:17, 30 June 2006 (UTC)

==Let's discuss this definition==
'''Terrorism''' is the use of terror against civilians as a means for political or ideological ends.

1. Does the target of terrorism matter?

2. Does the purpose matter?

3. Does it matter who the agent is?

Does anyone dispute that the above captures an undisputable minimum?

The Russian revolutionaries in the top of the 19th century were called "terrorists"
1. Their target was government officials, including the Czar.
2. Their purpose was a political and economic revolution.
3. They were private persons.

The Jewish Irgun in Palestine, under the British mandate were called "terrorists"
1. Target: British military
2. Purpose: political
3. Agents: clandestine para-military

In neither of these cases were the target of attack civilians -- so, at best, these were terrorists in an extended sense -- not in its core sense. Put otherwise, it is controversial whether the Russian and Jewish terrorists were strictly "terrorists.

But if the target is an innocent civilian, and the killing is for a political end, then it is clearly a terrorist act.

Bombing a bus, a restaurant, a ship, or an airplane containing innocent civilians is clearl a terrorist act -- whether the agents are civilians, police, or the military.

:It's all a matter of interpretation.. The ANC was labelled terrorist by the white minority government etc etc.. I think the Irgun did use wartime/terroristic tactics. Is the US bombing of wedding parties in Afganistan and Iraq terrorism?? Is blowing up Iraqi policemen terrorism? or restistance to a puppet state? I think the general public would view violence aginst civilians as the most recognisable definition of terrorism.. But then the defintion of civilian goes on... Can bomb attacks in wartime China against japanese carpetbaggers and chemical weapons experts be classified as against civilians? What about oil extraction experts and 'private security contractors' be classified as such? This article is here to explain all the different views and claims about terrorism. All the defintions should be here. And the background behind the them.. such as the origin of the definition and arguments surround the nature of modern warfare. -- ]<font size="1"> ] </font> 16:35, 8 June 2006 (UTC)

: Good idea, but
:: (1) you can't really use "terror" in a definition of "terrorism." "Violence," perhaps.
:: (2) restriction to "civilians" is HIGHLY problematic.

I would suggest that what is core is "the use of violence to achieve a political or quasi-political objective indirectly rather than directly."
] 13:39, 10 June 2006 (UTC)

==Your definition==
Terrorism is the idea that terror can be used as a compelling means of coercion.

First, terrorism is not an idea. The idea of terrorism is an idea.
Second, coercion implies a compelling force.
Third, if I pull a gun on you to get your money, this will satisfy the definition, but it will not be terrorism. <small>—Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 16:54, 8 June 2006</small><!-- Template:Unsigned -->

:As an aside, Skovoroda, you can sign your messages by typing <nowiki>"~~~~"</nowiki>, which turns into a signature with your username and the time of the message. That way people know who's saying what. --] 17:10, 8 June 2006 (UTC)

:Skovoroda: the definition holds true, and I would say that all criminal activity is terrorism in one form or another. The difference is one of scale: if one person is involved against another, it's an interpersonal dispute. If it involves entire countries, it's a war. If it involves only political groups, then the result is terrorism. Thus, groups that commit hate crimes (KKK, IRA, neo-Nazis, al-Qaeda, etc.) are terrorist organizations because they engage in activities that fit the definition cited above. Can you suggest a more compelling definition? -] 17:08, 30 June 2006 (UTC)

==Primary or Core Sense and Extended Senses==

Having to take usage into account, we can, I think, distinguish a core sense -- the one I am proposing, and extended senses.

1. The core sense is the terrorizing of civilians for political and ideological ends.

2. One extended sense has to include Russian terrorists targeting the government.

3. Another has to include cases like the Irgun targeting the military.

4. Perspectical senses: from the perspective of an established governments, all attacks against its military and government are terrorist acts. But from the perspective of those trying to topple the government -- their acts sgsinst the government and military are acts of war.

5. Borderline cases: since some civilian jobs help to maintain the military and the government, when these are targetted it is not clear what to call such acts. Bombing a telephone exchange center, for example, to disrupt communication.
] 18:08, 8 June 2006 (UTC)

:That is one way that the word is used, but not the only way. Max rspct has the article start with the broadest meaning and work its way toward specific uses like the one defined by the United States Department of Defense that you mention. According to the Misplaced Pages manual of style, that's the way articles are supposed to read. I don't mean any disrespect by reverting your contribution. I just think that following the manual of style, the way Max rspt had it, makes for better articles. --] 20:30, 8 June 2006 (UTC)

==US DoD definition/global view==

Is the Department of Defense definition necessary? The description of terrorism that follows states pretty much the exact same definition (creating fear to force compliance with demands), so this just seems redundant.

Also, the phrase "In recent Western culture," could be removed from the next sentence. I think the sentence already provides a very universal definition of what terrorism is. I can't imagine why a European or an African would define terrorism as anything but the use of violence to create fear and, in turn, influence people. -] 01:47, 10 June 2006 (UTC)

:The DOD definition and the second paragraph are pretty much the same thing because they come from the same source: the United States Armed Forces. The DOD definition is not a world view, and neither is saying that terrorism is "the use of violence...." Violence is an action. Terrorism is a way of thinking about, not just violence, but any way of inducing an overwhelming sense of imminent danger as a means to an end. Various cultures have added things to that definition (usually to serve their own ends), but we're writing a world view, not a propaganda piece. We need to start the article with something that isn't out to prove a point. I'm going to replace the United States Department of Defense definition with the more general worldwide view that we had there before. Please add anything you want to the body of the article, but I think the first paragraph has to be more universal than something created by the United States Armed Forces. --] 02:50, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
::Can you cite a source on your notion of terrorism being an idea about coercion, rather than the action of terrorist attacks themselves? -] 03:10, 10 June 2006 (UTC)

::No, I can't. Would you like me to delete everything in this article that does not have a source? --] 03:26, 10 June 2006 (UTC)

:::I changed it to the following. I hope this works for you. The DOD definition or any derivative of it does not work for me because it is not a world view. --] 03:39, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
<blockquote>Terrorism is the rationale that invoking overwhelming feelings of imminent danger in a population can be a compelling means of coercion.</blockquote>
::::I don't think you're wrong, I just think the way you're wording things isn't very clear. How about this:
::::<br>Terrorism is an ideology which promotes the use of violence and threats as a compelling means of coercion. In recent Western culture, ''terrorism'' is often used to refer specifically to the acts carried out by terrorists.
::::<p>In general, terrorists practice a strategy of using political violence, social threats,...
::::<br>-] 15:14, 10 June 2006 (UTC)

I don't think that's right either, Rodeosmurf. Terrorism isn't an ideology, it's a form of violence undertaken by rogue actors for political or ideological purposes. --] 15:52, 10 June 2006 (UTC)

:"Terrorism" either doesn't (tho of course it does exist as a term) exist or: is never separate from war/it is a form of warfare practised but not acknowledged by most warmakers. Same goes for ]. Whether it is justified or not. In Italy, the ], the biggest attack on civilians in post-WWII Italian if not West European history, was perpertrated by agents (not necc as in individual "agents") of the ]. Attacks like these are rarely perpetrated by lone individuals (the ] is one exception). ]s and government proxy forces whether 'left' or 'right-wing',religious or monarchist etc have been killing and maiming since time immemorial. The orthodox media and most governments are happy to use the terrorist moniker covering insurgent-type groups while dismissing suggestions that terrorism (as bombing of civilians) is more a tactic than a cohesive set of identifiable organisations or even 'ideology'.- -- ]<font size="1"> ] </font> 16:10, 10 June 2006 (UTC)


== reverted removal of reference to US as state sponsor ==
== Gone for two months ... ==
I reverted this edit , in the hopes that we could make it more NPOV and keep it. Thoughts? btw, does anyone know why the talk page is protected but not the article?--] ] 22:19, 19 June 2006 (UTC)


I rephrased the paragraph to make it a little more NPOV, as seen . Thoughts?--] ] 03:12, 20 June 2006 (UTC)
... and return to find Zephram still up to his old tricks. Good Lord.


:I'm not a scholar on this subject, but I am curious to know whether or not selective assassinations could be reasonably construed as terrorism. Also, some research into "The School of the Americas" and "Air America" may be of some help. To wit, did either of these organizations serve to support terrorist activities? As I said though, it's not my field. I was "RA" (Regular Army). ] 03:28, 20 June 2006 (UTC)
Thanks to the admin who locked the article and restored a measure of sanity here. ] 10:46, 2 September 2005 (UTC)


::Your experience gives you more knowledge than I have. Looking at the key criteria section of the article, targetting of civilians and motive to cause fear and mayhem both seem to be absent from the CI
:<font color=#004422>It just wouldn't feel like home if Misplaced Pages had an objective definition for '''''terrorism''''', like every other Dictionary and Encyclopedia, would it? It's a good thing JP locked down that subjective grab-bag of vague and contradictory meanings or you might have gone insane<FONT face="Times New Roman, Times, Serif" size=5>''!!''</FONT> '''''--] 14:19, 2 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


Chaser, please explain why you think the examples are POV? I tried to make both as factual as I could. In any case, you should not revert contributions unless you are prepared to correct them pretty much immediately. Basically, what I think you're saying is, the history is so shoking to your political sensibilities that the history needs to be toned down, or else eliminated. I am restoring my contribution because (1) I think it's non-POV (2) you cannot remove it, fail to "correct it" and thereby suppress it forever. I.e. if it is POV, it's only get seen and edited if it's up. --] 17:19, 5 July 2006 (UTC)
== Discussion of individual votes ==


(Discussion encouraged here to keep the voting area from being clogged with discussion.)


==Contras/US Section==
Thanks, ], for your votes in the sections above. You forgot to vote on the proposed addition (non-containment of violent acts to the area they are designed to "liberate"), however. As for your statement regarding civilian targets:
In the article it says the state-department of the USA described the Contras as terrorists. However, everything I can find has the US government hailing them as heroes. For example (I know this isn't a great source but it does have a quote on it attributed to Ronald Regan:
"moral equivalent of our founding fathers." ] 18:15, 6 July 2006 (UTC)


== Terror/terrorism diction ==
"This means that attacks on military targets, such as the Pentagon on 9/11, or a soldier throwing a grenade into a tent full of officers, would not be considered terrorism, correct?"


It has become commonplace for certain press and government leaders to interchange 'terrorism' and 'terror.' I'd suggest that something be done to comment on which term is appropriate/accepted and seek to trace where the split came from.
I think the Pentagon attack would be considered terrorism, under this criterion, since the plane was filled with civilians. The Pentagon also contains a mix of military and civilian employees. The soldier who threw a grenade into a tent full of officers (in Kuwait, prior to Gulf War 2) would not be guilty of terrorism, just murder and treason, according to this criterion. ] 17:00, 2 September 2005 (UTC)


== incidents in colombia ==
:So the attack on the U.S.S. Cole was not terrorism? Also your claims about the Pentagon attack are stretching it; the Pentagon is a military building regardless of whether there are civilians in there - and the plane was the weapon, not the target. I think the "civilian target" point is not necessarily the best way to put this -- perhaps that the attack kills noncombatants (military or civilian)?--] 18:16, 2 September 2005 (UTC)


There was a mayor bombing in 1989 in colombia during the drug lords era, more specifically, the bombing ocurred in a business centre and shopping mall in Bogotá called "Centro 93" (still an important place despite being almost destroyed, it was reconstructed and now part of a cosmopolitan zone in Bogotá). According to the Misplaced Pages ], the bombing was made with a truck bomb and killed 52 people and injured a 1,000. Can this be concidered an example of a major incident?
::No, according to this criterion the attack on the Cole was not terrorism. You are, of course, entitled to disagree. I still maintain that civilians were an intentional target of the 9/11 attacks, including the Pentagon, not just "collateral damage". The fact that the other planes were intentionally flown into civilian buildings or rammed into the ground shows the intent of the attackers included "maximizing civilian casualties" not minimizing them, unlike most (but not all) traditional warfare. ] 19:02, 2 September 2005 (UTC)


] 22:56, 15 July 2006 (UTC)
I agree with Stu here, and never even considered the USS Cole attack to be terrorism. That was a strictly military target. If attacking a military target without warning is terrorism, then I think the US has a lot of explaining to do for the last hundred years, especially the parts with the submarines and the snipers and the land mines.


:I would say so! and we want aas much range in "causes",groups,locations and times on here so as to be more NPOV through more information.] 00:35, 16 July 2006 (UTC)
I would also suggest that the Pentagon was a valid target, as any "civilians" inside were (or should have been) fully aware that they were supporting military operations. But I would say that the civilians killed in the plane that hit it were certainly victims of terrorism. ] 19:12, 2 September 2005 (UTC)


Well, I admit i was too young at that age and there isn't much information on the net about the many incidents that happened here in Colombia during the drug lords era. The "Centro 93" bomb was the worst incident, probably one of the worst terrorism acts in Colombia but it seems people forgot about it (which i think, is a good thing for us Colombians).
:::<font color=#004422>To know the motivation for something, all we have to do is listen to the reasons stated by the person who did it. If you consider coercion to be a factor of terrorism, the attacks against the U.S.S. Cole, the Pentagon, and the World Trade Towers were not terrorism because there was no coercion involved. In fact, Osama bin Laden said that those attacks were specifically aimed at reducing the United States ability to fight them through military and force-trade aggression. As such, they fall squarely under the definition of ].</font>


If i can find information about this in other sources other than the internet, I'll be glad to contribute, but my question is, Colombia; being the country with most terrorist incidents in the world but only a few with a conciderable magnitute to be compared with incidents in india and england, in which part of the article would this information about terrorism in colombia would go?
:::<font color=#004422>Knowing this doesn't make our jobs as Misplaced Pages editors any easier. Now we have to change the definition of terrorism that we've had for 200 years to make 9/11 and the U.S.S. Cole fit under our new description of the term. But that's not all. We also have to change the definition to make it look like we, and our governments, couldn't possibly fit under that description. All the while, we have to remember that Misplaced Pages isn't the first definitional source, so we'll have to badmouth or reinterpret all pre-9/11 dictionaries and encyclopedias along with anyone who claims to remember how terrorism used to be defined. Are we up to the challenge?</font>


] 01:14, 18 July 2006 (UTC)
:::<font color=#004422>Judging from the horrible condition of the locked intro to terrorism, it looks like we are not. Perhaps that's because it's impossible. Since the advent of the Internet, history can no longer be redefined to suit our needs. We're going to have to skip the propaganda and ulterior motives on this one, and concentrate on creating a definition that conveys information. '''''--] 19:17, 2 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


== USS Cole==
::::I think it's a mistake to take the stated reason as the real reason. Deception is widespread in both conventional warfare and terrorism. I doubt if bin Laden was so naive as to really believe that even the total destruction of the Pentagon would destroy the ability of the US military to function. Measured in purely military terms, it was far less effective than Pearl Harbor was at destroying our military capabilities. The idea that he was going to intimidate the US into leaving the Middle East would also be difficult to believe. Since I don't think bin Laden was stupid, I agree with those who say his true motive was to "gain publicity" for his cause an thus gain new recruits. ] 19:30, 2 September 2005 (UTC)


The article itself says it does not qualify as terror and here its said its terror? I think the Cole can be exchanged with a better fitting example like the bombing of the embassy.--] 07:08, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
:::::<font color=#004422>I don't pretend to know Osama bin Laden's mind, but I '''''do''''' know what he said, and it is consistent with the facts. I can see no reason to second-guess him except for propaganda purposes. --] 19:37, 2 September 2005 (UTC) </font>


Thanks for the votes, Zeph (although I do wish you'd put the extended discussion here so we don't make the voting list unmanageably long). Regarding the criterion about containment, no I did not propose it for the purpose of "showing how The Soviet Union v. al-Qaeda is the different than The United States v. al-Qaeda". My intent was to not include the endless civil wars that frequently use nasty tactics, like massacres of civilians. I consider those to be war crimes, and in some cases genocide, but not terrorism. ] 19:23, 2 September 2005 (UTC)


:I agree with Stone, the attack on the USS Cole, while it was a cowardly sneak attack, it was not, in my opinion, a "terrorist" attack. The USS Cole is a military vessel of the United States Navy and would be considered a legitimate target in any war. This attack is probably more correctly defined as a jihadist suicide attack; therefore it should be removed from this article in favor of another example that better fits the criteria, like the bombing of the London Underground, where civilians were targeted. -- ] 01:54, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
:<font color=#004422>It seems obvious that the three of us actually want to build a definition. If there is anything that all of us can agree upon, I propose that we start with that, working from the generally accepted to the specific additional constraints of usage. Anyone else who actually wants to help is certainly welcome. '''''--] 19:46, 2 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


::Definately an act of war not terrorism.] 02:06, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
::I want to do that, but don't feel 3 people is enough to call a quorum. I wanted 20 votes before proceeding to that stage, and you want 90. So, I get a weighted average of 45 votes to proceed to the next step. Since we are running maybe 3 votes a day, I hope we could hit that number in 15 days or so. ] 20:01, 2 September 2005 (UTC)


==Embargoes are State Terrorism?==
Zeph, I didn't understand your voting response "Hu?". Can you explain ? Also, if you have a link to where bin Laden said 9/11 was to destroy the US military, I would like to take a look at that. ] 19:53, 2 September 2005 (UTC)


The article includes embargoes as state terrorism. What's up with that? Naturally this is not true, otherwise "economic sanctions" must be included in the definition of state terrorism, which means trade agreements which stipulate economic recourses for violations need to be included in the state terrorism definition, which means diplomatic trade discussions need to be included.
:<font color=#004422>I'll look that up for you. He's said it many times. I saw it most recently in a video interview on Al Jazeera. Regarding the "hu," I'm sorry, I meant to say "Huh?" It isn't that I couldn't understand what the confusing sentence or the confusing arguments were saying if I put my mind to it; it's just that I don't want to extend that much effort on something that we've already discussed so many times in creating the ]. I consider you and Kafziel to be unbiased since you don't profess to be pushing any particular agenda. Do you two think the ] that me and several other editors hashed over for months should be thrown in the garbage? '''''--] 20:36, 2 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


== name change? ==
::Overall, I oppose that definition, or should I say those definitions, though there are parts of them I agree with. ] 23:13, 2 September 2005 (UTC)


What happened? A relatively new user -- editing for about a -- changes the name of this page without any discussion because he wants to focus on individual terrorists? I haven't been active on this page a while but am I the only one seeing a problem with this? And now, of course, it is impossible to move the page back. I note based on the user's edits, he has a fascination with notable killers and murderers - that is all fine, but this article was about terrorism, not about individual terrorists, and nobody had a problem with the title until now. Now what is the procedure for getting the name changed back? Unless the consensus agrees with Space ghost?--] 00:34, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
:::<font color=#004422>That wasn't really my question. Let me rephrase. Given that we have to start with either the ] or the ], which would be easier to edit to make a definitive definition? '''''--] 00:20, 3 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


From history :
::::I would say the def that is currently used on the main page is better, then. ] 02:09, 3 September 2005 (UTC)
22:37, 27 July 2006 Space Ghost 900 (Talk | contribs) m (moved Terrorism to Terrorists and Terrorisim: this article should be made to address the issue of notable indivual terriosts instead of the act of terriosim.)


