Lootifer wrote:oVo wrote:mrswdk wrote:George Washington was a terrorist.
Could be your next thread.
Single
mistakes actions taint you for life I guess.
He was a terroist for part of his life. He was also simply just a political activist (and not a terroist) for a good chunk of his life also.
I can't believe you just called Mandela a terrorist. What could possibly have led you to that idea?
Ever been to Alcoholics Anonymous? An alcoholic is an alcoholic for life even if he hasn't had a drink in decades. Maybe Agent 86 wouldn't have a problem if people referred to Mandela as a "recovering terrorist". Or "former terrorist". Arafat turned away from terrorism but some would always consider him a terrorist. And probably rightfully so, though there are plenty in the world who would view him as a hero.
Just because someone renounces their former violent ways doesn't absolve them of guilt from the violence they did commit. At least I don't think it does.
Unless of course terrorism is ok so long as the cause is just.But that leads down all kinds of nasty roads. Who determines what's "just"?
Where does Agent 86 get the moral authority to say it's ok to kill children in the cause of ending Apartheid but not for something else, say the expulsion of foreign troops in one's homeland? For instance, is it ok to blow up civilians in, say London because Britain has troops in Afghanistan?
I don't see any reason why native peoples shouldn't rise up and try to expel foreign troops in one's homeland (that's war) and if it's ok to use terrorism in the pursuit of a just cause, then it's perfectly acceptable to blow up children in the capital city of the invader's army.
I'm just speculating on the nature of terrorism and people's often contradictory views of the practice. As agent 86 said rightfully, it's pretty easy to get labeled a "terrorist".