Difference between revisions of "Terrorist"
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+ | |description=A powerful enemy image, a "terrorist" is someone who commits an act of "terrorism"... | ||
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+ | The word '''"terrorist"''' is an exonym and powerful [[enemy image]], associated with the concept of "[[terrorism]]". | ||
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==Official Narrative== | ==Official Narrative== | ||
− | "A terrorist is someone who commits an act of [[terrorism]]." So far, so good, but what is "terrorism"? [[Authorities]] are seem pretty much agreed that "terrorism is whatever ''we'' say it is". The {{on}} doesn't mention [[Terrorist# | + | "A terrorist is someone who commits an act of [[terrorism]]." So far, so good, but what is "terrorism"? [[Authorities]] are seem pretty much agreed that "terrorism is whatever ''we'' say it is". The {{on}} doesn't mention [[Terrorist#False_flag_terrorism|false flag terrorism]], a topic that is more or less a [[third rail]] issue. |
===Problems=== | ===Problems=== | ||
− | The word "terrorist" is very emotionally charged, and so the decision about who is and isn't is at least emotionally (and perhaps also legally) highly significant. Since there is no widely accepted definition of what "[[terrorism]]" is (and some have even called for the word to be abandoned), this means that the field is fraught with difficulty and inevitably has a subjectivity which is seldom respected by the {{ccm}}. [[South African President]] [[Nelson Mandela]], for example, was only removed from the [[US]] list of terrorists in 2008, some 15 years after having been awarded the [[Nobel Peace prize]].<ref>http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7484517.stm</ref> | + | The word "terrorist" is very emotionally charged, and so the decision about who is and isn't is at least emotionally (and perhaps also legally) highly significant. Since there is no widely accepted definition of what "[[terrorism]]" is (and some have even called for the word to be abandoned), this means that the field is fraught with difficulty and inevitably has a subjectivity which is seldom respected by the {{ccm}}. [[South African President]] [[Nelson Mandela]], for example, was only removed from the [[US]] list of terrorists in 2008, some 15 years after having been awarded the [[Nobel Peace prize]].<ref>http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7484517.stm</ref> In June 2020, a [[Facebook censor]] commented to [[Project Veritas]] that "If Someone is Wearing a MAGA Hat, I Am Going to Delete Them for Terrorism".<ref>https://www.projectveritas.com/news/facebook-content-moderator-if-someone-is-wearing-a-maga-hat-i-am-going-to/</ref> |
==War on terror== | ==War on terror== | ||
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A ''large'' proportion of terrorist acts are "False flags", i.e. not carried out by those who claim to have carried them out. A common pattern is to use such incidents as a pretext for [[war]]. The US population, for example, in Summer 2001 was not willing to wage a [[war of aggression]], but the [[9-11 attacks]] changed that. It is hard to be authoritative about the proportion of terrorist incidents which are false flags, but it is a safe bet that the proportion is more than let on by the {{ccm}} - who have shown themselves the servants of the [[deep state]] groups responsible for a lot of the world's terrorism. | A ''large'' proportion of terrorist acts are "False flags", i.e. not carried out by those who claim to have carried them out. A common pattern is to use such incidents as a pretext for [[war]]. The US population, for example, in Summer 2001 was not willing to wage a [[war of aggression]], but the [[9-11 attacks]] changed that. It is hard to be authoritative about the proportion of terrorist incidents which are false flags, but it is a safe bet that the proportion is more than let on by the {{ccm}} - who have shown themselves the servants of the [[deep state]] groups responsible for a lot of the world's terrorism. | ||
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==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} | ||
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Latest revision as of 18:40, 21 January 2022
"Terrorist" (enemy image) | |
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A powerful enemy image, a "terrorist" is someone who commits an act of "terrorism"... |
The word "terrorist" is an exonym and powerful enemy image, associated with the concept of "terrorism".
Contents
Official Narrative
"A terrorist is someone who commits an act of terrorism." So far, so good, but what is "terrorism"? Authorities are seem pretty much agreed that "terrorism is whatever we say it is". The official narrative doesn't mention false flag terrorism, a topic that is more or less a third rail issue.
Problems
The word "terrorist" is very emotionally charged, and so the decision about who is and isn't is at least emotionally (and perhaps also legally) highly significant. Since there is no widely accepted definition of what "terrorism" is (and some have even called for the word to be abandoned), this means that the field is fraught with difficulty and inevitably has a subjectivity which is seldom respected by the commercially-controlled media. South African President Nelson Mandela, for example, was only removed from the US list of terrorists in 2008, some 15 years after having been awarded the Nobel Peace prize.[1] In June 2020, a Facebook censor commented to Project Veritas that "If Someone is Wearing a MAGA Hat, I Am Going to Delete Them for Terrorism".[2]
War on terror
- Full article: War on terror
- Full article: War on terror
The "war on terror", rolled out by the deep state and the Military-industrial-congressional complex after the end of the cold war, can be understood as a continuation of the "war of terror", a strategy of tension to promote fear amongst the populace.[3]
Not only does the "War on Terror" promote fear of attack by terrorists, but also fear of being victimised as a terrorist, for non-violently holding a dissenting opinion. An FBI memo entitled "Potential Indicators of Terrorist Activities Related to Sleepers" says that people who should be "considered suspicious" include those who hold are sympathetic to "Conspiracy theories about Westerners", specifically citing as an example that "the CIA arranged for 9/11 to legitimize the invasion of foreign lands"[4] - including a large proportion of the world population.[5]
False flag terrorism
- Full article: false flag
- Full article: false flag
A large proportion of terrorist acts are "False flags", i.e. not carried out by those who claim to have carried them out. A common pattern is to use such incidents as a pretext for war. The US population, for example, in Summer 2001 was not willing to wage a war of aggression, but the 9-11 attacks changed that. It is hard to be authoritative about the proportion of terrorist incidents which are false flags, but it is a safe bet that the proportion is more than let on by the commercially-controlled media - who have shown themselves the servants of the deep state groups responsible for a lot of the world's terrorism.