Why ?
::::Zepoh will you please stop this BS? how many more people need to tell you that your definition is not useful here?--] 02:51, 3 September 2005 (UTC)


Move it back ! ] 01:02, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
:::::<font color=#004422>So far, I have one that doesn't have an obvious ulterior motive. What do you think, Kafziel? Don't be afraid to voice your opinion. These admins talk tough, but Misplaced Pages wouldn't be much of anything without its editors. --] 17:48, 3 September 2005 (UTC) </font>


I agree. The name change was not discussed, and would have been voted down if it had been. We should move it back. --] 02:19, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
::::::Zeph, do I understand correctly that you now classify me as someone with an "obvious ulterior motive", because I disagreed with your proposed definition ? ] 00:53, 4 September 2005 (UTC)


==Requested move==
:::::::<font color=#004422>No. You are the one person who has disagreed with my proposal who doesn't have an obvious ulterior motive. I appreciate honest criticism because it helps build a better article. You are obviously interested in building a definition that conveys information because you are actively working toward that end, so your opinion is quite valuable. --] 12:39, 4 September 2005 (UTC) </font>
] → ] – move it back to Terrorism. … Rationale: Superfluous. Ericd 01:06, 28 July 2006 (UTC)


===Survey===
::::::::Thanks. BTW, Zeph, did you ever find that bin Laden quote about the 9-11 attack being to destroy the US military ? ] 01:20, 5 September 2005 (UTC)
:''Add *'''Support''' or *'''Oppose''' followed by an optional one-sentence explanation, then sign your opinion with ''<nowiki>~~~~</nowiki>
*'''Support''' per ] and ]. --] | ] 06:01, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
*'''Support''' --] 06:41, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
*'''Support'''--] 07:38, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
*'''Support'''. New title is unusual for no apparent reason. ] 08:23, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
*'''Speedy support'''. How did it end in this silly title in the first place? An unilateral move, as I get it? ] 09:33, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
*'''Support''' ] 10:26, 28 July 2006 (UTC)


===Discussion===
:::::::::<font color=#004422>Peter Singer quotes bin Laden saying that in his book ''The Ethics of George W. Bush''. bin Laden said it several times in his videos that were blocked by the FBI, but shown on foreign channels. I also read it in a bin Laden interview on . If I run across a direct link, I'll post it here. '''''--] 16:54, 7 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>
:''Add any additional comments''
This is a huge problem with wikipedia that a troublemaker can come change the name of the article without discussion and then it cannot be changed back without an admin intervening after a discussion and vote. It should be as easy or difficult to change the article in the first place as it is to change it back. *sigh*--] 07:39, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
:In general, it can be moved back (if the redirect doesn't have history). The problem here is that other people were fixing the redirect for spelling and something minor, instead of reverting it back. A guy has been kicked off the Misplaced Pages (can't recall his username) for page moves to the names that suited him, then purposefully touching the redirect so that it's irrevertible without an admin. ] 12:11, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
::I'm not convinced that this is a "huge problem" procedurally. From one perspective it's very good. Once the poll is taken the issue can be considered closed, which preemptively eliminates the possibility that the article will be moved back and forth by individuals until the whole thing becomes a major dispute. ] 00:42, 30 July 2006 (UTC)
:I do '''not''' support the move. It should stay stuck at this title. --] 09:24, 29 July 2006 (UTC)


== A new idea? == ==State Terrorism==


This section fails to mention terrorist groups funded and directly aided by the CIA, such as those throughout Latin America, the harboring of anti-Cuban terrorists in Miami, and terrorist actions perpetrated by the Israeli government against the Palestinians, and, more recently, the Lebanese population.] 16:16, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
with all the archived discussion, I don't know if this has been described before, but what about digressing to history ''before'' the intro?
e.g.
1)"In order to define what terrorsim is, it is helpful first to give a condensed overview of the the histories of the word and the phenomenon"
2)histories given
3)Presently, terrorism has come to mean ...
] 18:46, 3 September 2005 (UTC)


== embargoes as state terrorism? ==
:<font color=#004422>Brilliant<FONT face="Times New Roman, Times, Serif" size=5>''!!''</FONT> --] 22:07, 3 September 2005 (UTC) </font>
::Uh, glad you like it. Other opinions? It would be great if we could get a consensus to at least try this, so we can unlock the page for a while. ] 23:31, 3 September 2005 (UTC)


i propose deleting embargoes in the list of examples for state terrorism. if this is controversial, maybe that could be discussed in the state terrorism article which does not mention embargoes. --] 08:24, 29 July 2006 (UTC)
:::I would prefer to define it first, then give historical usages. ] 00:49, 4 September 2005 (UTC)


== The Five Stage Process ==
:::<font color=#004422>There aren't that many people who actually care about making a good article for '''terrorism''', so don't expect anyone to support any particular idea. Most of the people are only here to keep the term from ever being defined. Don't let that stop you. I think your idea is among the best I've heard and I'd love to see you work it up. Obviously an article has to convey information in order to be considered a definition, so the grab-bag on the front page doesn't qualify, but as soon as we have a few real definition proposals, we can vote between them and the matter will be resolved. I'd love to see your idea fleshed out and StuRat's too. The more people we have making proposals, the better the definition will be in the end. Don't worry about the turd-blossom patrol. We flushed them all out with the last go round. If they block your definition without proposing anything better, they will lose their seats of power. Pretty much most of them are gone now, leaving a space for us to make real progress. '''''--] 01:39, 4 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>
I second the recommendation to remove this material. It don't see its relevance.--] 17:16, 30 July 2006 (UTC)
:I agree free up room for more important information and wikilinks.] 18:45, 1 August 2006 (UTC)


This section gives undue weight to a particular individual's theory of the sociology of terrorism. Unless it were to become an academic standard, it doesn't belong here. I've removed it. --] 03:27, 3 August 2006 (UTC)
Misplaced Pages articles are generally not structured that way, and for good reason. First the articles define the phenomenon, so people have an idea what the article is talking about, then they give the history of the term. As for Stark's contributions, the whole point of his ] is simply to promote the idea that the U.S. government's blockade of Iraq ''was'' terrorism, while Al Qaeda's attacks on the World Trade Center were not. The lack of response to him by regular editors is not because they are not watching this page, nor because they fear that they will "lose their seats of power"; rather, it is because they have generally lost patience with Stark's policy violations and his incessant personal attacks. If he continues on this course (e.g. referring to those who disagree with him using terms like "turd-blossom patrol" who have been "flushed out"), he will no doubt get himself banned soon enough. ]<sup><font color="DarkGreen">]</font></sup> 02:12, 4 September 2005 (UTC)


==Bias under State Terrorism==
:::<font color=#004422>See how easy it is to spot Karl's boys? They drone on and on about how any proposal won't work, but never propose anything better. Don't worry about Jayjg and his idle threats. He obviously doesn't have more than eight or ten administrators in his corrupt little gang. He talks all tough, but every time he blocks someone who's only crime is trying to make a better definition, he shows another dozen people how he's abusing his power, and we always get them unblocked again in very little time. '''''--] 03:19, 4 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


Although there is a link to a more in-depth article, the summary section given here is ridiculously biased. It lists Islamic extremist groups and communist-backed groups as examples of state terrorism, but fails to mention American or Israeli terrorism. This would seem to be a necessary counter-point to the argument presented here.] 16:01, 31 July 2006 (UTC)
::I agree that in general this idea is not desirable for an encyclopedia article, especially when a reader comes to an article knowing nothing about the subject. But I think it might be in this case, since most any reader coming here will have heard the term terrorism before, and will probably be wanting a more general and detailed overview of the what the term connotates beyond his/her own personal knowledge. I also think it could resolve the current deadlock in a way that might eventually lead to a consensus on what terrorism is, and this defintion/lack of definition/discussion of the vagaries of defintion/whatever might eventually be move back to the top. If the problem is as bad as it sounds, however, it might not do much good. ] 04:12, 4 September 2005 (UTC)
sigh --] 19:27, 31 July 2006 (UTC)


== "Against Innocents or non-combatants" ==
There's no real deadlock, though. Essentially Zephram Stark wants to re-write the article, and every other editor here (and we're talking 8 or more long-term editors) thinks his edits detract from the quality of the article, and most refuse to talk to him any more. ]<sup><font color="DarkGreen">]</font></sup> 07:18, 4 September 2005 (UTC)


I've reverted the intro again because the phrase "against innocents or non-combatants" is misleading. What do you call it when insurgents in Iraq kidnap American and British soldiers, and film their executions? Clearly these victims are combatants, and in the eyes of terrorists, they are not innocent; but at the same time, these are not typical actions of war, they are mass-media-enhanced tactics of spreading fear - the very definition of modern terrorism. ] 15:41, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
:<font color=#004422>Speak for yourself, tough guy. My only interest is in creating a definition that conveys information. My actions back that up. Your actions betray your true motivation as well. '''''--] 12:25, 4 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


:But under that definition, any use of violence could be construed as terroristic. What separates terrorism from non-terrorism is not the conventionality of the tactics used, but the targets of those tactics.] 15:59, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
::Please be aware that your next personal attack on this page will result in an RfC. Your behavior is contributing to the delay in unprotecting this article. ] | ] 17:50, 4 September 2005 (UTC)


::My point was that the type of person being directly harmed by terrorists is not important, when the message of the terrorist act is the same; The message behind executing a soldier(a combatant) on video is more or less the same message behind killing thousands of innocents on 9/11. An insurgent firing his weapon at a coalition soldier on the streets of Fallujah does not intend to spread any ideological message or demand, and it is therefore not a terroristic act. It doesn't matter if the victim is a soldier, because some acts of violence against soldiers are terroristic in nature, and some are simply standard acts of warfare. All that matters is whether there is a message, and whom it is being directed at. ] 16:33, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
:::<font color=#004422>If you want me to stop defending myself, I know of a really easy way to do that, Carbonite. Stop attacking me, and concentrate on a making a positive proposal for the article. '''''--] 14:33, 5 September 2005 (UTC)'''''


:::I disagree. Any soldier killed on the battlefield is an act of war, not terrorism. Deliberately killing or threatening to kill unarmed civilians is terrorism. Soldiers are armed and trained to risk death in combat, civilians are not. Now if you want to argue that killing an unarmed and non-threatening military prisoner of war is a war crime and against the Geneva conventions, then I would agree it is a war crime, but still not terrorism. Terrorism is a war crime, but not all war crimes are terrorism. Terrorism has its roots in barbarism.
::::Do you actually listen to your own advice? ] | ] 14:35, 5 September 2005 (UTC)


:::One sort of terrorism that has not been mentioned is terrorism by proxy. The deliberate act of endangering civilians by setting up military targets (i.e. rocket launchers) next to occupied homes and civilian buildings so that when the target is bombed, civilians are sure to be killed by the blast.
:::::<font color=#003311>Yes. '''''--] 15:10, 5 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


:::The failure of combatants to wear a uniform in combat is another war crime especially when they attack in populated areas and hide in the crowd. -- ] 18:12, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
== Perspectives from Other Languages ==
Also (though not to derail), I noticed there's no link to the ''many'' articles on terrorism in other languages. Very interesting distinctions. German one talks about a systematic and tactical action toward a goal, French about 'un sentiment de terreur,' Russian about an action of violence against someone who's not a formal enemy, Italian stub admits that 'La definizione di terrorismo non è unica,' Spanish page, with a warning about 'la neutrelidad,' starts off by descrbing terrorism as 'una estrategia de guerra asimétrica,' and quickly acknowledges the utility of considering 'la etimología de la palabra.' I would be interested especially in Hebrew, and Arabic if someone can summarize their definitions. ] 23:31, 3 September 2005 (UTC)


::::The notion that "Any soldier killed on the battlefield is an act of war" is ridiculous. The beheading of soldiers '''on videos''' which are then '''disseminated to the mass media''' is clearly an attempt to spread fear. In direct relation to the fighting going on in the war, the terrorists receive almost no benefit in killing the soldier; it would be completely absurd for the insurgency to attempt to defeat the coalition by endlessly capturing and beheading soldiers one at a time. Beheadings of this type have absolutely nothing to do with war, and everything to do with sending a message to the western world and generating fear and hopelessness. Why the hell would they film it otherwise? Terrorism is about creating fear, and sending a message; A terrorist can accomplish this by victimizing a soldier just as easily as he could by victimizing an innocent. ] 19:42, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
:The same word often has slightly different, or in some cases radically different, meanings in different languages. For example, in French "molest" means to "bother or disturb" (which is also it's original meaning in English, as seen in old movies: "Officer, this man is molesting me"). It's common modern meaning is to sexually assault children. My point is that we will likely find a different meaning for terrorism is each language. I'm not sure how WikiPedia handles this in general, does it restrict itself to the English language or try to define words in every language in which they are used ? ] 00:46, 4 September 2005 (UTC)
:::::I still disagree, to whom are they attempting to spread fear? Anger maybe, but fear? All right, perhaps they wish to spread fear amongst the other soldiers, but how would that be different then shooting him out in the open, or killing him by shelling his platoon, this is just more of the same. Yes, it is horrible, but that is war and it has always been like that, the difference today is you the civilian get to witness it at home in your living room, while in times past you just heard about it a week later. I stand by my statement; terrorism is unique as a tactic because it targets civilians and by doing so threatens all the other civilians who see the video. Civilians would not normally feel threatened by the death of a soldier in battle or as a prisoner, since the war is not being fought in the target audiences location (i.e. here in the west) however, bombing a civilian train in London does threaten the target audience at home. Do you see the difference?


:::::Let me also say that the criteria here for what is fear of terrorism should be a "reasonable" fear, anyone can develop an unreasonable fear, like fear of the number 13. We should not be basing our definition of terrorism on such a low threshold of fear, like fear of seeing death on TV five thousand miles away from the incident qualifies as being terrorized. If that were true, then any death on TV would be terrorism, and Hollywood movie studios would be terrorist organisations. Many Hollywood productions inclued real war footage and show real soldiers being killed. --] 20:05, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
::Agreed, but I don't think this applies here, since at present we have many world leaders adressing the whole world on the subject of terrorism as "currently understood," knowing that they will be translated into English, Finnish, Chinese.... Thus if there's a breakdown in meaning in some of these translation, I think that far from rendering the foreign language meanings irrelevant, this breakdown is relevant to the article because of the global natures of terrorism and the response to it. ] 04:22, 4 September 2005 (UTC)


::::::You don't think watching a soldier beheaded on television causes reasonable fear? Sure, the viewer wouldn't be afraid of getting kidnapped and beheaded themselves, because they're not anywhere near a place where that would happen; And certainly I'll agree that these videos are designed primarily to be seen by soldiers. But I can't agree with the notion that beheading someone on film is the same as shelling a platoon or shooting a soldier in the open; the videos convey a sense of complete hopelessness to stop the terrorists, and show the relentless violence of their mindset, much moreso than any conventional fighting could. These messages generate fear and demoralize the soldiers, whereas fighting conventionally is just par for the course. Terrorism directed at the soldiers is terrorism nonetheless.
:<font color=#004422>I think that's an excellent idea<FONT face="Times New Roman, Times, Serif" size=5>''!!''</FONT> Definitions from other languages are highly relevant. '''''--] 01:50, 4 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


::::::At any rate, the videos aren't just directed at soldiers; they threaten ''everyone'' with the prospect of dealing with the perpetrators, who are showing themselves to be ruthless and uncaring murderers. These videos are a prime example of terrorism. ] 21:13, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
Misplaced Pages does not refer to itself as a source. ]<sup><font color="DarkGreen">]</font></sup> 02:14, 4 September 2005 (UTC)


:::::::I don't agree with your definition of “terrorism” of soldiers as equivalent to terrorism. Terrorism must be defined differently than the military demoralization you describe. Otherwise you legitimize the killing of innocent civilians as the same as the killing of soldiers. There must be a difference in the definition in order to logically understand the subject matter. There is, and always has been a difference in the definition of things military and non-military. The reason for this is that we consider war to be separate from the civilized society it is designed to protect. Many things are permissible in war that are not permissible within civilized society. The reasons for this are purely practical. Without the practical ability to make war upon an attacking nation, that nation is powerless to prevent being overrun by its enemy and snuffed out. Every major nation that exists on the face of the earth exists to this day because it is the result of winning the wars in its history. There are also many nations that do not exist today, because they lost and were wiped out. For example, where is the great Aztec nation? Gone, overrun, looted, and replaced by Spanish Conquistadores. Terrorism is an “ism”; it is a philosophy, it is the philosophy that war should not have limits and that everyone (old women, children, babies, pregnant women, the handicapped, etc.) is a target for death, torture, rape, and oppression. Terrorism is a form of barbarism purposefully and narrowly directed at the most defenseless members of a society in order to break that society’s will to defend itself. It is by its very nature, cowardly, pathetic, and uncivilized. Those who subscribe to its tactics have elected themselves to be vermin and a pestilence upon the earth. They leave no option for peace other than their own eradication because they give no quarter and accept no treaty or terms. They are obsessed with their own deaths and those of their victims. They are criminals in every and all senses of the word. They are scum with no redeeming qualities and with no legitimate purpose for existence. They see no value in human life; therefore they make their own lives of no value. Their existence is a threat to everyone who wants peace and peace is not possible while they exist. They are incompatible with civilized society and they seethe with lust for its destruction and the deaths of its constituents. They are, in a word, evil.--] 13:57, 9 August 2006 (UTC)
:<font color=#004422>I've never heard an encyclopedia refer to itself in any manner. I didn't even think they could talk. '''''--] 03:31, 4 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


::::::::What you describe could equally be called War Crimes when carried out by "official" armies.] 15:22, 9 August 2006 (UTC)
:Misplaced Pages in English shouldn't cite itself but I'm pretty sure it ''can'' site Misplaced Pages articles in other languages. I wouldn't recommend this, though, since chances are the other langauges' wiki articles are equally volatile. My point was just that issue this should be included somehow, as it seems to accentuate the difficulty of the definition. I think that the language issue is just one more reason to avoid an overly narrow or technical definition. (I'm taking out that smiley face if no one minds) ] 04:22, 4 September 2005 (UTC)
:::::::::The grotesque nature of these acts make them war crimes; the fact that they are filmed and distributed makes them terrorism.


:::::::::In response to Britcom: Again, you and the others are missing the point. I understand full well that it is expected that soldiers will be attacked during wartime. But the types of things I've described go far beyond any definition of war, crossing over into the realm of terrorism.
::<font color=#004422>Don't mind Jayjg. He's just throwing up another smoke screen. If we listened to the Rove's naysayers, we wouldn't consider anybody's definition of terrorism except the ''Department of Homeland Gestapo''. '''''--] 12:18, 4 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


:::::::::I am not attempting to equate civilians to soldiers, thereby backhandedly legitimizing all terrorist acts against civilians as merely acts of war. In fact, it seems that those who disagree with me are doing almost the same thing: legitimizing terrorist acts against soldiers as acts of war, and sympathising with those who would mutilate a human on television by thinking of them as soldiers who are simply fighting a war. As you said, these people are not soldiers, they are cowards; their acts are not those of war but of motivated violence used as a fear-generating weapon.
== Techinical Solution Might Allow for Unprotection ==


:::::::::These videos are not just 'military demoralization'. I'm not in the military, but I've seen the videos and been disturbed by them; they have affected me and my peers, just as they might affect a soldier, which is entirely the goal of the perpetrators. ] 18:02, 10 August 2006 (UTC)
First of all, Jesus fucking christ. This discussion page is extremely childish and I wish people would not attack each other in the responses to my posts.
That being said, I understand the main point of contention is the definition. Since this comes at the very beginning of the article, we can't protect it without protecting the article. I hope we could get consensus to do the following:
:1)At the very beginning of the article, start with an exteremly innocuous definition '''preamble''' statement we can all agree on. E.g.: "This article is about the word terrorism and the things this word refers to."
:2)Immediately after we have a '''section'' called Defintion of Terrorism, Definitions of Terrorism, What is Terrorism, etc. This is a seperate section, so we can can keep it protected while unprotecting the rest of the page.
:3)Get an administrator to unlock the page, keeping a definition in a locked section.
:4)We work on '''the content of the article''' ''a lot''. In particular I'd like to see:
:*A lot more info about differing perspectives on terrorisim
:*More info on history(I'd like to work on 19th century terrorism myself)
:*Terrorism in fiction
:*quotes by GW Bush, Salman Rushdie, Edward Said, Jacques Derida, Jacques Chirac, Vladimir Putin...
:*Terrorism and democracy
:*translations of the word terrorism into other languages, the subtle differences that can be lost in translation, and what this means for terrorism as a global problem.
:5)After all this '''hard work''' (which anyone who wants to whine about the definition/lack of defintion/multiple definitions/futility of a defintion is '''strongly''' encouraged to participate in by yours truly) it should be much more clear what an appropriate definition should be. We can then try to reach a consensus on the talk page, unprotect the defintion, and
:6)take out the preamble.
I know this is imperfect, but I think it's the best way ahead. If everyone agrees to this we can have the page unprotected in 24 hours. This is an important subject and having it locked is just an embarassment. Misplaced Pages is precisly the place people would go to find a balanced, npov view on this kind of issue. ] 17:35, 4 September 2005 (UTC)
*'''Agree''' since I wrote it ] 17:35, 4 September 2005 (UTC)
*<font color=#003311>'''Agree''' that your suggestion would be better than this, and as per my comments below. '''''--] 15:08, 5 September 2005 (UTC)'''''


:::::::::: See my comments below at '''Reverted Intro''' --] 02:27, 11 August 2006 (UTC)
Unless I'm understanding your plan incorrectly, it is not technically possible. An article is either protected or unprotected, they can't be protected at the section level. The only workaround would be to transclude a protected template with the definition, but that's not very plausible. ] | ] 17:42, 4 September 2005 (UTC)
:Actually I'm fairly sure I've see this done in other articles. I'm trying to find an example now... ] 17:51, 4 September 2005 (UTC)
::There may be an article or two that uses such a translusion scheme, but it's extremely unorthodox and makes editing far more difficult. Hundreds (thousands?) of other controversial articles exist without any type of protection and I don't see the need for long-term protection (section-level or otherwise) here. ] | ] 17:56, 4 September 2005 (UTC)
:::I don't see a need for it either, but I don't see how this page is going to get unprotected anytime soon otherwise. Actually, I think I may have been thinking about a neutrality notice on a section, which could also be used, if people would form a consensus about not messing with idea for a while. The whole situation is just kind sad and lame, worrying about piddling techinicalities when the article itself is so obviously underdeveloped. But if we don't do this or something similar, how does the page get unprotected? ] 18:01, 4 September 2005 (UTC)
::::<font color=#003311>Your suggestion of editing the article is completely workable and '''''was''''' working as per Misplaced Pages guidelines until Jayjg and SlimVirgin started deleting large relevant chunks of the article, and reverting it to what we have now, as punitive gestures. If we can all agree to concentrate on making the article better, instead of punishing each other, there is no reason the article has to be locked.
::::<font color=#003311>I agree that we should start with an extremely innocuous definition '''preamble''' statement we can all agree on. However, a definition doesn't do anyone any good unless it conveys some sort of information. If there were just one word that we could all agree is associated with '''terrorism''', that would be better than no definition at all: "intimidate" for instance. '''''--] 15:08, 5 September 2005 (UTC)'''''


=="Causes" section==
===an easier way to solve this===
<blockquote><nowiki>==Causes==
I believe an admin can protect the page for only particular users - if we make this page so that anybody but Mr. Stark can change it, it should be reasonab;le to unprotect it. The only reason it is protected is because Stark kept messing it up. --] 02:24, 7 September 2005 (UTC)
====Social Networks====
*As far as I know, that is not something admins are capable of. --]] 02:50, 7 September 2005 (UTC)
====Historical Context====
====Cross Cutting Cleavages====
Cross Cutting Cleavages refer to a person or group's connections to other persons and groups with different ideologies and backgrounds. It has been found that the use of violent tactics for a political agenda is far more likely to be committed by groups with few cross cutting cleavages. For example, the al-Qaeda network is comprised of men who met while fighting Soviets in Afghanistan during the cold war, and all share the same religious and political beliefs. Thus an organization of like-minded individuals with little connection to opposing thoughts become "extremist" and use violence against their enemies. Research has also shown (citation?) that people become involved in terrorist organizations through their social networks, their social ties to others. It is then more important who one knows than what one thinks in becoming a terrorist. Combining these two ideas, we can begin to predict when terrorist organizations will form and who will be a part of them. If persons with few outside connections but many friends within their closed community, violent action on a political ideology is possible. {{citation needed}}</nowiki></blockquote>


