|
|
|
|
|
by omonra
3869 days ago
|
|
It seems that the actions of the terrorists allow for a fairly easy us vs them categorization. Ie there are millions of people in Europe who are first / 2nd / 3rd generation immigrants - yet the terrorists all come from specific subset. So there is some commonality between them that makes a dude go 'I'm gonna go kill a bunch of people'. The PC factor is exactly this - Ferguson doesn't shy away from putting light on it while the FB professor is horrified by the construct of the 'other' that's devoid of nuance. |
|
> It seems that the actions of the terrorists allow for a fairly easy us vs them categorization.
Why? For you?
> yet the terrorists all come from specific subset
What subset is that? Plenty of terrorism isn't based on religion.
> So there is some commonality between them [...]
And that is? Of course there's some commonality, but you actually have to specify which and why to have an argument.
> Ferguson doesn't shy away from putting light on it
What part of his writing does that? The part I've read very much paints with broad strokes and doesn't at all focus on "the commonality of a specific subset of terrorists". As you would expect from a history professor.