Wednesday, July 06, 2005

WikiTerror

Terror and terrorism are loaded words which officials and newspapers often abuse. This polarizes and deceives people, undermining at the same time the credibility of the messenger and turning the message into propaganda. From both Politiken and the Copenhagen Post covering Bush's birthday visit to Copenhagen today: "4000 Danish police will be assigned to protect the president. The increased protection is the result of the threat of terror attacks." (City braces for Bush)

If the increased security is to protect "random targets of opportunity" in the civilian population, then the term "terror threat" is applicable. If the increased security is solely to protect the president - which is undoubtly the case - then it is an "assassination threat".

There is debate around the definition of "terrorism". Though Bush and some governments tend to lump together all resistance to established authority as "terrorism", there is a general concensus around the UN academic consensus definition: "Terrorism is an anxiety-inspiring method of repeated violent action, employed by (semi-) clandestine individual, group or state actors, for idiosyncratic, criminal or political reasons, whereby — in contrast to assassination — the direct targets of violence are not the main targets."

For a comprehensive definition and debate on terrorism, read on Wikipedia (Article:Talk) (This by the way is an online dictionnary editable by all. One can be surprised by the breath and quality of a global and open dictionary. If laws could be written so openly and democratically, the world would be a much fairer place..)

So, now that the world's number one terrorist is indeed one and in town, why demonstrate? The US military budget ($441.6 billion for 2006) represents more than half the discretionary US budget (the money the adminitration has control over and must decide to spend each year). The US spends almost as much as the rest of the world’s (totalling almost $1000 billion). It is an obvious waste and misuse of resources compared to: $6b for basic education for everyone in the world, $9b for water and sanitation, and the mere $10b all UN agencies and funds spend each year (more under the excellent Global Issues, article World Military Spending).



Preserving the 'Pax Americana' at the point of a unilateralist gun will only create more tension in the long run. It is a flawed and dangerous strategy (the full strategy at the New American Century (sigh).

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