This section needs citations and a lot of work, if it's worth keeping at all. I've moved it here from the article. It sounds like it may be an extension of the "five stages", which as I noted above under the Five Stages heading I've removed because its inclusion gives undue weight to a particular individual's theories. And why is there nothing under the Social Networks and Historical Context headings? --] 18:55, 4 August 2006 (UTC)
::On the other hand, we could just revert any absurd edits he makes and ignore the talk-page trolling, deleting it if necessary. One editor can't hold a page up with so many opposing him. ] <sup><font color="Purple">]</font></sup> 03:00, September 7, 2005 (UTC)


::: Don't know if this is the place, but I like the idea of discussing how "persons with few connections" outside their own beliefs may tend toward erratic behavior. Might call it the Timothy McVeigh syndrome. These guys met and talked among themselves and reinforced their own wacky ideas, and there was no one there to say "Wait a minute, this is nuts." Ditto the Branch Davidians and the Jones cults, and it even says something about the political polarization we are witnessing in the U.S. today. There is so much media that we can pick just the outlets that agree with us and never have to hear the other side of the story. ]
:::<font color=#003311>The ] prevents one editor from reverting the definition more than three times. It sounds like what you really want is to prevent anyone from editing the article that doesn't agree with your agenda. ''(For those just joining us, the intro to '''terrorism''' hasn't conveyed information for going on three years now. JP, SlimVirgin, and CSloat delete any attempt to define the term, lock non-definitional definitions to the article, block IPs that revert their non-definitions, and call anyone taking a stand against them a "sockpuppet" or ]. If you want to see who is actually helping to improve the article, simply take a look through the archives at all the people proposing objective definitions.)'' '''''--] 15:39, 7 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


== Protect? ==
== ] ==
Normally I don't add needless sections to talk pages, and God knows this one has enough already. But I hope this will be the last chapter in this increasingly pathetic story. &ndash; ]\<sup><font color="gray">]</font></sup> 19:12, 4 September 2005 (UTC)


Perhaps this article should be protected. There seems to be a history of spam, nonsense and racist rubbish being posted on here. ] 13:00, 7 August 2006 (UTC)
:<font color=#003311>So... your message is that if we don't leave terrorism undefined, that you will get us in trouble? That might have worked in third grade, but here you'll have to present some sort of logical argument as to why you think the introductory definition of '''terrorism''' should remain undefined. '''''--] 15:15, 5 September 2005 (UTC)'''''</font>


== Reverted intro ==
::Zephram, the RfC page is quite specific about the reasons why it exists. The content of the article is not the issue. I still hope some compromise can be reached to everyone's satisfaction, but the more I read of this discussion page, the less likely that seems. I think your cause would be better served by adressing the criticism of your conduct on the CfD page in more detail and with less ideology and by evincing a greater willingness to comproimse. As far as content is concerned, I would like to better understand your point of view (which I understand is that a single objective defintion should be agreed upon, though I'm not really sure of the details), but it's greatly obscured at present by your rhetoric the attacks both on you and by you. Perhaps you could host the version of the intro you'd like to see on your talk page, with a justification of why you think it's better viz-a-viz wikipedia guidelines. ] 15:42, 5 September 2005 (UTC)


I've reverted the intro to something which I hope we can get some consensus on. Let's take a look at this statement:
:::<font color=#003311>When you say, "The content of the article is not the issue," I hope you are speaking for yourself. For some of us, the content of the article is the '''''only''''' issue. I've been through this same thing on many articles, including ]. In the end, it didn't matter what people thought of me. The only thing that mattered is that the NPOV tag was removed and has stayed off ever since. We finally have an article for '''al Qaeda''' that conveys information and is stable. That same thing can be done with '''terrorism'''. There are only a few people here who are trying to keep terrorism undefined. If we concentrate on the article, instead of letting them confuse the issue, we can get the job done.</font>
:::<font color=#003311>I have proposed ], not as something ''perfect'', but as something that conveys information—-a starting point. The purpose of a definition is to convey information, so '''''that much''''' is a bare minimum. I think my proposal is a step in the right direction because it more closely matches ] for what I believe a great article should encompass. '''''--] 15:59, 7 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


:''Terrorism is distinguished from other uses of force in that it involves the intentional targeting of persons who, unlike heads of state, members of the armed forces, and security personnel, are not direct participants in the conflict with the terrorists. Thus a "freedom fighter," an "insurgent," or a member of the armed forces may be a terrorist if and when he/she engages in an act of violence intentionally targeting a civilian population, while members of an acknowledged terrorist group defending themselves against persons trying to capture them are not, per se, committing a terrorist act.''
::::Zehpram I looked at ] and you introduced a reasonable definition without neologisms or original research, and you did not try to shove it down everyone's throat, you didn't engage in personal attacks and you didn't insist on typing everything in obnoxious colors and fonts. Thgere was no big controversy over your behavior on the talk page because you weren't being completely out of line, like you are here. Your definition on that page raised no controversy. Here it raised controversy because there was original research, there were absurd neologisms that nobody has ever used before, and you "defended" your definition by constant reversions by you and by anon ips that mysteriously appeared whenever you had run out of reverts, as well as by personal attacks and the demeanor of an 8-year-old stomping their foot. Nobody here wants you to offer a starting point for a new definition because of your conduct. The issues here have little to do with the content of your "contribution" -- that issue was settled long ago. The issue is with your conduct, and it is really way out of line. I have been in some disputes with other users before, but I have never seen anything like this. You may think you're just being tenacious but I encourage you to take a step back for a few days and consider this from other perspectives. --] 19:11, 7 September 2005 (UTC)


First of all, this part is far too long. The other debate I got involved in regarding this page sprung up because of a two-word phrase, 'against non-combatants', which essentially says the same thing. Additionally, the whole thing about terrorists defending themselves and therefore not committing terrorist acts is unnecessary, as this would be obvious if the introductory sentence properly identified terrorism as actions, rather than as a philosophy or ideology.
:::::<font color=#003311>I don't believe that you looked deeply enough, Commodore. The ] article was bitterly fought over for months. An NPOV tag has been on the article for most of its existence. The definition was locked for weeks at a time, and people like you played the same games of diverting attention away from the content of the article. When I was personally attacked, I would defend myself. When I saw ulterior motives, I would point them out. At the same time, I worked with everyone who was serious about improving the article until the we succeeded in creating a stable NPOV definition. Occasionally, people still try to undefine the definition of '''al Qaeda''' by throwing up contradictory smoke-screens, but their agenda becomes increasingly apparent over time. They're the ones, like you, who only create problems, not solutions.</font>
:::::<font color=#003311>Please feel free to prove me wrong. Many people have proposed solutions to which you could contribute. I would also love to hear you propose a solution of your own. '''''--] 20:25, 7 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


I've changed it to 'almost exclusively against non-combatants', which I hope will account for the subtle nuance of the debated subject matter.
::::::I have proposed a solution, which is for you to STFU. I have also proposed changes to the intro, which you belittled, because your only interest seems to be to cause trouble, rather than to actually improve the article. But the only "problem" needing a solution is your disruption of this page, and the solution is easy - for you to stop disrupting the page. As for the al-Qaeda page, don't give me this "months of debate" crap like you made up about this page. If there are diffs you would like to point us to that show us what you're talking about, please feel free to, otherwise you are just making up more crap.--] 23:10, 7 September 2005 (UTC)


== Just one Sentence ==
<font color=#003311>Let's play a little game called ''Just One Sentence''. In it, we'll take turns proposing the first sentence for the '''terrorism''' article. Anyone can play, but you can't reject the previous person's proposal unless you can come up with a better one yourself. When we get to the point that nobody can propose something better, that must be the best possible first sentence we can get. '''''--] 18:15, 7 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


:''...to generate fear, cause disruption, and ultimately to '''cause the authorities of a population to comply''' with certain political, religious, ...''
<font color=#003311>I'll start:</font>
*'''Terrorism''' is the systematic use of ] for the purpose of governing, opposing government, or as a type of ].
* According to the Department of Defence, '''terrorism''' is "the calculated use of unlawful violence or threat of unlawful violence to inculcate fear; intended to coerce or to intimidate governments or societies in the pursuit of goals that are generally political, religious, or ideological." In practice, the exact definition varies - it has descriptive and prescriptive..." Remove from "Definitions of "terrorism" generally" to "See State terrorism." Where relevent insert into body text. Lose the entire definitions section. ] - ] 19:01, 7 September 2005 (UTC)
::<font color=#003311>I '''disagree''' that Hipocrite's definition is better because I think the '''Department of Defence''' is biased. Asking a government to define terrorism is like asking ] to define ''mass-murderer''. If we have to quote a definitive source, I think the ] description, that I propose below, is written from an NPOV. '''''--] 19:29, 7 September 2005 (UTC)'''''</font>
*The word "terrorism" is controversial. There is no agreed upon definition, and the way the term is used varies widely. ]<sup><small><font color="DarkGreen">]</font></small></sup> 19:07, 7 September 2005 (UTC)
::<font color=#003311>I '''disagree''' that the above definition is better that Hipocrite's because Jayjg's doesn't convey any information. I think we can all agree that the minimum purpose of a definition is to convey information. '''''--] 19:29, 7 September 2005 (UTC)'''''</font>
:::Nobody said it was a definition. He claimed it was a good first sentence, and I agree with him. I think we can all agree that trying to wrap up the usage of this word in one short simple straightforward sentence is never going to be possible, and these two sentences are a good way to introduce the article. &ndash; ]\<sup><font color="gray">]</font></sup> 19:46, 7 September 2005 (UTC)
::::<font color=#003311>In that case, I think we have a format dispute that needs to be worked out before we can agree on how to add content. I'll start a section for that. '''''--] 19:52, 7 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>
:::::If it's definitions you're looking for, "Terrorism is the use of force by non-governmental groups or individuals with the intent of deliberately killing or injuring civilians in order to achieve political ends". ]<sup><small><font color="DarkGreen">]</font></small></sup> 20:27, 7 September 2005 (UTC)
::::::<font color=#003311>Is that from the Qur'an? --] 20:40, 7 September 2005 (UTC) </font>
:::::::Oh, I thought you were trying to engage in meaningful discourse. I won't make that error again. ]<sup><small><font color="DarkGreen">]</font></small></sup> 20:59, 7 September 2005 (UTC)
::::::::<font color=#003311>I guess I misunderstood you. When you said that it was a definition, I thought you meant that it was taken from something. Since you didn't provide a source, I thought the authoritarianism of it sounded like the Qur'an. '''''--] 21:08, 7 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>
:::::::::Please don't bother with the B.S., Stark, you know the Qur'an contains no definitions of terrorism. Where did ''your'' proposed definitions come from? Any of them? You just ]. Your agenda here is clear, it is purely for POV pushing and disruption. You are dismissed. ]<sup><small><font color="DarkGreen">]</font></small></sup> 21:13, 7 September 2005 (UTC)
::::::::::<font color=#003311>I've never read the Qur'an, but the quotes I've heard from it are consistent with your definition of terrorism being specifically non-governmental: the government gets it's power from God and anyone who disagrees is against God, evil, or some other pejorative term. In a government '''''of the people''''', like we have here in the good old USA, we would never require government exclusion from a potentially pejorative term. Here, our representatives only get their power from us, so it is possible for them to be just as corrupt as any non-governmental group, or more so. '''''--] 21:36, 7 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>
*The Oxford English Dictionary defines terrorism as "a policy intended to strike with terror those against whom it is adopted; the employment of methods of intimidation; the fact of terrorizing or condition of being terrorized." --] 19:29, 7 September 2005 (UTC)


This is too presumptuous, as many terrorist acts are meant to affect public opinion, which only affects authority figures indirectly. Also, this is somewhat redundant, as it is later explained that terrorism targets societies.
*''Terrorism is life-threatening violence directed against civilians, perpetrated by a non-state entity (or covertly by a nation) and not contained within the geographic region it is designed to "liberate" (from the POV of the perpetrators).'' ] 20:15, 7 September 2005 (UTC)
] 21:32, 10 August 2006 (UTC)
:::<font color=#003311>I disagree that terrorism is necessarily life-threatening, necessarily violent, or necessarily directed against civilians. None of those things are required to terrorize someone. I don't think we should preclude the possibility that the word might be used in its original context. '''''--] 20:53, 7 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>
::::I think we should, because "intense fear" clearly is not the subject of this article. &ndash; ]\<sup><font color="gray">]</font></sup> 21:12, 7 September 2005 (UTC)
:::::<font color=#003311>Let me make sure that I understand you correctly. You're saying that ''nobody'' uses '''terrorism''' to mean anything that could include "intense fear?" '''''--] 21:21, 7 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>
:::I'm saying that "terrorism" in the ultra-broad sense that you propose, namely "any policy that causes intense fear" is not the subject of this article. &ndash; ]\<sup><font color="gray">]</font></sup> 21:25, 7 September 2005 (UTC)
::::<font color=#003311>I don't believe that anybody proposed "any policy that causes intense fear." Where did you get that quote from? The closest I can find is the OED definition that you tried so hard to convince me was the most authoritative source. Personally, I would rather go with Webster. '''''--] 23:05, 7 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>
*'''Terrorism''' is the opposite of ]. While conventional warfare reduces an opponent's '''''ability''''' to fight, terrorism attempts to reduce an opponent's '''''will''''' to fight. --] 20:53, 7 September 2005 (UTC)


: I agree the discussion of examples of what is NOT terrorism could go somewhere else so that the introductory section is not too long. But generally, I see nothing in this latest version that actually distinguishes terrorism from other acts of violence. I believe that is what we need to reach consensus on. And I'm afraid I don't follow the logic in the arguments you put forth here in the discussion. E.g., you say the introductory sentence needs to describe terrorism as an action, not a philosophy. The introductory sentence DID describe it as an action -- the use of violence. No philosophy there. And isn't saying that terrorist acts are meant to affect public opinion and thus affect authority figures indirectly the same as saying "generate fear ... and ultimately cause the authorities ... to comply ..."? That was my intent. Maybe I missed the mark. Anyhoo, in one sentence or less, what distinguishes terrorism from other violence? I say it's that it is the intentional targeting of a general population/non-combatants whatever we want to call them. Adding "almost exclusively" invalidates this as a distinguishing factor. So what is it?]
Stark nobody wants to play your game because nobody trusts you. You pretend to be interested in improving the article until you get somebody sucked into discussing with you, then you start trolling, attacking, and playing games that make it clear you're not really interested in anything but causing trouble. So please stop it. --] 23:38, 7 September 2005 (UTC)


:: Terrorism is distinguished in that violence is used to create fear, and that fear is directed at larger societies''''''';//Can't the same be said for acts that are not terrorism, such as developing or testing a nuclear weapon (Iran, India, pakistan) or missile (North Korea), or issuing threats in speeches, or shelling an off-shore island (Quemoy-Matsu), or any number of other acts? Again, I think it is the violent attack on the civilian populace that distinguishes. '''I believe that is what the terrorists themselves say their method and aim is.//''''' '' I think that, as it is, the article makes this fairly clear. The intro sentence explains that terrorism is used to create fear, and the following sentence explains how it is an indirect form of coercion. We do not need to reiterate or elaborate on the notions that innocents are being harmed, because that is already made clear by the existing statements.
:Exactly. "Fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me". ]<sup><small><font color="DarkGreen">]</font></small></sup> 23:43, 7 September 2005 (UTC)


:: My apologies for the mix-up with the logic - The article previously referred to terrorism as 'a strategy' rather than 'the use of violence...'; at any rate, the whole thing about terrorists defending themselves would still be redundant, because the article defines terrorism as the use of violence to generate fear; The scenario in which 'terrorists' defend themselves is, by our definition, not an act of terrorism. // Agreed, but so many things are called terrorism that I believe it is important to say, somewhere, what is NOT terrorism.]//
== Format for the Article ==
<font color=#003311>It appears, from the section above, that we have a dispute over how the article should be laid out. Please offer your suggestions.</font><p>
<font color=#003311>I think of an encyclopedia article as useful when it immediately conveys information. A user might want just a quick overview, in which case she might only want to read a sentence or two. Deeper researchers would want to start with an overview and then a table of contents. I can't think of anyone who would want to read an introduction that didn't tell them anything. For that reason, I propose that the format for our article be as follows: we start with the most definitive sentence that we can all agree encompasses terrorism. (It doesn't necessarily have to constrain it to our particular meaning yet.) After that, we constrain it further, into distinct categories if we have to, giving the full context of each usage. If you think there is a better way to format the intro to an encyclopedia article, please share it with us. '''''--] 20:06, 7 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>
:I think an encyclopedia article is useful when it immediately conveys ''factual'' information; articles which make unsourced and false claims, or ] are inherently not useful. ]<sup><small><font color="DarkGreen">]</font></small></sup> 20:22, 7 September 2005 (UTC)
::<font color=#003311>Is your definition of ''factual'' something that is consistent with the scientific method, or does your ''factual'' have a higher, religious meaning? '''''--] 20:36, 7 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


:: The thing about the authorities seemed to suggest a more direct brand of terrorism which specifically and exclusively targets only the authority figures in societies, which I doubt is what you intended. Otherwise it just seems redundant and unnecessary, given the definition of terrorism as targeting societies. '''''//I think we need to try this without using the word "targeting" in several different senses. When you say targeting societies I believe what you mean is that their purpose is to affect the societies. And conversely when you say the terrorists don't really target people, you might get a rise out of folks who were at the World Trade Center. What you mean, I believe, is that their ultimate goal is not just to kill, but to effect change in policies.''''']] 22:37, 10 August 2006 (UTC)
:::What do you mean by that exactly, Zephram? ] <sup><font color="Purple">]</font></sup> 21:02, September 7, 2005 (UTC)
::::<font color=#003311>It sounds to me like Jayjg is hinting that one or more of the sentences is factually incorrect. By my definition of factual, none of them could be considered incompatible with the scientific method, so I was wondering if he had a different definition. Often people cite religious beliefs as fact, so I was wondering if he meant they weren't factual from a religious standpoint. '''''--] 21:16, 7 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>


::I agree, in general. Have as precise a definition as we can agree upon up front, then list all the history and alternative defs, eventually getting to the wacky ones (I suppose al-Queda defines anyone who doesn't believe in their brand of Islam as a terrorist). On the other hand, if all we can agree upon is something like "an act that may or may not be violent, may or may not be against civilians, who may or may not be the primary target, for what may or may not be purposes of intimidation for what may or may not be political goals", then forget it. If that's all we can agree upon we might as well just say "We don't know !" and end it there.] 20:27, 7 September 2005 (UTC)


:::: ''Can't the same be said for acts that are not terrorism, such as developing or testing a nuclear weapon (Iran, India, pakistan) or missile (North Korea), or issuing threats in speeches, or shelling an off-shore island (Quemoy-Matsu), or any number of other acts? Again, I think it is the violent attack on the civilian populace that distinguishes.''
:::<font color=#003311>I feel confident that if we continue to propose improvements to the first sentence proposal above, expanding the definition as needed to encompass the usages of everyone, we can come up with a first sentence we can all agree upon. '''''--] 20:36, 7 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>
::: No, because these acts are not in themselves violent. Pushing one's political weight around does not have the same effect as murdering thousands, so it is the combination of violence and the use thereof in spreading fear which defines terrorism.


:::: ''Agreed, but so many things are called terrorism that I believe it is important to say, somewhere, what is NOT terrorism.''
== Unprotection proposal ==
::: I agree, but I think that sort of thing should either go in the definitions section below the intro or on the separate page about the ].
Here begins yet another bloody section.


