Deprecated: Creation of dynamic property DUP_PRO_Global_Entity::$notices is deprecated in /home2/imszdrmy/public_html/wp-content/plugins/duplicator-pro/classes/entities/class.json.entity.base.php on line 244

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home2/imszdrmy/public_html/wp-content/plugins/duplicator-pro/classes/entities/class.json.entity.base.php:244) in /home2/imszdrmy/public_html/wp-content/plugins/bluehost-wordpress-plugin/vendor/newfold-labs/wp-module-ecommerce/includes/ECommerce.php on line 197

Notice: Function wp_enqueue_script was called incorrectly. Scripts and styles should not be registered or enqueued until the wp_enqueue_scripts, admin_enqueue_scripts, or login_enqueue_scripts hooks. This notice was triggered by the nfd_wpnavbar_setting handle. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 3.3.0.) in /home2/imszdrmy/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6078

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home2/imszdrmy/public_html/wp-content/plugins/duplicator-pro/classes/entities/class.json.entity.base.php:244) in /home2/imszdrmy/public_html/wp-includes/feed-rss2.php on line 8
Terrorism Archives - Occasional Planet https://occasionalplanet.org/tag/terrorism/ Progressive Voices Speaking Out Sun, 26 Feb 2017 19:24:57 +0000 en-US hourly 1 211547205 Amman, Yemen, Istanbul, Dhaka, Baghdad, Medina: Where is the outrage? https://occasionalplanet.org/2016/07/05/amman-yemen-istanbul-dhaka-baghdad-medina-outrage/ https://occasionalplanet.org/2016/07/05/amman-yemen-istanbul-dhaka-baghdad-medina-outrage/#comments Tue, 05 Jul 2016 21:03:49 +0000 http://www.occasionalplanet.org/?p=34300 June 22: Amman, Jordan, military checkpoint, 6 dead. June 27: Mukalla, Yemen, Security target, 42 dead, 30 injured. June 28: Istanbul, Turkey, Airport, 45

The post Amman, Yemen, Istanbul, Dhaka, Baghdad, Medina: Where is the outrage? appeared first on Occasional Planet.

]]>

Medina attackJune 22: Amman, Jordan, military checkpoint, 6 dead. June 27: Mukalla, Yemen, Security target, 42 dead, 30 injured. June 28: Istanbul, Turkey, Airport, 45 dead, 239 wounded. July 1: Dhaka, Bangladesh,Small bakery, 30 dead. July 2: Baghdad, Iraq, Neighborhood, 200+ dead, 147 wounded. July 4: Medina, Saudi Arabia, Mosque. At least 4 dead. At least 5 injured.

As I write this, the death toll in Medina continues to grow; it’s too soon to accurately count bodies. But still very few will pay attention.

The world reeled, the media buzzed, and Facebook grieved November 13 when bombers and shooters instigated a coordinated attack in Paris that left 130 dead and hundreds wounded.

The world reeled, the media buzzed, and Facebook grieved again on December 2, when two shooters in San Bernardino, CA killed 14 and seriously injured 22.

The world reeled, the media buzzed, and Facebook grieved again on March 22 when two bombings shook Brussels and killed 32 people and wounded over 300 others.

The world reeled, the media buzzed, and Facebook grieved again on June 12 when Omar Mateen went on a shooting rampage at a nightclub in Orlando, FL, killing 49 people.

The world did not reel, the media did not buzz, Facebook did not grieve for Amman. For Mukalla. For Istanbul. For Dhaka. For Baghdad. For Medina.

My goal is not to chastise the coverage of the first set, but to challenge the unrepentant disregard of the second. For them, where is the outrage? The wall-to-wall media coverage? The memoriams? The videos on replay? The profile picture overlays? The hashtags? The “thoughts and prayers”?

In fact, those deaths were little more than a blip on a screen. because Donald Trump tweeted something else utterly imbecilic, Kevin Durant signed with the Golden State Warriors, and Tim Duncan might retire. I mean, in the face of such groundbreaking developments, of course those victims took a back a seat: They don’t have fame, power, or prestige; they can’t sell newspapers; they don’t fuel any political narrative.

When Westerners are killed at the hands of “radical Islamic terrorists,” politicians can use it to get elected. When those politicians are elected, the military industry gets billions in government funding for the production of war machines. When those war machines are deployed, independent contractors are hired to work abroad in war zones. It’s a beautiful mechanism, carefully oiled for repeated use and reuse after every tragedy for maximum profit. Why change what people don’t see as broken?

When non-Westerners, when Muslims, when non-Whites are killed, it doesn’t just not fuel that narrative, it actively counteracts it. It doesn’t allow anyone to paint all Muslims as violent, ISIS as a fanatical anti-American jihadist group, or xenophobia as patriotism. But who likes nuances anyway?

Actually, now that I’m thinking about it, the radio silence does fuel one political narrative. But it’s the last narrative we ought to encourage. It’s the narrative of the attackers who argue that we think some lives– Muslim lives, Arab lives, Brown and Black lives– matter less. It’s the narrative that to acheive peace and liberation, violence is necessary. It’s the narrative that pits the West against the “Muslim world” and justifies the bloodshed.

So, I just wanted to use whatever voice I might have to remind you what is happening off-screen. When the media isn’t paying attention, when politicians aren’t shouting on podiums and platforms, when no one is changing their Facebook profile picture, people are being killed.