:::: ''I think we need to try this without using the word "targeting" in several different senses. When you say targeting societies I believe what you mean is that their purpose is to affect the societies. And conversely when you say the terrorists don't really target people, you might get a rise out of folks who were at the World Trade Center. What you mean, I believe, is that their ultimate goal is not just to kill, but to effect change in policies.'''''
I can see that the content debate has restarted and seems like it will go on for a while. However, the article is not in a very good state right now, and I don't want to to remain locked indefinitely while we tortuously bash this out. Therefore, I suggest this:
::: This is a good point, and I apologize for not seeing the way this could be read earlier. I've changed part of the intro on the page to reflect this difference. ] 23:57, 10 August 2006 (UTC)


::::: Also, Xosa just changed the intro sentence back to 'refers to a strategy of using violence...'. I think either phrasing works, but I'd like to hear what Xosa has to say on the matter if he/she would like to chime in here. ] 00:00, 11 August 2006 (UTC)
*The article will be unlocked, and small- and medium-scale editing will be able to resume.
*Large-scale structural changes to the article, including substantial revisions of the introduction, will be required to achieve consensus on the talk page before they are committed.
*Consensus means CONSENSUS. A lack of response is not consensus. Suggestions for major changes which receive a lack of response, should have responses solicited from contributors to the article and discussions over the last few months.
*Nobody will obnoxiously claim to have consensus when they do not, or fake consensus by the use of sockpuppets.
*These rules will apply to everyone, including me.
&ndash; ]\<sup><font color="gray">]</font></sup> 21:49, 7 September 2005 (UTC)
:Agreed, with the proviso that consensus means ], which ranges from 60% to 80% agreement, depending on the issue. And, of course, sockpuppets and IPs never count for these things. ]<sup><small><font color="DarkGreen">]</font></small></sup> 22:01, 7 September 2005 (UTC)
::So basically we all have to abide by the policies of Misplaced Pages? Yeah, that works for me. ] | ] 22:41, 7 September 2005 (UTC)


:::I surrender, Rodeosmurf. I agree and disagree with many points in your write-up, but if we can't handle this fundamental one I see no contribution I can make: that terrorism's stated aim, to effect change by killing as many innocent civilians as possible, is what makes it unique. It is a stark, singular, and easily discernible difference. No one else does this. It shares this characteristic with no other kind of fighter. One man's terrorist is NOT another man's freedom fighter. (Think of me whenever you hear someone say that.) Onward and upward. I've enjoyed the exchange and thank Misplaced Pages for the forum.]
Let me make sure I understand your proposal correctly. You want to have the non-definitional intro on the article, and nobody can ever change it unless they solicit responses and get answers back from everyone who has contributed to the article ''or'' the discussion over the past few months? On top of that, anyone that Jayjg labels a sockpuppet isn't included in the consensus? '''''--] 22:35, 7 September 2005 (UTC)'''''


:<font color=#003311>'''Agreed''', as long as we start with an introduction that conveys information, and I get to pick the sockpuppets this time. '''''--] 22:38, 7 September 2005 (UTC)'''''


::Okay, I have read what you all have to say about defining terrorism and I have studied several authoritative definitions on the subject and I believe the best one I have read so far is the one given by Princeton University on its WordNet project site. Princeton defines terrorism thusly:
::You mean, ''reuse'' the sockpuppets, don't you? --] | ] 00:26, September 8, 2005 (UTC)
::''“the calculated use of violence (or threat of violence) against civilians in order to attain goals that are political or religious or ideological in nature; this is done through intimidation or coercion or instilling fear”'' ]


::Before anyone criticizes this definition, I would encourage you to go back and reread the definitions of “]”, “]”, “]”, and “]” because many of acts attributed to terrorism today, actually fall into one of these other categories and should not be lumped in with the definition of terrorism. We need to keep in mind that not all violent acts rise to the level of terrorism, even though they may be committed by individuals or organizations that are reputed as terrorist. I think often we rush to define an act of violence as terrorism, just because it is committed by a terrorist organization. By no means it to say that there aren’t valid examples of terrorism today, there most assuredly are. But, in order for us to hope to bring an end to terrorism, we must understand what makes it different from the other forms of violence previously mentioned. Likewise, just because an act of violence may not be definable as terrorism, does not lessen its severity, or seriousness. Terrorism is an especially heinous form of violence and it should stay that way and we should not allow it to be redefined down to just a synonym for “guerilla warfare”, or “resistance”. Many terrorist organizations try to portray their actions as merely guerilla in nature down-playing their criminal acts leading many to believe that terrorists are merely guerillas with bad publicity, or conversely that all soldiers are terrorists. Most of this confusion comes from attempted justification or obfuscation by the terrorists themselves. I think it would also be helpful for each of us to go back and reread the ] so as to get a handle on what lawful war looks like so that we may contrast that with recent acts attributed to terrorism.--] 02:24, 11 August 2006 (UTC)
:<font color=#003311>I honestly don't think anyone is going to solicit votes from everyone who has contributed to the discussion, since most of them were only here to badmouth other editors and sometimes even said that they had no interest in the article. How about a more realistic proposal?
'''Proposal #2:''' Because the current introduction is factually incorrect, we obviously can't use it, so lets just agree on one sentence that encompasses everyone's definitions and leave the intro at that until we can agree on more. We can put proposals in a special section on our watchlist and anyone who cares to vote can do so. If we get a seventy percent consensus over any three day period, that becomes the new intro. Sockpuppets are also determined in their own section by a seventy percent consensus. '''''--] 22:57, 7 September 2005 (UTC) '''''


== Revised definition ==
:Is your definition of ''factual'' something that is consistent with the scientific method, or does your ''factual'' have a higher, religious meaning? ]<sup><small><font color="DarkGreen">]</font></small></sup> 23:00, 7 September 2005 (UTC)


I recently introduced this revised definition of terrorism: ''Terrorism is the systematic use or threatened use of violence to intimidate a population or government and thereby effect political, religious or ideological change.'' This definition is derived from the and the . -- ] 02:04, 12 August 2006 (UTC)
::<font color=#003311>Scientifically, of course. I'm quite sure that if a scientific study were done of the various usages of the word '''terrorism''', absolutely none of them would be the nondefinition included in our article's introduction. '''''--] 23:11, 7 September 2005 (UTC)'''''
:This is wonderful; Hopefully this will end the ongoing debates about the definition. However, it seems to me that the two sentences which follow the definition are very poorly worded.
::''Terrorist attacks are designed to influence the broader society to which those killed, injured, or taken hostage belong. The dramatic focus of mass media is often ascribed as amplifying and broadcasting feelings of intense fear and anger that make terrorism more effective in the modern world.''
:These almost seem to be written in some sort of backwards-speaking Yoda-talk, which uses passive voice and draws attention away from the subject. I'd recommend this:
::''Terrorist attacks are not intended merely to victimize or eliminate those who are killed, injured, or taken ], but rather to victimize and influence the societies to which they belong. Modern terrorism has come to be defined in part by the influential power of the ], which terrorists co-opt in their efforts to amplify and broadcast feelings of intense fear and anger.''


:Opinions? ] 20:25, 12 August 2006 (UTC)
:::Ah, I see. Since terms like "terrorism" cannot be defined "scientifically", I was wondering if you were confusing science with your religious beliefs. ]<sup><small><font color="DarkGreen">]</font></small></sup> 23:25, 7 September 2005 (UTC)


::I still like the Princeton Univ. definition: ''“the calculated use of violence (or threat of violence) against civilians in order to attain goals that are political or religious or ideological in nature; this is done through intimidation or coercion or instilling fear”'' ] IMHO, It is simple, and easy to understand, and is not easily confused with the definition of war. The way I read it, WGee's definition is indistingishable from the definition of traditional warfare, (see the rest of my comments on this issue at the end of “Reverted Intro” above.)
::::<font color=#003311>No, not at all, but thanks for caring. '''''--] 23:36, 7 September 2005 (UTC)'''''


::Here is a quote from Answers.com about the confusion; ''"Guerrilla warfare is sometimes confused with terrorism, in that a relatively small force attempts to achieve large goals by using organized acts of directed violence against a larger force. But in contrast to terrorism, these acts are almost always against military targets, and civilian targets are minimized in an attempt to increase public support. For this reason, guerrilla tactics are generally considered military strategy rather than terrorism, although both terrorism and guerrilla warfare could be considered forms of asymmetric warfare."'' ]--] 05:31, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
I have a proposal -- how about somebody who has a specific problem with the current definition articulate precisely what that problem is, and attempt to rewrite the introduction to address that specific problem? Why not hammer out a consensus over a new definition on the discussion page and then let an admin make the change to the page so that it stays locked otherwise. Starting with a premise like "the current intro is factually incorrect" is totally useless unless we can identify what exactly is incorrect about it. --] 23:17, 7 September 2005 (UTC)


I'd agree that the definition as currently stated is indistinguishable from conventional warfare. Really don't think it's suitable. Scholars have been trying to sum up terrorism in a few short words for years and have singularly failed to do so. I'm afraid any attempt to do so here is likewise doomed to failure.
:I have a problem with the current definition. I do not believe there is a verifiable source that states either that "there is no agreed upon definition" In fact - given the sections below, it seems there are quite a few agreed upon definitions. Additionally, I believe that saying "The word "terrorism" is controversial," begs the question of who and where (aside from this talk page) is said contravercy going on. Said question is not answered in the article. I have not read enough of this talk page to be certain my questions have not been answered prior - if they have, feel free to just assert such and I'll go digging through the archives. If I find they have not, however, I will be quite cross. I also believe the untoward focus on the WORD as opposed to the concept is more appropriate for Wikietymology, not Misplaced Pages. (unless I confused bugs and words.) ] - ] 23:34, 7 September 2005 (UTC)
::<font color=#003311>ROFL


The problem, as noted elsewhere, stems from the fact that nation states reserve the right to conduct and/or support political violence themselves in pursuit of their own objectives. The result is that they are unwilling to commit to a hard and fast definition which could be applied objectively because it would limit their own ability to pursue political violence to further goals they believe to be worthwhile.
::If you look at many different sources, do you find the same basic definition of terrorism? If not, then there '''isn't''' an agreed upon definition.


The most informative thing you can say about the definition of terrorism, in my opinion, that there isn't a useful one. As such, I'd recommend avoiding any attempt to sum up terrorism in the intro. (Apologies if I've broken any formatting conventions, I'm new here.) - ] 12:22, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
::Have countless hours and words been used to argue the definition of terrorism on this page alone? If so, then there is controversy. For outside sources, an AP article (via Yahoo) states that "''A definition of terrorism has long been controversial...''" A Google search for "definition+terrorism+controversy" returns over 600,000 hits.


:There may not be a useful definition of terrorism but I think an honest definition of how the term is normally used would be "really bad stuff that the other guys do". It is a propaganda tool that would lose its effectiveness if it had a hard and fast definition. It is a word that has powerful connotation but has an extremely fluid denotation. According to Mark Burgess of the Center for Defence Information (http://en.wikipedia.org/Center_for_Defense_Information) "The term terrorism did not itself appear until the end of the 18th Century, when it was used by the likes of the British political philosopher Edmund Burke to demonize the leaders of the French Revolution." - BrianM
::Before we can move forward, we must realize that ''no'' definition can be completely accurate or neutral. No definition will be accepted by all. We have to try our best to achieve ], which does not mean "everyone agrees". ] | ] 23:50, 7 September 2005 (UTC)


::I don't think the word "terrorism" should ever refer to a form of conventional warfare. Those who have said such things in the past are often sympathizers with the terrorists, and either secretly or overtly support terrorist methods. Terrorism should be defined as an aberration of the rules of war, not as synonymous with the rules of war. The whole purpose for the word to exist is to define a different set of rules used by some groups or governments that are unacceptable according to traditionally accepted, and legally delimited (by treaty or convention) rules of war. Add to this the ] definition of crime, and you discover that universally the rules of war exclude the intentional targeting of; ‘’non-combatant’’ women, children, aged, disabled people, and prisoners (men of military age (approx. 15-50) who display any hostility are assumed to be combatants, unless they immediately make a display of passivity or surrender). That right there is your definition of terrorism in a nut shell. Groups or governments who, as a policy, target those above mentioned individuals for rape, torture, kidnapping, or death, are guilty of terrorism whether you call it that or not. These perpetrators are the ones who according to natural law, are guilty of a crime and thereby deserve punishment by the governing authorities of the nations the victims belong to, even unto death, because what they are guilty of is a capital crime against natural law, humanity, international law, and every civilized body of national law. I disagree with the idea that terrorism cannot be defined, to me that is a ridiculous and illogical notion (no offense). Of course it can be defined, the problem is some people don’t want it defined because they may harbor the notion that they, or their pet organizations, may want to use terrorist tactics in the future. If the definition of terrorism can be obfuscated, they continue to operate in a grey area and can deflect criticism of their actions. This grey area, in my view, is unacceptable and the proverbial “spade” should be called a “spade”. Terrorism is the deliberate and avoidable targeting of innocents with violence. Anything that does not equate this, also in my view, is a ‘’re’’definition, not a definition of the word. --] 20:59, 14 August 2006 (UTC)
:::<font color=#003311>How about a disambiguation page? People could choose what every pre-9/11 dictionary and encyclopedia in the world says, or ''government propaganda'', depending on what each person likes. '''''--] 00:03, 8 September 2005 (UTC)'''''


::Here is another defintion that I find acceptable from the ] page: "In November ], a UN panel described terrorism as any act: "intended to cause death or serious bodily harm to civilians or non-combatants with the purpose of intimidating a population or compelling a government or an international organization to do or abstain from doing any act." " --] 21:46, 14 August 2006 (UTC)
*For what it's worth, there are indeed verifiable sources that assert that there is no agreed upon definition of terrorism. A quick Google search for "no agreed definition terrorism" came up with some fruitful references real quickly. Examples:


:::Actually, I like the definition from the UN panel better than the definition I inserted. A dictionary and an encyclopedia aren't exactly the most scholarly sources, anyway. To many people, a UN panel is one of the most independent, netural, and authoritative commentators on a subject, so I believe its definition is quite appropriate to use. -- ] 03:14, 17 August 2006 (UTC)
<blockquote>''The struggle to define terrorism is sometimes as hard as the struggle against terrorism itself. The present view, claiming it is unnecessary and well-nigh impossible to agree on an objective definition of terrorism, has long established itself as the “politically correct” one. It is the aim of this paper, however, to demonstrate that an objective, internationally accepted definition of terrorism is a feasible goal, and that an effective struggle against terrorism requires such a definition. The sooner the nations of the world come to this realization, the better.''</blockquote>


::::Q - Is there anyone else who likes the UN Panel defintion (above) , and would like to see it in the article; or are there any objections to it being placed in the article? --] 03:34, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
<blockquote>''There are several international conventions that define war crimes, but there is no internationally accepted definition of terrorism.''</blockquote>
:::::I definately want the UN Panel defintion (above) placed in this article, perhaps even as the First definition, as the UN are highly notable and '''A Lot''' of people and cultures where involved in the formation of this definition.] 12:29, 18 August 2006 (UTC)


== Vandalism ==
<blockquote>''Amnesty International does not use the word "terrorism". In our view it is simply not an acceptable term of use given that there is no internationally agreed definition of what the term means.''</blockquote>


"Terrorists are g**d*m muslim and islamic loonys who are a**holes and should all die!!!! GET THE F**K OUTTA OUR COUNTRY!!!"
:--]] 00:06, 8 September 2005 (UTC)


I'm not entirely sure how this site works, but...that guy should be warned.
::<font color=#003311>I'm sure if Webster were alive today, he would do Google searches instead of writing definitions that mean anything. '''''--] 00:15, 8 September 2005 (UTC)'''''


*Nevermind, it appears he has already been warned previously for removing information from the terrorist page. He's already been warned. Perhaps some bannination should be done? =P] 15:27, 12 August 2006 (UTC)
:::Which demonstrates how little you actually know about how dictionaries are ''actually'' written. Check out Simon Winchester's ''The Professor and the Madman'' for a look at how the greatest English-language dictionary in history was actually produced. Hint: it wasn't from Olympian ego-driven pronouncements of a self-proclaimed expert. --] | ] 00:25, September 8, 2005 (UTC)


{{aan}}
::::<font color=#003311>Do tell. Did they do Google searches? Did they pronounce terms controversial and beyond definition? Did they provide a grab-bag of contradictory definitions and let people mix and match? '''''--] 00:33, 8 September 2005 (UTC)''''' </font>
:::::They would have happily used Google had it existed; they certainly used every other tool at their disposal to acquire their informaion. Yes, they did provide grab-bags of contradictory definitions and let people mix and match, if they found that the actual usage of the term being defined had a grab-bag of contradictory definitions. Even simple words can have dozens of different definitions, and dictionaries record that. --]] 00:44, 8 September 2005 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 10:01, 14 October 2021

This is an archive of past discussions about Terrorism. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page.
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State Terrorism

Anonymous removed my edit at the end of of definition of State Terrorism

  • My edit stated

However a state and its government has been established to defend the nation and enforce the law of the land by using violence, if needed. Therefore, every single state and government could be labeled with State terrorist label. So this definition is meaningless.

I repeat it. The state is created for the only purpose - to defend people and to ensure some kind of order and justice. In order to execute these functions it is authorised to use violence according the Law, when needed. (If one does not understand that, it is too early for him/her to read political articles. Not to say to write them.)
So, according the article's definition of State Terrorism, every state may be labeled as a state terrorist. --HenryS 03:17, 4 July 2006 (UTC)
  • I received a message

Misplaced Pages is an encyclopedia, and so its editors' opinions do not belong here. Please review our point of view and original research policies, so that you know what type of material can and cannot be included. Dylan 20:19, 2 July 2006 (UTC)

It is not an editor's opinion, however this requires some middle school level of education. I believe that virtually every wikipedia reader has it. Meantime, it requires some logic. I believe that virtually every wikipedia reader is able to use it.

Finally, I am not happy with a war around obvious ideas. So I put a "Fact" request near the State Terrorism definition and I wait a definition by highly reliable, by Misplaced Pages standards, source.

I was the anon (I hadn't logged in), and I was also the one who left you that message. No one is arguing that you're wrong, only that this is not the place to voice your opinion in that regard. Again, please read about no original research. Using logic and reasoning, no matter how valid, doesn't belong on Misplaced Pages: by reasoning something like that out, you're coming to a new synthesis of information, which is squarely original research. However, what you can include is other peoples' analysis of that issue. If some political theorist or outside commentator has remarked that "state terrorism" is a meaningless term, then great -- cite it, and put it in the phrasing "Some people have argued that 'state terrorism' is meaningless." However, stating as fact "'state terrorism' is a meaningless term" is simply your own opinion, one with which not everyone would agree, and so it can't be included here. Regarding the {{fact}} tag you placed, that sort of issue might be better resolved at the State terrorism article, since in this article, state terrorism is sort of an ancillary subject.--HenryS 03:17, 4 July 2006 (UTC)
Again, the point is not that your reasoning is faulty, only that this particular kind of material cannot be included in Misplaced Pages. Kane5187 17:40, 3 July 2006 (UTC)

Well, let me ask a question. Suppose, Mary has 2 apples and Ann has 3 apples and everybody knows that. Or should know. Is it an original research to write that the girls have 5 apples?--HenryS 03:17, 4 July 2006 (UTC)

Yes, because if you can't cite an outside source that's already pointed that out, it doesn't belong here. Read WP:NOR, and note at the bottom of each edit page that "Content...must be based on verifiable sources." Kane5187 03:34, 4 July 2006 (UTC)
Well, so could you clairify what should be verified
  1. The fact that Mary has 2 apples and Ann has 3 apples (It is suggested that everybody knows that, or should know)
  2. The fact that 2 apples and 3 apples is 5 apples (It is suggested that everybody knows that, or should know)
  3. Other (please specify)

--HenryS 12:10, 4 July 2006 (UTC)

You cannot include "any new analysis or synthesis of published data," such as adding 2 and 3 together for yourself. This is clearly against WP:NOR, as any other editor familiar with the policy will testify. You will find yourself getting into grey area very quickly if Misplaced Pages editors have to start making judgments about what people "should know." We re-produce information that has already been published, and nothing else. Kane5187 15:09, 4 July 2006 (UTC)

Henry, you are wrong as a conceptual matter. Many states are violent, launch wars not in self-defense, etc. But violence does not equal terrorism. The definition of terrorism includes the violent targeting of civilians for a political purpose. Many states have sponsored terrorism. If you find sources showing states that committed acts consistent with this definition, then I might agree that they should be listed here. In general, since so much of the terrorism in the world is state terrorism, this section should be much LARGER than it is. --JustFacts 17:10, 5 July 2006 (UTC)

Non-Combatants

The problem lies in defining who is a non-combatant. For example is a civilian police officer a civilian or a combatant? Is an off-duty police officer a civilian or a combatant? Is a member of the internal security service a civilian or a combatant? If an army, uses civilian infrastructure for observation (e.g. civilian traffic cameras) and the civilian cellular phone network for communications, are the civilians who maintain this infrastructure non-combatants?

Don't know who wrote this (no signature!), but here's an idea: in October of 2000, when the USS Cole was attacked, the sailors aboard were not permitted to fire upon the rubber dinghy that approached them, filled with explosives. The result was that 17 sailors lost their lives. The reasoning: the ship had not been fired upon, and thus the people in the dinghy were considered non-combatants. Authority to fire has been extended to all water vessels failing to stop for US Naval vessels, when hailed via loudspeaker. Needless to say, we've learned our lesson in this regard. Non-combatants are those who are not actively engaged in combat, or who are trying to avoid combat altogether. It should be noted that it is sometimes difficult to determine who are and who are not non-combatants, and for this reason if there is a question, most people tend to err on the side of caution in this regard. Thus, if we're under attack from within the infrastructure, we would treat these civilians as combatants, and if any of them made any move that were considered threatening or sudden, our troops would likely not hesitate to shoot. However, if there is no reason to believe that the civilians are combatants, they are non-combatants. Kinda. This is the "quick and dirty" explanation, and should give kind of any idea. Red Heron 16:33, 30 June 2006 (UTC)
I would like to add to this that rules of engagement usually state that men of military age (usually 15-50) are always suspect, especially if in groups; and women, children, and old men are usually not suspected. An armed civilian police officer, if engaged on the battlefield, would be considered a combatant if he did not immediately surrender. An unarmed police officer would probably not be considered a combatant, unless he was to be considered a possible spy, then he could be taken prisoner. The rules change when an area is being occupied by an army, then the rules of marshal law apply to the civilian population and the army becomes a military police force until redeployed. --Britcom 18:37, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
The more interesting question (to me) around the Cole incident is whether the attack was terrorism. It was my job in a previous life to oversee publication of a compendium of worldwide reports on terrorist acts, which meant I had to decide whether an act of violence was to be considered terrorism. (The decisions had political implications, as you can imagine.) The definition we finally arrived at, which seemed to work, is pretty much what I added to the definition of terrorism here. The keys are INTENTIONALLY targeting violence against NON-COMBATANTS, the latter term needing much care and elucidation, as attempted in the terrorism entry. To the extent the sailors on the Cole were part of the effort against the terrorists, the terrorists' action was one of self-defense, undeclared war, unconventional war, etc, not terrorism. Heinous crimes such as beheading a captured SOLDIER with a knife or executing a dozen bound Iraqi POLICEMEN are not terrorism just because they are heinous or use certain methods.

The definition leads us to conclusions some of us may be uncomfortable with. Hiroshima, the firebombing of Dresden, etc, were terrorist acts. We can plead that they were judged to be the lesser of two evils, that a calculation was made that they would in fact result in fewer deaths than the alternatives. But if we go down that road, people who intentionally blow up kindergartens can say that it is for the greater good as well. I feel strongly that we must clearly define terrorism as INTENTIONAL targeting of (what I will call here for the sake of brevity) "non-combatants." Only then will such statements as "Oh well, one man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter" be answerable. Only then can we isolate this activity and take coherent action against it. JHarlen

causes

I would love to know why you think Seperatism and Democracy are legitimate explanations of the cause of terrorism. Headsock 02:11, 26 June 2006 (UTC)

I'm thinking that you misinterpreted something, as I don't understand where you're getting this from (EDIT: I'm agreeing with Headsock, for what it's worth... these sections don't make a lot of sense). Also, the claim that "the countries with the least amount of terrorism tend to be the most democratic" seems to not be NPOV, as this is a subjective statement on its face. Red Heron 15:34, 30 June 2006 (UTC)

major edits

Please note that all of the major additions and deletions to the entry I have been making are part of a larger attempt to restructure the article to make it more readable, consistent, accurate, readable, and shorter. In essence, I'm trying to make it more like an encyclopedia article and less like a forum where everyone constantly adds their two cents over and over again on a topic.Headsock 00:17, 22 June 2006 (UTC)

Goodbye to lone wolves

This is my reasoning for my most recent edit of the lone wolf section, deleting the first two paragraphs. I believe the only function such a sectio has in our entry on Terrorism is to dispel the myth than individual fanatics acting alone should be considered in the same breath as terrorist organizations. The causes, effects, and means of handling lone wolf attacks are entirely different than terrorist acts perpetrated by groups. As I mentioned in the article, Boehlert's discussion of terrorism vs. hate crimes reflects how the social construction of an attack determines it's classification. To understand and prevent terrorism, it is vital that we deconstruct both kinds of attacks to see what causes them and what effectively counteracts them. Headsock 18:33, 6 June 2006 (UTC)

Even so, wouldn't it make sense to include this information on a section about Lone Wolves, as they are engaging in terrorist activity? Red Heron 15:48, 30 June 2006 (UTC)

section on "psychological factors"

If my edits on the "causes of terrorism" section are acceptable, i propose deleting the psychological factors, section, as it is rendered largely irrelevant given the sociological understanding of terrorism. Headsock 21:08, 1 June 2006 (UTC) <---what does "UTC" mean?

I support your proposal for deleting the section on psychological factors, or at least consider a serious revision of it. While it may hold true for some cases, terrorists are typically not "loners," but involved in vast social networks, or groups, that encourage and support their belonging to such orginizations.

This was my rational for essentially deleting the section on psychological factors, and just briefly discussing why such factors do not belong in an article on terrorism. I would love to hear any contrary argument there might be, in light of evidence provided on the social origins and explanation for terror, for why a discussion of psychological factors belongs here. Headsock 18:56, 6 June 2006 (UTC)

I would like to see a section on psychological factors that assist in the furthering of terroristic aims, such as the grooming of psychological traits that promote any or all of the five stages theory, as well as recruitment and other activities that require a focus on the psychological makeup of the individuals who are members of such organizations. There are roughly 5% of any society (according to the American Psychiatric Association) who are active dissidents, but very few (if any) of these ever engage in terrorist activity. Rather, terrorists (from my own observation and nothing more) tend to come from a gradual recruitment process that builds on things like poor education, political hatred, susceptibility to suggestion, and a host of other traits. This gradual process would then be necessary for inclusion if it can be substantiated (which I cannot do, as it would be considered OR and thus unsuitable for an encyclopedic entry). --Red Heron 19:16, 30 June 2006 (UTC)

terrorism in the modern sense

Re: edit by Peter McConaughey - edit summary was "History - POV removed. Who says that "terrorism in the modern sense seems to have emerged around the mid 19th-century" and "it does not correspond to the modern use of the term state terrorism?"" I don't know about the "state terrorism" line but the sentence about terrorism in the modern sense -- that is a generally established notion in counterterrorism literature, though there is some dispute over how clear a line can be drawn between premodern and modern terrorism. But the key factor is the invention of dynamite in 1866, after which a new form of terrorism appears that is characterized as the individual or small group attacking a larger group rather than mob action against an individual or group of individuals (e.g. KKK or Sons of Liberty). Many have written about this but a good touchstone is David C. Rapaport's typology of modern terrorism.--csloat 01:51, 10 December 2005 (UTC)

Perhaps we should say that, according to David C. Rapaport's typology of modern terrorism, terrorism in the modern sense seems to have emerged around the mid 19th-century.
I don't think that Rapaport's "modern terrorism" is indicative of all "terrorism" currently in use. Until we have another word to use in the description of state terrorism, for instance, we still need the strict sense of "terrorism" in order to communicate the original idea of a system of terror. --Peter McConaughey 17:42, 12 December 2005 (UTC)
Do you know of other scholars who disagree with this assessment? Rapaport is the one who invented this typology, and it has been criticized for being too rigid, but the general distinction between modern and premodern terrorism is pretty common in counterterrorism scholarship. "State terrorism" is acknowledged by such scholars but it is called "state terrorism," not just "terrorism." I just think it would be appropriate to make clear distinctions that are generally acknowledged in the field.--csloat 18:26, 12 December 2005 (UTC)
I agree that it is good to make the distinctions, but when they are disputed, even among non-scholars, they should be cited. There is nothing wrong with stating who makes such assertions. When the source is strong, citing it adds credence to the argument. When the source is weak, citing it maintains NPOV. Either way, sources should be cited if there is any chance that the reader would question the conclusion. --Peter McConaughey 18:36, 12 December 2005 (UTC)

Hello this is corey i live in iowa!!!

Terrorism has been a part of man's history dating to the dawn of time. War is often confused with terrorism: They are definitely not the same. Attila the Hun: Was that war? No, that was terrorism of people in the territory he wished to claim. Hitler? No, that wasn't war either (against the Jews): That was terrorism against a religious group (no, I am not Jewish). Pol Pot and Lon Nol in Thailand: Terrorism against their own people. In the modern world though, it appears to me that all (90%+) terrorism is by Islamic people that I feel are trying to impose Islamic rule on the world. I hold no particular religious belief, but the possibility of a holy war instigated by radical Muslims is a distinct threat to the Western world. Indonesia, London, the USA, we're all targets of zealots who feel that their way is the only way. This has no place in the current, modern world, but is a fact nonetheless. I am most definitely not a prejudiced person, and I believe that all people of faith have the right to observe their own religion. But the undeniable fact that most all of the "terrorist attacks" occur at the hands of Islamic radicals makes me feel that this should be the target of US action. For the record, I am against the US occupation of Iraq and the Bush Administration's evedropping policies. Rant over...... The preceding unsigned comment was added by 70.177.100.223 (talk • contribs) 22:17, 28 January 2006.

Hi Corey, i meant to reply to your rant earlier but for some reason this page was protected, am a muslim and on behalf of all muslims i would like you to know that we don't give a shit about what you & your people believe in, you can worship Jesus, jehovah,allah, buddha.. the only nation trying to impose its beliefs on others is the USA, when your countries troops gets attacked in iraq or yemen or saudi, its not because they are christians, its because they are occupying others lands. as for (90%+) terrorism is by Islamic peopleallow me to justify that, when a group of usa soldiers rape a 13 year old girl in iraq, kills her along with her family & try to accuse the resistance in iraq, this is not considered as terrorism, had the iraqi resistance been accused of it, this would have been considered as terrorism, so you see, any crime done by americans, israelis, or their allies is never considered as terrorism, hence you won't find an american terrorist even if he butchered a whole country, so sweatheart, please stop believing the lies you hear from your media & your monkey-face president, cause your people's ignorance is causing the death of my people.

"terrorism expert"?

RonCram added a theory by Christopher L. Brown that claims that al Qaeda attacks after releasing two videos. Someone should add that this theory has been rejected by other terrorism experts and that the CIA refused to even comment on it (that's from the article Ron links). Mr. Brown is not a "terrorism expert," regardless of what the neocon website CNS News says. Interestingly the site only says he works for a Washington-based think tank but refuses to tell us which one. As far as I can tell, this guy's only publication is about British theories of human rights in the 18th century. I've never seen his name listed on any list of essays by terrorism experts and I've never seen his name on the program for any conferences about terrorism. A google search yields 112 hits for both "Christopher L. Brown" and "terrorism" - very few of which actually refer to this person and even fewer (I can't find a single one!) that refer to his theories on terrorism. Compare a similar search for real terrorism experts for example. I don't think it's a good idea for wikipedia to hilight every crackpot theorist as an "expert" just because some right wing website calls him that.--csloat 17:59, 11 January 2006 (UTC)

Most of the sites that I can find that refer to Mr. Brown's theories on terrorism tend to be very much on the crackpot side of things, and spin out conspiracy theories that don't have a solid basis in fact, or which distort facts in a manner consistent with propagandism. The term "expert" however is a subjective one, as anyone can publish a book that says anything they want to, as long as it would sell. Sales are very much a part of who is and is not considered an "expert" in any field, and thus subjectivity in the academic world must be attributed for anyone without academic credentials. Take Kerry Boren, for example, who has multiple books published on various historical topics: very much an "expert" in the classic sense, but most of his work is theoretical at best. I doubt very much that he's personally surveyed most of the subjects he writes about, though his writing reflects a realism that makes an otherwise dry subject very appealing. I don't think he has much in the way of academic credit, however, and is simply a "well-selling" author. This distinction is perhaps the most important when determining who can or cannot be considered an expert. I'm afraid that Mr. Brown might qualify, despite the fact that any theory advanced would be automatically suspect by anyone who is well-studied in the area.Red Heron 15:46, 30 June 2006 (UTC)

Trolling...

...I usually refrain myself from editing articles. As such, I will leave it to the rest of the community to deal with this line (at the end of Examples of Major Incidents):

"Terrorist are cowards that can't fight a real fight and win. They have to make up for their small penises by blowing up innocent people."


You might want to try Chris Brown or Christopher Brown and terrorism before you make such broad stroked statements

Please sign your comments with four tildes. MichaelBillington 10:20, 27 May 2006 (UTC)

i'm quite sure there are quite a few terrorists who have NO penises. as in, they are women. Gringo300 07:23, 26 July 2006 (UTC)

according to

According to Mark Juergensmeyer, Terror in the Mind of God, the definition of the latin word: Terrre is defined as "to cause to tremble," not "to frighten."


Terrorism definition...

Although I feel it is important to know the history of terrrorism, I do not feel that it necessarily belongs in the "defintion" section of the article. The "different definition" section of this article has been broken down into legal/state definitions. This rules out opinions of the definition of terrorism and also makes the article much easier to read.

It might be nice to put the word in perspective with some examples of how its been used historically. If you want to take what I added and put it a tier down thats fine. We also need to deal with the fact that we now have a Democratically elected terrorist state in Hamas, that has been recognized by President Bush, albeit with no great pleasure, but still some redefinition of terms is required. Federal Street 23:02, 26 January 2006 (UTC)

That'll be tough since one man's terrorist is often another man's freedom fighter. The definition might depend on which side you're on. The British probably considered George Washington to be a terrorist.SR - RE 18:40, 2 February 2006 (UTC)

The United Nations has proposed at least one definition for terrorism and this may be contrasted with that of, say, the United States or other countries. Readers may infer the self interest inherent in each definition if they wish, or the writer can point it out to them. Either way, defining it is a central issue/bone of contention, politically. But that shouldn't stop an encyclopedia from showing the diverse range of definitions out there. RM

I think this is the crux of the problem with the word terrorist: there is no set criteria that makes a group a 'terrorist organisation.' It is an entirely subjective label applied by states to groups that oppose them by violent means. There is no real difference in the end result if a bomb is detonated by a 'terrorist' group, a state security service or a country's military.GiollaUidir 13:17, 24 May 2006 (UTC)

Just had a thought: what is we included a definition section that stated: Although widely disputed by many governmental and civil organizations; for the purposes of this article, terrorism will be defined as <blah>. This should remove any need for disputing which definitions are valid or not, and the state-related definitions can be dropped into the "Other Definitions" section. (Oh, and, for what it's worth, Mormons are on the list of cults around the world, but most Mormons consider their beliefs a religion with a solid foundation... it's a matter of whom you ask, and the same holds true of terrorism, terrorist organizations, and terrorist activities just as it does for cults and religions.) --Red Heron 18:32, 30 June 2006 (UTC)

"Recruitment" section

Tactics vary between groups. Islamist terrorist groups use the promise of a "martyr's" reward in the afterlife. In addition, Saddam Hussein's Iraq was known to offer money to Palestinian martyrs' surviving family members after a successful attack.

I reworded these two sentences, but that doesn't change them still being crap. I don't know much about terrorist recruitment, but I doubt that the promise of 70 afterlife virgins is the Islamist terrorist recruitment method. The gratuitous mention of Saddam Hussein while ignoring Iran, by far the largest state sponsor of terror, again reflects the continuing Western obsession with Iraq after a U.S. PR blitz during the 1991 Gulf War. There's no mention of non-Middle Eastern terrorism, nor is there any detail or good information given about much of anything, really. I've moved the section from the article to here so that either it can be improved, or at least be out of the article. --Mr. Billion 04:53, 30 January 2006 (UTC)

Recruitment for any organization still has a very common foundation. Criminal and terrorist organizations still require some measure of "proof" in order to be able to believe that someone is not an infiltrator. Additionally, the higher up in the organization an individual goes, the greater the proof that is required (in well-organized groups). The exception to this is in cellular organizations (al-Qaeda falls into this category) where there is only a single central authority with wide distribution of information--information which can be smuggled through a variety of different means. Cutting off the head of such an organization might certainly cause a splintering, but the desired effect of causing the organization to crumble from within would effectively result in two organizations with different aims (in effect two sets of cellular groups), called the "Hydra Effect" after the serpent of Greek mythology. Recruitment, therefore, is a careful screening process resulting in far fewer numbers than anyone would give credit to believe, with regard to organizational leadership. It is, in fact, very difficult to gauge how many are in an organization when the organization itself doesn't keep any kind of record about this, and basically anyone who upholds its aims and which claims an alliance in such an organization cannot be verified. However, in organizations that do keep tabs on their members (even if only verbal tabs), contact networks can usually verify and authenticate the activities of its members with a fair amount of speed. In addition, higher levels typically know more about an organization's operation, whereas foot solders tend to simply follow orders until their superiors need replacing. And a foot soldier typically cannot be distinguished from a superior simply by sight. Thus, terrorist organizations are free to recruit from within other organizations, and even from within prisons, schools, etc., without the recruit ever knowing that they'd been recruited. Terrorist recruitment follows an ideal that is very different from other criminal organizations in this respect, and operates more like an intelligence agency. --Red Heron 19:16, 30 June 2006 (UTC)

al Qaeda

Bin Laden was, though, a product of a monumental miscalculation by western security agencies. Throughout the 80s he was armed by the CIA and funded by the Saudis to wage jihad against the Russian occupation of Afghanistan. Al-Qaida, literally "the database", was originally the computer file of the thousands of mujahideen who were recruited and trained with help from the CIA to defeat the Russians.Federal Street 01:45, 8 February 2006 (UTC)

The fact that bin Laden was being armed in the 80s by the CIA is in dispute. Yes, the CIA and the Saudi's (among others) were pouring money into Afghanistan, but it was going to the Afghan mujahidin that were fighting the Russians, not bin Laden. The other thing is that the CIA funneled its funds through the Pakistani Inter-Services-Intelligence Directorate (ISID). This meant that there was no direct contact between the CIA and mujahidin. You also have to remember that during the 80s bin Laden was not the guy in charge of the recruitment and training of the Muslim volunteers, plus, Al Qaeda never even existed at that time. The man in charge was bin Laden's mentor, Abdullah Azzam, who was responsible for the formation of Mektab al Khidimat (MAK or Afghan Services Bureau), the organization bringing the volunteers into Afghanistan. It wasn't until the late-80s that al Qaeda was formed. Azzam was assassinated by a car bomb in mid-89 by unknown persons. Finally, bin Laden could tap into his fortune that was reported to be in the millions. At the sametime he was also receiving a lot of money from various people throughout the Middle East. These donations brought in further millions. L.J.Brooks 18:52, 17 MAr 2006 (UTC)
Your disputation that bin Laden was "armed" by the CIA is kind of a misconstrual of the facts. The truth is that bin Laden was a part of the mujahidin in Afghanistan. The dispute that bin Laden has been heard saying (if memory serves) is that the Afghans were abandoned when the USSR pulled out, and then we (Americans) interfered with the internal order of things in the Middle East by invading Saudi Arabia (1990-91, in response to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait), an action that bin Laden opposed because of our treatment of Afghanistan. We as a country did indeed train and arm bin Laden through the CIA in the 1980's, though this was not a direct action and the monies did not go directly into his pocket. The claim should be that we trained and armed him inadvertently, by training the people he was involved with at the time. Red Heron 16:06, 30 June 2006 (UTC)

terrorist surveillance

Terrorist Surveillance Activities

Few terrorist attacks are executed without pre-operational surveillance of the desired target. Surveillance is done to determine target suitability, security and noticeable patterns in the targets movements, physical security, and the surrounding environment.

Key activities suggesting possible terrorist surveillance is in progress may include:

Foot surveillance involving 2-3 individuals working together.

Mobile surveillance using bicycles, scooters, motorcycles, sport-utility vehicles, cars, trucks, boats or small aircraft.

Persons or vehicles being seen in the same location on multiple occasions; persons sitting in a parked car for an extended period of time.

Persons not fitting into the surrounding environment, such as wearing improper attire for the location, or persons drawing pictures or taking notes in an area not normally of interest to a tourist.

Persons using possible ruses to cover their activities, such as taking on a disguise as a beggar, demonstrator, shoe shiner, fruit or food vendor, street sweeper, or a newspaper or flower vendor not previously recognized in the area.

Persons videotaping or photographing security cameras or guard locations. Unusual or prolonged interest in security measures or personnel, entry points and access controls, or perimeter barriers such as fences or walls.

An increase in anonymous threats followed by individuals noticeably observing security reaction drills or procedures. Questioning of security or facility personnel by an individual(s) that appears benign.Federal Street 01:45, 8 February 2006 (UTC)

(I thought I'd posted this earlier, but apparently I must have closed the window before hitting Save Page).
Few terrorist attacks are committed without getting dressed in the morning, but getting dressed in the morning is not a terrorist attack. Surveillance aids many terrorist attacks, but surveillance itself isn't a terrorist attack, and it doesn't make any sense to list it as such. I've edited some of your additions and left others as they are. --Mr. Billion 22:17, 10 February 2006 (UTC)
Are you a terrorist? Do you know any terrorists? If not how would you know?69.164.66.203 16:49, 12 February 2006 (UTC)
Posted in anonymity... bah. I'd respond to that last post, but it's just silly. For the real post: Mr. Billion, I'd like to say that your logic is sound, though I have to say that surveillance itself is an activity that most people don't engage in, and thus it is a good indicator as to whom to watch when you discover surveillance. It also matters what you're surveilling, and in what quantities. For example, several Middle Eastern nationals were found to be in possession of detailed surveillance of the Panama Canal, which has for years been said to be a potential target for terrorist activities. The surveillance was not itself a terrorist act, but in the wrong hands it could have led to successful placement of improvised explosive devices, attacks on ships, and potentially hundreds of lives lost, not to mention a loss in international revenues due to increased turnaround times for trade on perishable goods. The fact that surveillance activities are counted in terrorist precursor activities is a very real idea, though I believe extra care should be taken to avoid the observing of security reaction drills by those who are unauthorized to do so. Just my two cents. Red Heron 16:19, 30 June 2006 (UTC)

Al-Qaeda means "the base," not "the list"

The meaning of the phrase has been thoroughly discussed on the Al-Qaeda article. al-Qa'ida (The Base) --Mr. Billion 17:52, 10 February 2006 (UTC)

Its silly for someone who doesn't speak arabic to make statements like that. Take a look at the triliteral semitic roots.(qda) AlQaeda

means ENTRY: qd. DEFINITION: To be(come) holy, sacred. 1. Kiddush, from Mishnaic Hebrew qiddû, sanctification, purification, from Hebrew qidd, to consecrate, sanctify, derived stem of qda, to be(come) holy, sacred. 2. Kaddish, from Aramaic qaddi, holy, sacred, from qda, to be(come) holy, sacred (so called after the first words of the prayer: yitgaddal w-yitqadda meh rabb, may His (God's) great name be exalted and kept holy).

The list of those who will become holy or sacred Federal Street 04:09, 11 February 2006 (UTC)

That's interesting, and as always I'll grant the possibility that I'm wrong. But what's your source for that? Do you speak Arabic?
All the sources I've seen say "The Base." Wiktionary and Misplaced Pages both said it meant "the base" until you changed the Misplaced Pages entry just now, again without providing a source. As I noted earlier, the Federation of American Scientists entry on al-Qaeda says it means "the base". Dictionary.com gives "Base" as a synonym. Another dictionary site gives this etymology from the American Heritage Dictionary: "Arabic al-q'ida, the base : al-, the + q'ida, foundation, base, feminine participle of qa'ada, to sit." The BBC says it means "the base." Search Google for "al-Qaeda means the list" and you get two message boards. Enter "al-Qaeda means the Base" and you get 265 results, among them another BBC article, a speech by Dick Cheney in which he says it means "the base," a Guardian article, and many others. The FBI says it means "the base."