Those numbers– those numbers you probably didn’t hear about– look at the dates. All of those attacks occurred in less than the last two weeks. And each one of the tally marks is a life extinguished and tens of hundreds of lives more that are now broken, despairing, and grieving.

And to add to all that pain and suffering, these countries ought to be rejoicing. The holy month of Ramadan is ending and Eid-al-Fitr, one of the biggest Muslim holidays is in a few days. Usually, during this time, those countries are brimming with joy and festivities. There are feasts and parties and lights and excitement and laughter, and everyone puts away their differences for a few days to celebrate the blessed time of the year.

But instead there is grief, and there is blood, and there is destruction. There is a cry for help and for attention, and there is an overwhelming tiredness for having to grieve alone. Again.

And on the other side of the world, there is an indomitable wave of extreme apathy that glances at that carnage– that carnage that dared to interrupt its cool existence–, shrugs its shoulders, and turns back to the entertainment of the moment. Maybe it’ll even take a moment to send out “thoughts and prayers” if enough bodies are in the morgue.

So let us have a moment of silence for the dead, and may our consciences not be among those we have lost.

The post Amman, Yemen, Istanbul, Dhaka, Baghdad, Medina: Where is the outrage? appeared first on Occasional Planet.

]]>
https://occasionalplanet.org/2016/07/05/amman-yemen-istanbul-dhaka-baghdad-medina-outrage/feed/ 2 34300
America’s role in spawning terror https://occasionalplanet.org/2015/01/20/americas-role-spawning-terror/ https://occasionalplanet.org/2015/01/20/americas-role-spawning-terror/#comments Tue, 20 Jan 2015 17:09:46 +0000 http://www.occasionalplanet.org/?p=31105 I suspect that most Americans don’t realize how much we are responsible for the acts of terror being committed in European countries. I know

The post America’s role in spawning terror appeared first on Occasional Planet.

]]>

iraq-war15I suspect that most Americans don’t realize how much we are responsible for the acts of terror being committed in European countries. I know I didn’t give it much thought until I read an article by an American writer living in Norway. It makes sense that the millions of refugees from wars in the Middle East and Africa have to go somewhere. Most of us see the news on TV and feel sorry for the innocent families, especially the children, in those awful camps in eastern Turkey, without giving a second thought to our role in creating the chaos they are suffering.

Americans make up only 5 percent of the world’s population, but it appears that we have a disproportionate power to make people in other countries afraid of our irrational behavior. The occupation of Iraq and dismantling of its internal equilibrium in 2003 is now regarded as the tragic mistake that set the dominoes in that part of the world in motion. How ironic that Americans believed for 40 years that communism would spread and that governments all over the world would fall like dominoes if we didn’t stop it in places like Vietnam. We are still paying for that mistake.

But it wasn’t communism that set the Middle East on fire. It was overzealous Americans who set dominoes falling. We pulled the foundational brick out of what was never a sturdy structure to begin with.

Now European nations with generous immigration policies are paying for our blind obedience to the warmongers in the Bush White House. People living in hopeless situations, far from family and everything that comforts them, are easy targets for recruiters to a cause that gives them purpose. We shouldn’t be surprised that young Europeans with little stake in their own society should be easily converted as well.

No matter how much President Obama and Pentagon officials claim our drone attacks are killing only their targets, we know better. Imagine living day and night never knowing if bombs might be exploding next door. To those whose family members are killed by American firepower, WE are the terrorists.

To Europeans dealing with all the problems created by our wars in the Middle East, WE are the dangerous ones. They wait and watch to see which country America will target next. Yes, we know there are people in many countries that want to harm us, but we are creating more enemies than we can ever kill by relying on military solutions.

Sadly, we have no choice. Our Congress is trapped in the black hole known as “national security.” President Eisenhower, when he warned of the “unwarranted influence” of the military-industrial complex could never have imagined what is happening now. (For more on how private contractors control Congress and the Pentagon, read James Risen’s Pay Any Price.)

And we are “paying the price” at home for the damage we create around the world. Fear is a powerful weapon in the arsenal of the war profiteers. Add to that the constant messages we hear from those who profit by scaring us to death and we have the perfect storm of a nation at war with itself. No wonder Americans kill each other at a higher rate than any other “civilized” country.

In an article called “Have Americans Gone Crazy?,” Ann Jones sums it up this way:

Europeans understand, as it seems Americans do not, the intimate connection between a country’s domestic and foreign policies. They often trace America’s reckless conduct abroad to its refusal to put its own house in order. They’ve watched the United States unravel its flimsy safety net, fail to replace its decaying infrastructure, disempower most of its organized labor, diminish its schools, bring its national legislature to a standstill, and create the greatest degree of economic and social inequality in almost a century. They understand why Americans, who have ever less personal security and next to no social welfare system, are becoming more anxious and fearful.

Where do we go from here? It has taken us several decades to unravel our society’s best hope for future peace and prosperity. If we start now opening the eyes of the willfully blind American voters, we might be able to replace the war mongers in power with women and men who truly represent the needs of the people. We can’t afford any more to be bystanders shaking our heads and wondering what to do. There are groups already working on shifting the public conversation. Find one and get to work.

The post America’s role in spawning terror appeared first on Occasional Planet.

]]>
https://occasionalplanet.org/2015/01/20/americas-role-spawning-terror/feed/ 1 31105