--DEATH TO THE SOVIETS!! 02:14, 15 May 2006 (UTC)It does mean the Base. the origin of the name Al-queda originally comes from the base Bin Laden established in Afghanistan in order to train the Muhaydeen to fight against the Russians.

Googling around, it looks like your source is The American Heritage Dictionary, but you've wildly misread what is written. This entry is not for the word combination "al-qaeda," giving its "Semitic Roots," it is for an actual Semitic root phrase qdš. that forms a part of the language. Above you copy/pasted what was probably the Bartleby.com text, but didn't get the "š" because you can't paste an image as text. The word "list" doesn't appear anywhere in that entry, so I'm guessing you added that yourself.
Copy/pasting that text into the Al-Qaeda article without quote marks or a source was a copyright violation, by the way. --Mr. Billion 05:38, 11 February 2006 (UTC)
"Do you speak Arabic?"
Mostly Egyptian Arabic, although my accent is probably Iranian. I'm fluent enough to be able to survive in areas where no other language is spoken.
Why do you prefer Dick Cheney's explanation to that of Bartleby's semitic roots?
You might want to familiarize yourself with the use of triliteral roots in semitic languages.
"qdš or qdsh represents a set of consonants which are used in words with similar meanings.(kadesh = high place and kodesh = holy) The literal meaning is holy and sacred."
The list of those who are prepared to do what it takes to become holy and sacred through martyrdom. To give that a secular meaning without recognizing what it means to al Qaeda is worse than misleading.
First recognize that triliteral semitic roots don't include vowels, then recognize that "al" is the equivalent of our definitive article.
Copy/pasting that text into the Al-Qaeda article without quote marks or a source was a copyright violation, by the way.
Since you clearly don't speak the language or have any familiarity with linguistics, you might want to remedy those deficiencies before speaking further about this.Federal Street 16:52, 12 February 2006 (UTC)

Extensive familiarity with linguistics is not required to recognize a copyright violation, and anyway I'm not confident of the extent of yours.

I don't prefer Dick Cheney's explanation for much of anything, but I do prefer to believe facts that are supported by the vast majority of sources. Your response apparently tries to ignore all the other sources I mentioned while attacking Cheney specifically because he's fairly widely accepted to be a greedy, corrupt politician. It doesn't follow, though, that Cheney would likely lie about the meaning of "al-Qaeda," nor even if his statement was discounted would it affect the credibility of the several other sources I've mentioned. I've provided many sources that say that the phrase in question means "the base," while you yourself have provided no sources at all. All you've done is pasted some text that didn't contain the word "list" (without bothering to mention the source) and added "list" in yourself. I remain unconvinced.

The text you pasted was copied from Bartleby.com, but "Bartleby" is not the original source. Bartleby.com hosts dictionary information from The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. That dictionary's appendix is where your text came from. Its etymology of al-Qaeda, though, is the one I gave above. This is not complicated.

Other sources on Bartleby.com also say "the base."

In the future, for the sake of clarity, please keep your comments separate from other editors'. Inserting your own messages in the middle of other people's makes it hard for observers to tell who's saying what. I've separated your comments from mine. --Mr. Billion 18:35, 12 February 2006 (UTC)

Crummy edits

I dont know who did it, but starting an article with "The exact definition of terrorism is highly controversial" is about as amateurish an edit as Ive ever seen. It's a bit disappointing to see actually, considering the work I and others have put into the article over the last few years. Thanks, newbies. -Ste|vertigo 20:51, 14 February 2006 (UTC)

Why don't you fix it? thejabberwock 17:49, 22 February 2006 (UTC)
I incorporated the old intro; it's definitely better. TheJabberwock 02:54, 2 March 2006 (UTC)

approved terrorists section

This "Approved terrorists" section is not very clear as what it is saying. It needs to define what is meant by "approved terrorists" and be clearer in how this effected the anti-terror legislation that would ban verbal support of terrorists. --Cab88 02:23, 18 February 2006 (UTC)

I deleted this section. It was an inaccurate description of the proposed offence of glorification which was overtaken by events - the government agreed to remove glorification as a distinct offence and instead made glorification an element of encouragement to terrorism (clause 1). The proposed offence of glorification was ridiculous, but the text didn't reflect how it would actually work.62.49.56.42 17:15, 22 February 2006 (UTC)

Regarding definitions of terrorism

I find notable bias in the following "actors who don't belong to any recognized armed forces, or who don't adhere to their rules, and who are therefore regarded as 'rogue actors'." The definition is inherently biased in the favour of the state, for according to this definition all that is required in order NOT to be a terrorist is a uniform denoting membership in an armed force. Clearly this would mean any army or nation-state could not commit terrorism and that's an unfortunate bias in the writing.

Note that Kofi Annan's (Toronto Globe and Mail 11 March 2005) definition and the UN definitions for terrorism are lacking from this piece.

--Rick MacLaren

"ctors ..." seems to be addressing not so much definition of terrorism as definition of "combatant". Terror can be by the State or by non-State actors, and the only difference is whether responding to it constitutes "war" in an international-law sense. (Distinguishing between "state", and "state-sponsored" terrorism hints at the difference. And the "war on terror" is not a war so defined; it's a slogan as others doubtless have pointed out, and forgive me if I haven't read through the entire site.)

These (non-state actors) are issues well known to human/civil rights law and to refugee law. See, for example: http://uniset.ca/terr (a bibliographic essay with links to hundreds of archived law reports and newspaper accounts that I've been working on for a year and which will in due course be published in NYU's GlobaLex series). The problem is more obvious with "state" or "state-sponsored" terrorism when political actors and the police encourage, but do not participate in, militia-type violence against dissidents.

A very few judges have tried to define "terrorism". A UN (General Assembly) definition would probably be worthless unless it became accepted as consensus by nations and by international-law scholars. That takes time (the relevance of "doctrine" to law is better known in the Civil Law system than the Common Law one, and is something I wouldn't need to point out if I were writing this in French). For many, "terrorism" is a violent attack on the status quo, and proximity and personal risk are relevant. That's why I quoted Monty Python's "News for Parrots". The main concern of a Muslim or Jewish or Swiss or Korean (etc.) newspaper report on an air crash or terrorist attack is -- quite understandably -- whether any members of their constituency were victims.

Finally, there seems to be a paradox and the mere abstention from taking a view may constitute taking one. As in earlier research on Sharia law, I find that extremism tends to crowd out rationality and liberalism. There's a reason why so much of the real scholarship on Sharia is occurring in Germany and the USA and not in any Muslim land. Citing anything gives it credibility, but you have to cite -- or at least to sample -- varying arguments or one becomes an advocate and not a commentator or analyst. But one man (or woman)'s terrorist will always be somebody else's freedom fighter. And who but McDonald's would have accused Steel and Morris of "eco-terrorism"?

--Andy Grossman

I wouldn't omit the controversey over definition between the UN and the USA vis terrorism. Each has it's own idea of how to define it, and each has their own rationale and self interest.

Andy Grossman says "But one man (or woman)'s terrorist will always be somebody else's freedom fighter." Exactly. I submit that's at the core of why some nations don't want it to be possible for a terrorist to be defined as (potentially/possibly) a state. The UN definitions make it possible for states to be terrorists. That's a significant disparity of points of view, I contend, and not an uninteresting one.

--Rick MacLaren

Terroristic Threats article

First, let me say that this is the first time I've added to a talk page. Ergo, if I commit a breach of etiquette, please let me know. That being said...

There seems to have been at one time a page, linked to other legal terminology, titled "Terroristic Threats." This page appears to have been either removed or absorbed into the general topic "Terrorism."

My concern is that there is a crime called, verbatim, "Terroristic Threats," and it is a felony. My question, then, is this: Shouldn't this be an article separate from the general topic "Terrorism," since its definition as a federal crime does not fall comfortably into the catch-all of the general topic article?

Just a thought...Misplaced Pages is something I feel quite strongly about, and I wouldn't want to commit an error in judgment that damages either credibility or accuracy.

Merge Political terrorism into here

I feel that this page might be better facilitated by being merged with Terrorism. As it is this article is mainly from a US POV, minorly from a UK POV, and does not address domestic terrorism in other countries. Any thoughts? --Scaife Don't forget Hanlon's Razor 06:53, 11 March 2006 (UTC)

'Agree'. Little point in having separate articles.Mark Sedgwick 09:54, 26 March 2006 (UTC)
Agree, although I assume you meant to post this on Talk:Terrorist. --Descendall 01:26, 27 March 2006 (UTC)
Very Agree (no speaka de English) - the.crazy.russian (T) (C) (E) 04:24, 27 March 2006 (UTC)
Obvious Agree! Tazmaniacs 22:57, 10 April 2006 (UTC)
Disagree Terrorism should explain the basic definition of terrorism, then give links to the kinds of terrorism. it should also be cleaned of any redundancy. --DEATH TO THE SOVIETS!! 02:19, 15 May 2006 (UTC)
Agree and Disagree.
Yes, "Terrorism should explain the basic definition of terrorism" (though we'd have to accept definitions in the plural), and one of the major problems with this article is indeed redundancy, as the main thread keeps getting lost in detailed discussions of individual groups.
No, "political terrorism" as a "kind" of terrorism is not obvious. I have argued in the journal Terrorism an Political Violence that terrorism is by definition political, and that so-called "religious terrorism" is basically political with religious elements. In thory, we could have a section on "purely religious terrorism," of which an obvious example (sometimes used) is the Thugs--except that then it's not clear that they were actually terrorists in the first place. --Mark Sedgwick 07:15, 6 June 2006 (UTC)
Agree I think that we should merge "political terrorism" into this topic as a subsection. -Red Heron 16:40, 30 June 2006 (UTC)

Massive POV Rewrite

I think that there is a compromise position between the two extremes of Jayjg's version and that of GregorB. Instead of having a revert war, let me try to take just the NPOV parts of both and make a better article. I am in the middle of doing that. I ask both sides to please let me finish before deciding it is acceptable. --65.133.151.1 15:40, 9 April 2006 (UTC)

I don't have any "version". The article was completely re-written yesterday, in a highly POV way, by a sockpuppet. Previous to that the article had been in a stable state for months. You haven't compromised, you've merely reverted to a POV re-write. Jayjg 15:42, 9 April 2006 (UTC)
I disagree with most of the "compromises" you've made. You've taken it back almost entirely to Jayjg's version (yes, that is the "Jayjg approved" version) already. Still you say that you are "in the middle" of making the compromise? What is left, to revert the last two parts of GregorB's version? --4.237.2.137 15:51, 9 April 2006 (UTC)
Hardly a "Jayjg approved" version. I didn't write any of it; it was written and agreed to by multiple other editors. Jayjg 15:55, 9 April 2006 (UTC)
I note your latest revert edit summary claims this article is "Jayjg/JPGordon/Slimvirgin Jewish propaganda like everything else they control"? I see your claim that there was "nothing personal" in your original revert was, in fact, completely false. Banned editors are not allowed to edit; please stop. Jayjg 16:06, 9 April 2006 (UTC)
Your excuse for reverting this article back to your version, locking the page, and banning the editor representing the other side of the dispute was "banned anti-semitic editor editing." The editor you banned never said anything against your faith. He only pointed out that your edits seemed to him to be "Jewish propaganda." How exactly is accusing you of something "anti-semitic?" --65.145.31.236 16:16, 9 April 2006 (UTC)
To begin with, the banned editor himself is well-known. Next, please recall, I do not have a "version" of this article, nor have I made edits to it; I've just reverted non-consensus POV changes. In addition, I didn't "revert to my version then lock it"; rather, I semi-protected the version that was currently in place. Regular editors can still edit it. And finally, why on earth would "Jewish propaganda" come into it, anyway? Why bring up alleged Jews at all, some of whom have never even edited this article? The banned editor was alleging something about specific editors, not about the article. Jayjg 16:19, 9 April 2006 (UTC)
The banned editor is well-known? You semi-protected the version in place? That sounds like something out of a B Nazi film. "He is well-known to the SS as a subversive and a threat to the fatherland. We have not locked the document; we have only semi-protected it against editors who have not proven their loyalty to the Fuhrer." --65.145.31.236 16:37, 9 April 2006 (UTC)
If you want an answer to your question about why the editor brought up Jewish propaganda at all, you would have to ask the editor. Except that you can't, because you banned him. --65.145.31.236 16:41, 9 April 2006 (UTC)
Looking through your contributions and the history of this article, it appears that you and Jpgordon do this song and dance quite frequently. Jpgordon reverts the article to the one you clearly prefer and then you immediately lock or "semi-protect" it saying, "I just locked the current version." It looks like you often get this Slimvirgin, that 4.237.2.137 was talking about, into the act too. I have to admit, you're quite a showman. Now how about letting somebody else take a crack at editing this article? --65.145.31.236 16:52, 9 April 2006 (UTC)
I'm not sure what article history you imagine you've looked at. Contrary to your claims, I've never semi-protected this article before, I have not banned the IP who was blathering about "Jewish propaganda", so he can certainly explain himself, and I'd already contacted a half-dozen editors with interest in the article to comment on it before semi-protecting. The last time I touched this article was twice on Feb 21, 2006, the last time before that was once on October 27, 2005, and once before that one October 14 2005, once on Sept. 19, etc. I am, in fact, letting everyone else "have a crack" at editing this article, since I've barely edited it, and have added no content. Now, why don't you get your facts straight, and use the Talk: pages for discussing content rather than attacking other editors. Jayjg 17:39, 9 April 2006 (UTC)
The editors of Misplaced Pages can look through your contributions and determine for themselves how often this same scenario happens, but they don’t have to go very far to see what you did this time. You had a disagreement over content with another editor. That other editor was willing to compromise, listen to the suggestions of other people and try to reach a consensus, but you weren’t. You used your position to control the definition of this term. --63.153.31.224 03:26, 10 April 2006 (UTC)
Because of the many falsehoods in your previous statements, your current ones have no credibility. "That other editor" (4.237.xxx.xxx) was spouting anti-Semitic conspiracy theories, and gave no indication he was willing to compromise. As for you, there's no reason why you can't propose changes on the Talk: page, is there? Please start discussing article content. Jayjg 04:12, 10 April 2006 (UTC)

Picture

I see this article has no picture. I found this ], ] ].]] that could be put in the text so it becomes better. The problem is that I can't manage to out it in right. This is just a reminder so that somebody else could put it in. --NorwegianMarcus 12:21, 16 April 2006 (UTC)

I've also had trouble with this. The 'terrorism' box seems to mess up the formatting. Unfortunately, none of the other pages that use the box have lead images, so there's no standard on how to have both the box and an image. Is there a way to edit the box? It might work better as a bottom-oriented box. At any rate, I think that an image of the 9/11 attack would be a bit too obvious, would present a highly American view of terrorism, and would probably just set off all sorts of debate. I had planned to use the first image on the page for Black September, because the Munich Massacre was an international crisis, as well as a pivotal event in the emergence of modern terrorism.

Well, that's what we have on -no. NorwegianMarcus 11:45, 3 July 2006 (UTC)

Introduction

I think the first two paragraphs are loaded with inaccuracies.

Paragraph 1
The term terrorism is used to refer to acts of violence, or the threat of violence carried out for political motives by organisations/individuals who are not recognised as organs of the legitimate state within a given territory nor officially at war with that territory.

Does not this definition mean that all those who fought as rebels in the American War of Independence were terrorists ("We must hang together, or assuredly we shall all hang separately")? What is an "official war". Does this make the 2003 invasion of Iraq an act of terror? As the United states had declared a "War on Terror" is that an official war? The US adminstation think that people they hold under the War Powers Act are "enemy combatants". So and do acts of violence are carried out by an enemy combatant in the territory of the U.S.A do not count as terrorism as they are part of an "official war"?

Further is there not a contradiction to the first paragraph created by Article 1. Paragraph 4 of GC Protocol I and should that not be mentioned?

Paragraph 2
"Terrorist attacks" are usually characterized as "indiscriminate," "targeting of civilians," or executed "with disregard for human life." The term "terrorism" is often used to assert that the political violence of an enemy is immoral, wanton, and unjustified. According to the definition of terrorism typically used by states, academics, counter-terrorism experts, and non-governmental organizations, "terrorists" are actors who don't belong to any recognized armed forces, or who don't adhere to their rules, and who are therefore regarded as "rogue actors".

Who are "civilians"? Are police civilians? What about part time police like the old B Specials in Northern Ireland. What about territorial soldiers can they only be targeted at the weekend when they are in uniform? Was the murder of Airey Neave by the INLA a terrorist attack or an legitimate attack on part of the command and control of the British security forces?

The IRA targeted the City of London it to very large truck bombs (we are talking more than 10 tonnes of explosives in each bomb). These were made to do billions of pounds of damage so that the insurance companies despite political pressure would not pay out, this forced the British Government to pay for the damage, and so in a round about way acknowledge that the British state was in an armed conflict with the IRA. In both cases warnings were given. The intention of the attacks was not to kill people but to destroy the infrastructure of the City of London, The British press called these terrorist attacks, but the attack was not an "indiscriminate," "targeting of civilians," or executed "with disregard for human life." so does this mean that Misplaced Pages is claiming that targeting civilian infrastructure is not terrorism?

The first sentence of the second paragraph of the article does not bring any clarity to the points I have raised above and as such is not of any use because it appears to be a defintion (quotes and all) but on closer examination does not say anything.

The last sentence does not make sense unless one qualifies the word "actors" as "enemy actors" after all one does not usually call "Freedom fighters" terrorists. --PBS 13:09, 5 May 2006 (UTC)

Have you ever heard the expression "one man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter"? In case you don't know, there is no universally accepted definition of terrorism, and this is part of the reason why. In one of the notes in Pacifism as Pathology, Ward Churchill quips " political effectiveness rather than the use of violence is the defining characteristic underlying official use of the term ." The Ungovernable Force 01:45, 20 May 2006 (UTC)
Yes I have and Yes I do, and Ward Churchill's quip misses out the word "enemy" in front of "political effectiveness", friends who are politically effective don't often get called terrorists. --PBS 11:30, 24 May 2006 (UTC)


Proposed Criteria

The definition statements lack clarity and virtually anything can be construed as "terrorism". Terroistic tactics are not necessarily the most horrific or egregious, but instead describe tactics that are symbolic, target civilians (not the same as non-combatants which may include political leaders) and do not attempt to secure economic or geographic resources.

For example, Dresden while probably a war crime was not terrorism - not because the USA did it, but because it was leading to a surrender of a state and the acquisition of territory. Colombine, Oaklahoma city bombing, 9/11, Mombasa hotel bombings, car bombings in Bagdhad all pretty easily match this criteria. Israeli attacks on Lebanon also likely constitute war crimes but are not necessarily terrorism. On the other hand Hamas' missle attacks on Israel are not to secure resources or target combatants but to harm civilians and cause symbolic damage.

Many organizations use a combination of political, economic, military and terroristic tactics and an attempt to simply lable any organization with one term is futile. Terrorist organizations will generally have or be affiliated with other organizations that utilize the other tactics -- the IRA/Shin Fein and Hamas are good examples and in can be argued that the CIA and KGB, North Korea and Iran have historically provided various services to terrorist organizations.

To attempt to validate the morality of violent acts is futile and meaningless -- in the end, dead people are dead people. To say that there are enemy actors who "don't play by the rules" or lack "regard for human life" or that one act is worse than another is rather meaningless since being blown up by a car bomb is probably similar to being blown up by a 500 pound bomb -- it is instead a POV approach to defining your current enemy. To talk as if the Russians in Chechnya or Israelis in Lebanon are playing by accepted rules makes little sense.

If a recognized armed force is a primary consideration, then every revolution has been a terrorist act. Obviously not the case and that would be contradicted by the economic and geographic criteria.

Gulliver001 20:06, 15 August 2006 (UTC)

"Problems" section

What is the purpose of this opening monologue. Was this slipped in at the last minute or has this been a long-standing section? savidan 20:14, 21 May 2006 (UTC)


American war of independence

However, historically, neither the the term "insurgency" nor "terrorism" was used by Colonial England to describe the behavior of its American colonies during the Revolutionary War.

I would imagine that they were described as traitors. and that was a in the minds of the English at the time was a far more heinous crime than murder, hence the punishment for high treason (HDQ). At the Nuremberg trials no one was tried and found guilty of genocide, they were found guilty of "crimes against humanity". This does not stop most articles on the subject describing the Holocaust as an act of genocide. Is there any evidence that "insurgency" or "terrorism" were used in contemporary English to describe the actions of rebels of not then this sentence should go. --PBS 11:30, 24 May 2006 (UTC)

The comparison is further complicated by the complex legal framework within which the American Revolution was framed (see Declaration of Independence) and international aid and acknowledgment (from France.

What does this mean? A UDI is not a complex legal framework. If independence is achived, it becomes a legal document (at least in the eyes of the new state), but few would argue that Smith's Rodesian UDI was legal or complex. --PBS 11:47, 24 May 2006 (UTC)

merging ?

it seems that both articles can be expanded; merging would create a semantic confusion --Ayanoa 18:39, 24 May 2006 (UTC)

What is to be done?

This must be one of the most messy articles in the whole of Misplaced Pages. Of course, this is a reflection of the difficulty of the subject and of the diversity of views that exist, but even so I think something needs to be done.

One problem is that irrelevant material keeps creeping in. One third of the opening section on "Problems" is now devoted not to problems but to a discussion of the American revolution. In the following section on "Etymology," the reader has to get through six paragraphs of discussion and official definitions before getting to the etymology. Then there are references to 50 U.S.C. § 1801(c), and the Strategic Foresight Group meeting in New Delhi, neither of which have anything to do with etymology either. In fact, of 15 paragraphs in this section, I would say that only three actually deal with etymology!

Examples are meant to help clarify. But all too often in this article they lead to qualifications which then confuse. Fortunately, no one (so far!) has felt obliged to jump in to defend the Jacobin Club... But when we move on to the section on "Key Criteria," what starts as a simple statement about "Target" refers to the Irgun. So then we find a vaguely pro-Irgun statement followed by a vaguely anti-Irgun statement, and then of course someone has to mention Hamas... Ok, but what does all this add to anyone's understanding of the basic point that many think that targeting civilians is one of the key criteria?

I could go on. But I won't, because my key proposal is to try to slim the article down and make it as concise as possible by removing irrelevant discussions and including examples only if (a) they genuinely help and (b) are sufficiently generally accepted not to give rise to off-topic discussions. Any support for this idea? Deleted material could be put somewhere else--for example, a short disucssion of "Terrorism in the American revolution" or even "50 U.S.C. § 1801(c)." Mark Sedgwick 08:14, 25 May 2006 (UTC)

Nobody feels like responding to this proposal? I've just looked at "terrorism" articles in some other language versions of Misplaced Pages, and they're all much better than the English one... If there was some encouragement, I'd be happy to edit the current version of this article down to the minimum and post a draft here for discussion. Mark Sedgwick 07:31, 6 June 2006 (UTC)

header

'Problems' is actually not too bad a header after all. -- max rspct leave a message 23:18, 30 May 2006 (UTC)

Globalize tag

Terrorism is rather U.S.-centric, particularily in the definitions section. Although it discusses one UN agency's defintion of terrorsm as war criles in peacetime (clever little rhyme) and goes on for some length about Columbia, it mentions three U.S. governmental agencies' definitions without citing a single one from another state agency. A little more balance is needed, it seems. --Zantastik talk 18:06, 1 June 2006 (UTC)

Having US-centric definitions may be inevitable, given that it's the US, more than any other state, that guides official definitions world-wide. Here in Egypt official definitions (to the extent they exist) don't differ significantly from US ones. The two major definitions in actual use are (and I exaggerate only slightly):
"A terrorist is anyone who threatens the current regime, including so-called 'peaceful' demonstrators" (informal government definition)
"Terrorism is what Muslims are hypocritically accused of by people who don't like them" (informal popular definition).
Actually, perhaps we need a section on "popular perceptions" as well as "official definitions"?! Any takers?
Mark Sedgwick 07:25, 6 June 2006 (UTC)

section on "psychological factors"

If my edits on the "causes of terrorism" section are acceptable, i propose deleting the psychological factors, section, as it is rendered largely irrelevant given the sociological understanding of terrorism. Headsock 21:08, 1 June 2006 (UTC) <---what does "UTC" mean?

It means "Coordinated Universal Time", about the same as Greenwich Mean Time. (Also, it would be good to make sure to post new comments on the bottom. Helps to keep things from getting confusing.) --Mr. Billion 17:21, 2 June 2006 (UTC)
I support your proposal for deleting the section on psychological factors, or at least consider a serious revision of it. While it may hold true for some cases, terrorists are typically not "loners," but involved in vast social networks, or groups, that encourage and support their belonging to such orginizations. (Orignally posted at top by Skr3 6 June 2006 01:43 & moved here to keep discussion in one place)
Agreed. And why not merge "sociological factors" into "causes" while you're at it, and then delete the whole "Common characteristics" section? Mark Sedgwick 07:05, 6 June 2006 (UTC)
  • OK, your edits need some changes, because you've gone in a non-encyclopedic direction with them (or the existing language you moved has done so.) For example, you need to leave out essayish fluff like it should be noted (well, yeah, you just noted it, so you don't need to say it should be noted, because otherwise, you wouldn't have noted it); we don't use language like When we understand that, because we don't address the reader (and who is "we" anyway?). Likewise, we know that (we do?) needs to go; also, we don't self-reference or tell people what to think, as in Also, as in the Lone Wolf section of this article, violent acts committed by an insane or fanatical individual should not be considered terrorist. --jpgordon∇∆∇∆ 19:15, 6 June 2006 (UTC)
I'm trying to come to some understanding so that I can uphold or oppose the consensus, but here is the problem I'm having: why not completely rewrite the "psychological factors" to reflect how the five-stage process interacts with the mind? Also, it would be handy to include how recruitment, etc., relies heavily on the pyschological makeup (and alteration thereof) for those who are interested in the invention of an enemy for political purposes. Why not include these items? I could be off-base with this, but I really don't understand why we don't simply disambiguate and/or remove the redundancy. -Red Heron 17:17, 30 June 2006 (UTC)

Let's discuss this definition

Terrorism is the use of terror against civilians as a means for political or ideological ends.

1. Does the target of terrorism matter?

2. Does the purpose matter?

3. Does it matter who the agent is?

Does anyone dispute that the above captures an undisputable minimum?

The Russian revolutionaries in the top of the 19th century were called "terrorists" 1. Their target was government officials, including the Czar. 2. Their purpose was a political and economic revolution. 3. They were private persons.

The Jewish Irgun in Palestine, under the British mandate were called "terrorists" 1. Target: British military 2. Purpose: political 3. Agents: clandestine para-military

In neither of these cases were the target of attack civilians -- so, at best, these were terrorists in an extended sense -- not in its core sense. Put otherwise, it is controversial whether the Russian and Jewish terrorists were strictly "terrorists.

But if the target is an innocent civilian, and the killing is for a political end, then it is clearly a terrorist act.

Bombing a bus, a restaurant, a ship, or an airplane containing innocent civilians is clearl a terrorist act -- whether the agents are civilians, police, or the military.

It's all a matter of interpretation.. The ANC was labelled terrorist by the white minority government etc etc.. I think the Irgun did use wartime/terroristic tactics. Is the US bombing of wedding parties in Afganistan and Iraq terrorism?? Is blowing up Iraqi policemen terrorism? or restistance to a puppet state? I think the general public would view violence aginst civilians as the most recognisable definition of terrorism.. But then the defintion of civilian goes on... Can bomb attacks in wartime China against japanese carpetbaggers and chemical weapons experts be classified as against civilians? What about oil extraction experts and 'private security contractors' be classified as such? This article is here to explain all the different views and claims about terrorism. All the defintions should be here. And the background behind the them.. such as the origin of the definition and arguments surround the nature of modern warfare. -- max rspct leave a message 16:35, 8 June 2006 (UTC)
Good idea, but
(1) you can't really use "terror" in a definition of "terrorism." "Violence," perhaps.
(2) restriction to "civilians" is HIGHLY problematic.

I would suggest that what is core is "the use of violence to achieve a political or quasi-political objective indirectly rather than directly." Mark Sedgwick 13:39, 10 June 2006 (UTC)

Your definition

Terrorism is the idea that terror can be used as a compelling means of coercion.

First, terrorism is not an idea. The idea of terrorism is an idea. Second, coercion implies a compelling force. Third, if I pull a gun on you to get your money, this will satisfy the definition, but it will not be terrorism. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Skovoroda (talkcontribs) 16:54, 8 June 2006

As an aside, Skovoroda, you can sign your messages by typing "~~~~", which turns into a signature with your username and the time of the message. That way people know who's saying what. --Mr. Billion 17:10, 8 June 2006 (UTC)
Skovoroda: the definition holds true, and I would say that all criminal activity is terrorism in one form or another. The difference is one of scale: if one person is involved against another, it's an interpersonal dispute. If it involves entire countries, it's a war. If it involves only political groups, then the result is terrorism. Thus, groups that commit hate crimes (KKK, IRA, neo-Nazis, al-Qaeda, etc.) are terrorist organizations because they engage in activities that fit the definition cited above. Can you suggest a more compelling definition? -Red Heron 17:08, 30 June 2006 (UTC)

Primary or Core Sense and Extended Senses

Having to take usage into account, we can, I think, distinguish a core sense -- the one I am proposing, and extended senses.

1. The core sense is the terrorizing of civilians for political and ideological ends.

2. One extended sense has to include Russian terrorists targeting the government.

3. Another has to include cases like the Irgun targeting the military.

4. Perspectical senses: from the perspective of an established governments, all attacks against its military and government are terrorist acts. But from the perspective of those trying to topple the government -- their acts sgsinst the government and military are acts of war.

5. Borderline cases: since some civilian jobs help to maintain the military and the government, when these are targetted it is not clear what to call such acts. Bombing a telephone exchange center, for example, to disrupt communication. Skovoroda 18:08, 8 June 2006 (UTC)

That is one way that the word is used, but not the only way. Max rspct has the article start with the broadest meaning and work its way toward specific uses like the one defined by the United States Department of Defense that you mention. According to the Misplaced Pages manual of style, that's the way articles are supposed to read. I don't mean any disrespect by reverting your contribution. I just think that following the manual of style, the way Max rspt had it, makes for better articles. --Tammy Wise 20:30, 8 June 2006 (UTC)

US DoD definition/global view

Is the Department of Defense definition necessary? The description of terrorism that follows states pretty much the exact same definition (creating fear to force compliance with demands), so this just seems redundant.

Also, the phrase "In recent Western culture," could be removed from the next sentence. I think the sentence already provides a very universal definition of what terrorism is. I can't imagine why a European or an African would define terrorism as anything but the use of violence to create fear and, in turn, influence people. -Rodeosmurf 01:47, 10 June 2006 (UTC)

The DOD definition and the second paragraph are pretty much the same thing because they come from the same source: the United States Armed Forces. The DOD definition is not a world view, and neither is saying that terrorism is "the use of violence...." Violence is an action. Terrorism is a way of thinking about, not just violence, but any way of inducing an overwhelming sense of imminent danger as a means to an end. Various cultures have added things to that definition (usually to serve their own ends), but we're writing a world view, not a propaganda piece. We need to start the article with something that isn't out to prove a point. I'm going to replace the United States Department of Defense definition with the more general worldwide view that we had there before. Please add anything you want to the body of the article, but I think the first paragraph has to be more universal than something created by the United States Armed Forces. --Award winner 02:50, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
Can you cite a source on your notion of terrorism being an idea about coercion, rather than the action of terrorist attacks themselves? -Rodeosmurf 03:10, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
No, I can't. Would you like me to delete everything in this article that does not have a source? --Award winner 03:26, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
I changed it to the following. I hope this works for you. The DOD definition or any derivative of it does not work for me because it is not a world view. --Award winner 03:39, 10 June 2006 (UTC)

Terrorism is the rationale that invoking overwhelming feelings of imminent danger in a population can be a compelling means of coercion.

I don't think you're wrong, I just think the way you're wording things isn't very clear. How about this:

Terrorism is an ideology which promotes the use of violence and threats as a compelling means of coercion. In recent Western culture, terrorism is often used to refer specifically to the acts carried out by terrorists.

In general, terrorists practice a strategy of using political violence, social threats,...


-Rodeosmurf 15:14, 10 June 2006 (UTC)

I don't think that's right either, Rodeosmurf. Terrorism isn't an ideology, it's a form of violence undertaken by rogue actors for political or ideological purposes. --Mr. Billion 15:52, 10 June 2006 (UTC)

"Terrorism" either doesn't (tho of course it does exist as a term) exist or: is never separate from war/it is a form of warfare practised but not acknowledged by most warmakers. Same goes for booby traps. Whether it is justified or not. In Italy, the Bologna massacre, the biggest attack on civilians in post-WWII Italian if not West European history, was perpertrated by agents (not necc as in individual "agents") of the Gladio project. Attacks like these are rarely perpetrated by lone individuals (the London Nail Bomber is one exception). Groupuscules and government proxy forces whether 'left' or 'right-wing',religious or monarchist etc have been killing and maiming since time immemorial. The orthodox media and most governments are happy to use the terrorist moniker covering insurgent-type groups while dismissing suggestions that terrorism (as bombing of civilians) is more a tactic than a cohesive set of identifiable organisations or even 'ideology'.- -- max rspct leave a message 16:10, 10 June 2006 (UTC)

reverted removal of reference to US as state sponsor

I reverted this edit , in the hopes that we could make it more NPOV and keep it. Thoughts? btw, does anyone know why the talk page is protected but not the article?--Chaser T 22:19, 19 June 2006 (UTC)

I rephrased the paragraph to make it a little more NPOV, as seen here. Thoughts?--Chaser T 03:12, 20 June 2006 (UTC)

I'm not a scholar on this subject, but I am curious to know whether or not selective assassinations could be reasonably construed as terrorism. Also, some research into "The School of the Americas" and "Air America" may be of some help. To wit, did either of these organizations serve to support terrorist activities? As I said though, it's not my field. I was "RA" (Regular Army). Rklawton 03:28, 20 June 2006 (UTC)
Your experience gives you more knowledge than I have. Looking at the key criteria section of the article, targetting of civilians and motive to cause fear and mayhem both seem to be absent from the CI

Chaser, please explain why you think the examples are POV? I tried to make both as factual as I could. In any case, you should not revert contributions unless you are prepared to correct them pretty much immediately. Basically, what I think you're saying is, the history is so shoking to your political sensibilities that the history needs to be toned down, or else eliminated. I am restoring my contribution because (1) I think it's non-POV (2) you cannot remove it, fail to "correct it" and thereby suppress it forever. I.e. if it is POV, it's only get seen and edited if it's up. --JustFacts 17:19, 5 July 2006 (UTC)


Contras/US Section

In the article it says the state-department of the USA described the Contras as terrorists. However, everything I can find has the US government hailing them as heroes. For example (I know this isn't a great source but it does have a quote on it attributed to Ronald Regan: "moral equivalent of our founding fathers." GiollaUidir 18:15, 6 July 2006 (UTC)

Terror/terrorism diction

It has become commonplace for certain press and government leaders to interchange 'terrorism' and 'terror.' I'd suggest that something be done to comment on which term is appropriate/accepted and seek to trace where the split came from.

incidents in colombia

There was a mayor bombing in 1989 in colombia during the drug lords era, more specifically, the bombing ocurred in a business centre and shopping mall in Bogotá called "Centro 93" (still an important place despite being almost destroyed, it was reconstructed and now part of a cosmopolitan zone in Bogotá). According to the Misplaced Pages List of terrorist incidents, the bombing was made with a truck bomb and killed 52 people and injured a 1,000. Can this be concidered an example of a major incident?

Minako-Chan* 22:56, 15 July 2006 (UTC)

I would say so! and we want aas much range in "causes",groups,locations and times on here so as to be more NPOV through more information.Hypnosadist 00:35, 16 July 2006 (UTC)

Well, I admit i was too young at that age and there isn't much information on the net about the many incidents that happened here in Colombia during the drug lords era. The "Centro 93" bomb was the worst incident, probably one of the worst terrorism acts in Colombia but it seems people forgot about it (which i think, is a good thing for us Colombians).

If i can find information about this in other sources other than the internet, I'll be glad to contribute, but my question is, Colombia; being the country with most terrorist incidents in the world but only a few with a conciderable magnitute to be compared with incidents in india and england, in which part of the article would this information about terrorism in colombia would go?

Minako-Chan* 01:14, 18 July 2006 (UTC)

USS Cole

The article itself says it does not qualify as terror and here its said its terror? I think the Cole can be exchanged with a better fitting example like the bombing of the embassy.--Stone 07:08, 27 July 2006 (UTC)


I agree with Stone, the attack on the USS Cole, while it was a cowardly sneak attack, it was not, in my opinion, a "terrorist" attack. The USS Cole is a military vessel of the United States Navy and would be considered a legitimate target in any war. This attack is probably more correctly defined as a jihadist suicide attack; therefore it should be removed from this article in favor of another example that better fits the criteria, like the bombing of the London Underground, where civilians were targeted. -- Britcom 01:54, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
Definately an act of war not terrorism.Hypnosadist 02:06, 28 July 2006 (UTC)

Embargoes are State Terrorism?

The article includes embargoes as state terrorism. What's up with that? Naturally this is not true, otherwise "economic sanctions" must be included in the definition of state terrorism, which means trade agreements which stipulate economic recourses for violations need to be included in the state terrorism definition, which means diplomatic trade discussions need to be included.

name change?

What happened? A relatively new user -- editing for about a week -- changes the name of this page without any discussion because he wants to focus on individual terrorists? I haven't been active on this page a while but am I the only one seeing a problem with this? And now, of course, it is impossible to move the page back. I note based on the user's edits, he has a fascination with notable killers and murderers - that is all fine, but this article was about terrorism, not about individual terrorists, and nobody had a problem with the title until now. Now what is the procedure for getting the name changed back? Unless the consensus agrees with Space ghost?--csloat 00:34, 28 July 2006 (UTC)

From history : 22:37, 27 July 2006 Space Ghost 900 (Talk | contribs) m (moved Terrorism to Terrorists and Terrorisim: this article should be made to address the issue of notable indivual terriosts instead of the act of terriosim.)

Why ?

Move it back ! Ericd 01:02, 28 July 2006 (UTC)

I agree. The name change was not discussed, and would have been voted down if it had been. We should move it back. --Mr. Billion 02:19, 28 July 2006 (UTC)

Requested move

Terrorists and TerrorismTerrorism – move it back to Terrorism. … Rationale: Superfluous. Ericd 01:06, 28 July 2006 (UTC)

Survey

Add *Support or *Oppose followed by an optional one-sentence explanation, then sign your opinion with ~~~~

Discussion

Add any additional comments

This is a huge problem with wikipedia that a troublemaker can come change the name of the article without discussion and then it cannot be changed back without an admin intervening after a discussion and vote. It should be as easy or difficult to change the article in the first place as it is to change it back. *sigh*--csloat 07:39, 28 July 2006 (UTC)

In general, it can be moved back (if the redirect doesn't have history). The problem here is that other people were fixing the redirect for spelling and something minor, instead of reverting it back. A guy has been kicked off the Misplaced Pages (can't recall his username) for page moves to the names that suited him, then purposefully touching the redirect so that it's irrevertible without an admin. Duja 12:11, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
I'm not convinced that this is a "huge problem" procedurally. From one perspective it's very good. Once the poll is taken the issue can be considered closed, which preemptively eliminates the possibility that the article will be moved back and forth by individuals until the whole thing becomes a major dispute. Isomorphic 00:42, 30 July 2006 (UTC)
I do not support the move. It should stay stuck at this title. --TheM62Manchester 09:24, 29 July 2006 (UTC)

State Terrorism

This section fails to mention terrorist groups funded and directly aided by the CIA, such as those throughout Latin America, the harboring of anti-Cuban terrorists in Miami, and terrorist actions perpetrated by the Israeli government against the Palestinians, and, more recently, the Lebanese population.Smitty Mcgee 16:16, 28 July 2006 (UTC)

embargoes as state terrorism?

i propose deleting embargoes in the list of examples for state terrorism. if this is controversial, maybe that could be discussed in the state terrorism article which does not mention embargoes. --trueblood 08:24, 29 July 2006 (UTC)

The Five Stage Process

I second the recommendation to remove this material. It don't see its relevance.--Motorsportsmark 17:16, 30 July 2006 (UTC)

I agree free up room for more important information and wikilinks.Hypnosadist 18:45, 1 August 2006 (UTC)

This section gives undue weight to a particular individual's theory of the sociology of terrorism. Unless it were to become an academic standard, it doesn't belong here. I've removed it. --Mr. Billion 03:27, 3 August 2006 (UTC)

Bias under State Terrorism

Although there is a link to a more in-depth article, the summary section given here is ridiculously biased. It lists Islamic extremist groups and communist-backed groups as examples of state terrorism, but fails to mention American or Israeli terrorism. This would seem to be a necessary counter-point to the argument presented here.Smitty Mcgee 16:01, 31 July 2006 (UTC) sigh --trueblood 19:27, 31 July 2006 (UTC)

"Against Innocents or non-combatants"

I've reverted the intro again because the phrase "against innocents or non-combatants" is misleading. What do you call it when insurgents in Iraq kidnap American and British soldiers, and film their executions? Clearly these victims are combatants, and in the eyes of terrorists, they are not innocent; but at the same time, these are not typical actions of war, they are mass-media-enhanced tactics of spreading fear - the very definition of modern terrorism. Rodeosmurf 15:41, 1 August 2006 (UTC)

But under that definition, any use of violence could be construed as terroristic. What separates terrorism from non-terrorism is not the conventionality of the tactics used, but the targets of those tactics.Smitty Mcgee 15:59, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
My point was that the type of person being directly harmed by terrorists is not important, when the message of the terrorist act is the same; The message behind executing a soldier(a combatant) on video is more or less the same message behind killing thousands of innocents on 9/11. An insurgent firing his weapon at a coalition soldier on the streets of Fallujah does not intend to spread any ideological message or demand, and it is therefore not a terroristic act. It doesn't matter if the victim is a soldier, because some acts of violence against soldiers are terroristic in nature, and some are simply standard acts of warfare. All that matters is whether there is a message, and whom it is being directed at. Rodeosmurf 16:33, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
I disagree. Any soldier killed on the battlefield is an act of war, not terrorism. Deliberately killing or threatening to kill unarmed civilians is terrorism. Soldiers are armed and trained to risk death in combat, civilians are not. Now if you want to argue that killing an unarmed and non-threatening military prisoner of war is a war crime and against the Geneva conventions, then I would agree it is a war crime, but still not terrorism. Terrorism is a war crime, but not all war crimes are terrorism. Terrorism has its roots in barbarism.
One sort of terrorism that has not been mentioned is terrorism by proxy. The deliberate act of endangering civilians by setting up military targets (i.e. rocket launchers) next to occupied homes and civilian buildings so that when the target is bombed, civilians are sure to be killed by the blast.
The failure of combatants to wear a uniform in combat is another war crime especially when they attack in populated areas and hide in the crowd. -- Britcom 18:12, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
The notion that "Any soldier killed on the battlefield is an act of war" is ridiculous. The beheading of soldiers on videos which are then disseminated to the mass media is clearly an attempt to spread fear. In direct relation to the fighting going on in the war, the terrorists receive almost no benefit in killing the soldier; it would be completely absurd for the insurgency to attempt to defeat the coalition by endlessly capturing and beheading soldiers one at a time. Beheadings of this type have absolutely nothing to do with war, and everything to do with sending a message to the western world and generating fear and hopelessness. Why the hell would they film it otherwise? Terrorism is about creating fear, and sending a message; A terrorist can accomplish this by victimizing a soldier just as easily as he could by victimizing an innocent. Rodeosmurf 19:42, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
I still disagree, to whom are they attempting to spread fear? Anger maybe, but fear? All right, perhaps they wish to spread fear amongst the other soldiers, but how would that be different then shooting him out in the open, or killing him by shelling his platoon, this is just more of the same. Yes, it is horrible, but that is war and it has always been like that, the difference today is you the civilian get to witness it at home in your living room, while in times past you just heard about it a week later. I stand by my statement; terrorism is unique as a tactic because it targets civilians and by doing so threatens all the other civilians who see the video. Civilians would not normally feel threatened by the death of a soldier in battle or as a prisoner, since the war is not being fought in the target audiences location (i.e. here in the west) however, bombing a civilian train in London does threaten the target audience at home. Do you see the difference?
Let me also say that the criteria here for what is fear of terrorism should be a "reasonable" fear, anyone can develop an unreasonable fear, like fear of the number 13. We should not be basing our definition of terrorism on such a low threshold of fear, like fear of seeing death on TV five thousand miles away from the incident qualifies as being terrorized. If that were true, then any death on TV would be terrorism, and Hollywood movie studios would be terrorist organisations. Many Hollywood productions inclued real war footage and show real soldiers being killed. --Britcom 20:05, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
You don't think watching a soldier beheaded on television causes reasonable fear? Sure, the viewer wouldn't be afraid of getting kidnapped and beheaded themselves, because they're not anywhere near a place where that would happen; And certainly I'll agree that these videos are designed primarily to be seen by soldiers. But I can't agree with the notion that beheading someone on film is the same as shelling a platoon or shooting a soldier in the open; the videos convey a sense of complete hopelessness to stop the terrorists, and show the relentless violence of their mindset, much moreso than any conventional fighting could. These messages generate fear and demoralize the soldiers, whereas fighting conventionally is just par for the course. Terrorism directed at the soldiers is terrorism nonetheless.
At any rate, the videos aren't just directed at soldiers; they threaten everyone with the prospect of dealing with the perpetrators, who are showing themselves to be ruthless and uncaring murderers. These videos are a prime example of terrorism. Rodeosmurf 21:13, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
I don't agree with your definition of “terrorism” of soldiers as equivalent to terrorism. Terrorism must be defined differently than the military demoralization you describe. Otherwise you legitimize the killing of innocent civilians as the same as the killing of soldiers. There must be a difference in the definition in order to logically understand the subject matter. There is, and always has been a difference in the definition of things military and non-military. The reason for this is that we consider war to be separate from the civilized society it is designed to protect. Many things are permissible in war that are not permissible within civilized society. The reasons for this are purely practical. Without the practical ability to make war upon an attacking nation, that nation is powerless to prevent being overrun by its enemy and snuffed out. Every major nation that exists on the face of the earth exists to this day because it is the result of winning the wars in its history. There are also many nations that do not exist today, because they lost and were wiped out. For example, where is the great Aztec nation? Gone, overrun, looted, and replaced by Spanish Conquistadores. Terrorism is an “ism”; it is a philosophy, it is the philosophy that war should not have limits and that everyone (old women, children, babies, pregnant women, the handicapped, etc.) is a target for death, torture, rape, and oppression. Terrorism is a form of barbarism purposefully and narrowly directed at the most defenseless members of a society in order to break that society’s will to defend itself. It is by its very nature, cowardly, pathetic, and uncivilized. Those who subscribe to its tactics have elected themselves to be vermin and a pestilence upon the earth. They leave no option for peace other than their own eradication because they give no quarter and accept no treaty or terms. They are obsessed with their own deaths and those of their victims. They are criminals in every and all senses of the word. They are scum with no redeeming qualities and with no legitimate purpose for existence. They see no value in human life; therefore they make their own lives of no value. Their existence is a threat to everyone who wants peace and peace is not possible while they exist. They are incompatible with civilized society and they seethe with lust for its destruction and the deaths of its constituents. They are, in a word, evil.--Britcom 13:57, 9 August 2006 (UTC)
What you describe could equally be called War Crimes when carried out by "official" armies.GiollaUidir 15:22, 9 August 2006 (UTC)
The grotesque nature of these acts make them war crimes; the fact that they are filmed and distributed makes them terrorism.
In response to Britcom: Again, you and the others are missing the point. I understand full well that it is expected that soldiers will be attacked during wartime. But the types of things I've described go far beyond any definition of war, crossing over into the realm of terrorism.
I am not attempting to equate civilians to soldiers, thereby backhandedly legitimizing all terrorist acts against civilians as merely acts of war. In fact, it seems that those who disagree with me are doing almost the same thing: legitimizing terrorist acts against soldiers as acts of war, and sympathising with those who would mutilate a human on television by thinking of them as soldiers who are simply fighting a war. As you said, these people are not soldiers, they are cowards; their acts are not those of war but of motivated violence used as a fear-generating weapon.
These videos are not just 'military demoralization'. I'm not in the military, but I've seen the videos and been disturbed by them; they have affected me and my peers, just as they might affect a soldier, which is entirely the goal of the perpetrators. Rodeosmurf 18:02, 10 August 2006 (UTC)
See my comments below at Reverted Intro --Britcom 02:27, 11 August 2006 (UTC)

"Causes" section

==Causes== ====Social Networks==== ====Historical Context==== ====Cross Cutting Cleavages==== Cross Cutting Cleavages refer to a person or group's connections to other persons and groups with different ideologies and backgrounds. It has been found that the use of violent tactics for a political agenda is far more likely to be committed by groups with few cross cutting cleavages. For example, the al-Qaeda network is comprised of men who met while fighting Soviets in Afghanistan during the cold war, and all share the same religious and political beliefs. Thus an organization of like-minded individuals with little connection to opposing thoughts become "extremist" and use violence against their enemies. Research has also shown (citation?) that people become involved in terrorist organizations through their social networks, their social ties to others. It is then more important who one knows than what one thinks in becoming a terrorist. Combining these two ideas, we can begin to predict when terrorist organizations will form and who will be a part of them. If persons with few outside connections but many friends within their closed community, violent action on a political ideology is possible. {{citation needed}}

This section needs citations and a lot of work, if it's worth keeping at all. I've moved it here from the article. It sounds like it may be an extension of the "five stages", which as I noted above under the Five Stages heading I've removed because its inclusion gives undue weight to a particular individual's theories. And why is there nothing under the Social Networks and Historical Context headings? --Mr. Billion 18:55, 4 August 2006 (UTC)

Don't know if this is the place, but I like the idea of discussing how "persons with few connections" outside their own beliefs may tend toward erratic behavior. Might call it the Timothy McVeigh syndrome. These guys met and talked among themselves and reinforced their own wacky ideas, and there was no one there to say "Wait a minute, this is nuts." Ditto the Branch Davidians and the Jones cults, and it even says something about the political polarization we are witnessing in the U.S. today. There is so much media that we can pick just the outlets that agree with us and never have to hear the other side of the story. JHarlen

Protect?

Perhaps this article should be protected. There seems to be a history of spam, nonsense and racist rubbish being posted on here. Blowski 13:00, 7 August 2006 (UTC)

Reverted intro

I've reverted the intro to something which I hope we can get some consensus on. Let's take a look at this statement:

Terrorism is distinguished from other uses of force in that it involves the intentional targeting of persons who, unlike heads of state, members of the armed forces, and security personnel, are not direct participants in the conflict with the terrorists. Thus a "freedom fighter," an "insurgent," or a member of the armed forces may be a terrorist if and when he/she engages in an act of violence intentionally targeting a civilian population, while members of an acknowledged terrorist group defending themselves against persons trying to capture them are not, per se, committing a terrorist act.

First of all, this part is far too long. The other debate I got involved in regarding this page sprung up because of a two-word phrase, 'against non-combatants', which essentially says the same thing. Additionally, the whole thing about terrorists defending themselves and therefore not committing terrorist acts is unnecessary, as this would be obvious if the introductory sentence properly identified terrorism as actions, rather than as a philosophy or ideology.

I've changed it to 'almost exclusively against non-combatants', which I hope will account for the subtle nuance of the debated subject matter.


...to generate fear, cause disruption, and ultimately to cause the authorities of a population to comply with certain political, religious, ...

This is too presumptuous, as many terrorist acts are meant to affect public opinion, which only affects authority figures indirectly. Also, this is somewhat redundant, as it is later explained that terrorism targets societies. Rodeosmurf 21:32, 10 August 2006 (UTC)

I agree the discussion of examples of what is NOT terrorism could go somewhere else so that the introductory section is not too long. But generally, I see nothing in this latest version that actually distinguishes terrorism from other acts of violence. I believe that is what we need to reach consensus on. And I'm afraid I don't follow the logic in the arguments you put forth here in the discussion. E.g., you say the introductory sentence needs to describe terrorism as an action, not a philosophy. The introductory sentence DID describe it as an action -- the use of violence. No philosophy there. And isn't saying that terrorist acts are meant to affect public opinion and thus affect authority figures indirectly the same as saying "generate fear ... and ultimately cause the authorities ... to comply ..."? That was my intent. Maybe I missed the mark. Anyhoo, in one sentence or less, what distinguishes terrorism from other violence? I say it's that it is the intentional targeting of a general population/non-combatants whatever we want to call them. Adding "almost exclusively" invalidates this as a distinguishing factor. So what is it?JHarlen
Terrorism is distinguished in that violence is used to create fear, and that fear is directed at larger societies'';//Can't the same be said for acts that are not terrorism, such as developing or testing a nuclear weapon (Iran, India, pakistan) or missile (North Korea), or issuing threats in speeches, or shelling an off-shore island (Quemoy-Matsu), or any number of other acts? Again, I think it is the violent attack on the civilian populace that distinguishes. 'I believe that is what the terrorists themselves say their method and aim is.// I think that, as it is, the article makes this fairly clear. The intro sentence explains that terrorism is used to create fear, and the following sentence explains how it is an indirect form of coercion. We do not need to reiterate or elaborate on the notions that innocents are being harmed, because that is already made clear by the existing statements.
My apologies for the mix-up with the logic - The article previously referred to terrorism as 'a strategy' rather than 'the use of violence...'; at any rate, the whole thing about terrorists defending themselves would still be redundant, because the article defines terrorism as the use of violence to generate fear; The scenario in which 'terrorists' defend themselves is, by our definition, not an act of terrorism. // Agreed, but so many things are called terrorism that I believe it is important to say, somewhere, what is NOT terrorism.JHarlen//
The thing about the authorities seemed to suggest a more direct brand of terrorism which specifically and exclusively targets only the authority figures in societies, which I doubt is what you intended. Otherwise it just seems redundant and unnecessary, given the definition of terrorism as targeting societies. //I think we need to try this without using the word "targeting" in several different senses. When you say targeting societies I believe what you mean is that their purpose is to affect the societies. And conversely when you say the terrorists don't really target people, you might get a rise out of folks who were at the World Trade Center. What you mean, I believe, is that their ultimate goal is not just to kill, but to effect change in policies.JHarlenRodeosmurf 22:37, 10 August 2006 (UTC)


Can't the same be said for acts that are not terrorism, such as developing or testing a nuclear weapon (Iran, India, pakistan) or missile (North Korea), or issuing threats in speeches, or shelling an off-shore island (Quemoy-Matsu), or any number of other acts? Again, I think it is the violent attack on the civilian populace that distinguishes.
No, because these acts are not in themselves violent. Pushing one's political weight around does not have the same effect as murdering thousands, so it is the combination of violence and the use thereof in spreading fear which defines terrorism.
Agreed, but so many things are called terrorism that I believe it is important to say, somewhere, what is NOT terrorism.
I agree, but I think that sort of thing should either go in the definitions section below the intro or on the separate page about the Definition of terrorism.
I think we need to try this without using the word "targeting" in several different senses. When you say targeting societies I believe what you mean is that their purpose is to affect the societies. And conversely when you say the terrorists don't really target people, you might get a rise out of folks who were at the World Trade Center. What you mean, I believe, is that their ultimate goal is not just to kill, but to effect change in policies.
This is a good point, and I apologize for not seeing the way this could be read earlier. I've changed part of the intro on the page to reflect this difference. Rodeosmurf 23:57, 10 August 2006 (UTC)
Also, Xosa just changed the intro sentence back to 'refers to a strategy of using violence...'. I think either phrasing works, but I'd like to hear what Xosa has to say on the matter if he/she would like to chime in here. Rodeosmurf 00:00, 11 August 2006 (UTC)
I surrender, Rodeosmurf. I agree and disagree with many points in your write-up, but if we can't handle this fundamental one I see no contribution I can make: that terrorism's stated aim, to effect change by killing as many innocent civilians as possible, is what makes it unique. It is a stark, singular, and easily discernible difference. No one else does this. It shares this characteristic with no other kind of fighter. One man's terrorist is NOT another man's freedom fighter. (Think of me whenever you hear someone say that.) Onward and upward. I've enjoyed the exchange and thank Misplaced Pages for the forum.JHarlen


Okay, I have read what you all have to say about defining terrorism and I have studied several authoritative definitions on the subject and I believe the best one I have read so far is the one given by Princeton University on its WordNet project site. Princeton defines terrorism thusly:
“the calculated use of violence (or threat of violence) against civilians in order to attain goals that are political or religious or ideological in nature; this is done through intimidation or coercion or instilling fear” ]
Before anyone criticizes this definition, I would encourage you to go back and reread the definitions of “guerrilla warfare”, “insurgency”, “barbarism”, and “war crime” because many of acts attributed to terrorism today, actually fall into one of these other categories and should not be lumped in with the definition of terrorism. We need to keep in mind that not all violent acts rise to the level of terrorism, even though they may be committed by individuals or organizations that are reputed as terrorist. I think often we rush to define an act of violence as terrorism, just because it is committed by a terrorist organization. By no means it to say that there aren’t valid examples of terrorism today, there most assuredly are. But, in order for us to hope to bring an end to terrorism, we must understand what makes it different from the other forms of violence previously mentioned. Likewise, just because an act of violence may not be definable as terrorism, does not lessen its severity, or seriousness. Terrorism is an especially heinous form of violence and it should stay that way and we should not allow it to be redefined down to just a synonym for “guerilla warfare”, or “resistance”. Many terrorist organizations try to portray their actions as merely guerilla in nature down-playing their criminal acts leading many to believe that terrorists are merely guerillas with bad publicity, or conversely that all soldiers are terrorists. Most of this confusion comes from attempted justification or obfuscation by the terrorists themselves. I think it would also be helpful for each of us to go back and reread the Geneva Conventions so as to get a handle on what lawful war looks like so that we may contrast that with recent acts attributed to terrorism.--Britcom 02:24, 11 August 2006 (UTC)

Revised definition

I recently introduced this revised definition of terrorism: Terrorism is the systematic use or threatened use of violence to intimidate a population or government and thereby effect political, religious or ideological change. This definition is derived from the American Heritage Dictionary and the Encylopædia Britannica. -- WGee 02:04, 12 August 2006 (UTC)

This is wonderful; Hopefully this will end the ongoing debates about the definition. However, it seems to me that the two sentences which follow the definition are very poorly worded.
Terrorist attacks are designed to influence the broader society to which those killed, injured, or taken hostage belong. The dramatic focus of mass media is often ascribed as amplifying and broadcasting feelings of intense fear and anger that make terrorism more effective in the modern world.
These almost seem to be written in some sort of backwards-speaking Yoda-talk, which uses passive voice and draws attention away from the subject. I'd recommend this:
Terrorist attacks are not intended merely to victimize or eliminate those who are killed, injured, or taken hostage, but rather to victimize and influence the societies to which they belong. Modern terrorism has come to be defined in part by the influential power of the mass media, which terrorists co-opt in their efforts to amplify and broadcast feelings of intense fear and anger.
Opinions? Rodeosmurf 20:25, 12 August 2006 (UTC)
I still like the Princeton Univ. definition: “the calculated use of violence (or threat of violence) against civilians in order to attain goals that are political or religious or ideological in nature; this is done through intimidation or coercion or instilling fear” ] IMHO, It is simple, and easy to understand, and is not easily confused with the definition of war. The way I read it, WGee's definition is indistingishable from the definition of traditional warfare, (see the rest of my comments on this issue at the end of “Reverted Intro” above.)
Here is a quote from Answers.com about the confusion; "Guerrilla warfare is sometimes confused with terrorism, in that a relatively small force attempts to achieve large goals by using organized acts of directed violence against a larger force. But in contrast to terrorism, these acts are almost always against military targets, and civilian targets are minimized in an attempt to increase public support. For this reason, guerrilla tactics are generally considered military strategy rather than terrorism, although both terrorism and guerrilla warfare could be considered forms of asymmetric warfare." ]--Britcom 05:31, 13 August 2006 (UTC)

I'd agree that the definition as currently stated is indistinguishable from conventional warfare. Really don't think it's suitable. Scholars have been trying to sum up terrorism in a few short words for years and have singularly failed to do so. I'm afraid any attempt to do so here is likewise doomed to failure.

The problem, as noted elsewhere, stems from the fact that nation states reserve the right to conduct and/or support political violence themselves in pursuit of their own objectives. The result is that they are unwilling to commit to a hard and fast definition which could be applied objectively because it would limit their own ability to pursue political violence to further goals they believe to be worthwhile.

The most informative thing you can say about the definition of terrorism, in my opinion, that there isn't a useful one. As such, I'd recommend avoiding any attempt to sum up terrorism in the intro. (Apologies if I've broken any formatting conventions, I'm new here.) - Garrys 12:22, 13 August 2006 (UTC)

There may not be a useful definition of terrorism but I think an honest definition of how the term is normally used would be "really bad stuff that the other guys do". It is a propaganda tool that would lose its effectiveness if it had a hard and fast definition. It is a word that has powerful connotation but has an extremely fluid denotation. According to Mark Burgess of the Center for Defence Information (http://en.wikipedia.org/Center_for_Defense_Information) "The term terrorism did not itself appear until the end of the 18th Century, when it was used by the likes of the British political philosopher Edmund Burke to demonize the leaders of the French Revolution." - BrianM
I don't think the word "terrorism" should ever refer to a form of conventional warfare. Those who have said such things in the past are often sympathizers with the terrorists, and either secretly or overtly support terrorist methods. Terrorism should be defined as an aberration of the rules of war, not as synonymous with the rules of war. The whole purpose for the word to exist is to define a different set of rules used by some groups or governments that are unacceptable according to traditionally accepted, and legally delimited (by treaty or convention) rules of war. Add to this the natural law definition of crime, and you discover that universally the rules of war exclude the intentional targeting of; ‘’non-combatant’’ women, children, aged, disabled people, and prisoners (men of military age (approx. 15-50) who display any hostility are assumed to be combatants, unless they immediately make a display of passivity or surrender). That right there is your definition of terrorism in a nut shell. Groups or governments who, as a policy, target those above mentioned individuals for rape, torture, kidnapping, or death, are guilty of terrorism whether you call it that or not. These perpetrators are the ones who according to natural law, are guilty of a crime and thereby deserve punishment by the governing authorities of the nations the victims belong to, even unto death, because what they are guilty of is a capital crime against natural law, humanity, international law, and every civilized body of national law. I disagree with the idea that terrorism cannot be defined, to me that is a ridiculous and illogical notion (no offense). Of course it can be defined, the problem is some people don’t want it defined because they may harbor the notion that they, or their pet organizations, may want to use terrorist tactics in the future. If the definition of terrorism can be obfuscated, they continue to operate in a grey area and can deflect criticism of their actions. This grey area, in my view, is unacceptable and the proverbial “spade” should be called a “spade”. Terrorism is the deliberate and avoidable targeting of innocents with violence. Anything that does not equate this, also in my view, is a ‘’re’’definition, not a definition of the word. --Britcom 20:59, 14 August 2006 (UTC)
Here is another defintion that I find acceptable from the Definition of terrorism page: "In November 2004, a UN panel described terrorism as any act: "intended to cause death or serious bodily harm to civilians or non-combatants with the purpose of intimidating a population or compelling a government or an international organization to do or abstain from doing any act." " --Britcom 21:46, 14 August 2006 (UTC)
Actually, I like the definition from the UN panel better than the definition I inserted. A dictionary and an encyclopedia aren't exactly the most scholarly sources, anyway. To many people, a UN panel is one of the most independent, netural, and authoritative commentators on a subject, so I believe its definition is quite appropriate to use. -- WGee 03:14, 17 August 2006 (UTC)
Q - Is there anyone else who likes the UN Panel defintion (above) , and would like to see it in the article; or are there any objections to it being placed in the article? --Britcom 03:34, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
I definately want the UN Panel defintion (above) placed in this article, perhaps even as the First definition, as the UN are highly notable and A Lot of people and cultures where involved in the formation of this definition.Hypnosadist 12:29, 18 August 2006 (UTC)

Vandalism

"Terrorists are g**d*m muslim and islamic loonys who are a**holes and should all die!!!! GET THE F**K OUTTA OUR COUNTRY!!!"

I'm not entirely sure how this site works, but...that guy should be warned.

  • Nevermind, it appears he has already been warned previously for removing information from the terrorist page. He's already been warned. Perhaps some bannination should be done? =P67.33.141.71 15:27, 12 August 2006 (UTC)
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