Examples
Page name | Date | Perpetrated | Description |
---|---|---|---|
"Islamic terrorist" | An enemy image called to mind by legislators as they write laws to clamp down on civil liberties and step up mass surveillance. | ||
Yasser Arafat | Leader of the Palestinian Liberation Organization for 35 years | ||
Shamil Basayev | |||
Orlando Bosch | Cubana de Aviación Flight 455 | Convicted assassin, Operation 40 member, released by special order of George H. W. Bush after a petition from Jeb Bush | |
Anders Breivik | Convicted of planting the bomb that killed 8 people in central Oslo, Norway, followed by the shooting to death of 66 teenagers on a nearby camping island on 22 July 2011 | ||
Luis Posada Carriles | |||
Rémy Daillet | French "anti-vaxxer terrorist" | ||
Mohammed Deif | |||
Abu Elias | |||
Ismail Haniyeh | Victim of Israeli assassination | ||
Eitan Livni | |||
Rolando Masferrer | Operation 40 member car bombed in Miami a week mafter he published a newspaper editorial arguing that car bombs were a justifiable tactic. | ||
Bernard Henry McGinn | IRA member sentenced to a total of 490 years imprisonment in 1999. | ||
Sayyed Razi Mousavi | |||
Mario N | Man who shot dead a cashier at a petrol station after a drunken argument over face masks in September 2021. Used evilly in corporate media propaganda: "All anti-vaxxers are terrorists!" | ||
Hassan Nasrallah | Leader of Hezbollah | ||
Sean O'Callaghan | |||
Operation Demagnetize | "The institutional hardening of Gladio", an expansion of Gladio in the late 1940s, early 1950s. | ||
Virgilio Paz Romero | |||
Patrick Ryan | IRA quartermaster, priest turned terrorist. | ||
Yahyah Sinwar | |||
Jason Walters | A convicted terrorist who's Hofstadgroup - being under siege 2 miles from The Hague's parliamentary quarter - helped Islam becoming a permanent enemy image in Dutch sentiment. | ||
Saleh al-Arouri |
Related Document
Title | Type | Publication date | Author(s) | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Document:Who Are the Terrorists? | blog post | 18 October 2024 | Craig Murray | "In 1985 the official position of the British state was that the ANC were terrorists and apartheid South Africa were the good guys. In 2024 the official position of the British state is that Hamas and Hezbollah are terrorists and apartheid Israel are the good guys. The state can be wrong." |
Official examples
Name | Perpetrated | Description |
---|---|---|
Babar Ahmad | US pressure had Babar Ahmad arrested and held for 10 years in UK, although he had broken no UK law. He was beaten up by UK police in 2003. A petition signed by 149,388 people did not prevent his extradition to US - with no evidence of wrong doing provided - a country where it is likely he has been tortured. | |
Nawaf Alhazmi | ||
Haroon Rashid Aswat | UK citizen of Indian origin with alleged ties to Al Qaeda and also possibly a clandestine agent of UK intelligence. | |
Victor Bout | Russian accused of arms smuggling by the US, was jailed with help from a turned associate, allegedly, on orders of the CIA. | |
Bherlin Gildo | ||
Anthony Karam | Public enemy number 1 in Sydney | |
Daniel Abed Khalife | ||
Samantha Lewthwaite | "The world's most wanted woman", stated the Daily Mail in 2018. | |
Terry Nichols | ||
Christiane Northrup | American doctor; smeared hard during COVID. | |
Abu Hamza Rabia | ||
Stewart Rhodes | Founder and leader of the Oath Keepers | |
Lauren Southern | Lauren Southern is a Canadian activist. Probably the most famous personality in the Culture war of the late 2010s. | |
Tamerlan Tsarnaev | Official perpetrator of the Boston Bombings, possibly an FBI double agent. Died after an encounter with US police custody. | |
Vincenzo Vinciguerra | Peteano bombing | During his trial, he exposed Operation Gladio, now serving a life sentence for the 1972 Peteano Bombing. |
Khaled al-Mihdar | ||
Ayman al-Zawahri | Alleged right man of Osama Bin laden, brains behind "9-11". |
References
- ↑ http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7484517.stm
- ↑ https://www.projectveritas.com/news/facebook-content-moderator-if-someone-is-wearing-a-maga-hat-i-am-going-to/
- ↑ http://www.unwelcomeguests.net/694
- ↑ http://www.hangthebankers.com/fbi-questioning-911-makes-you-a-potential-terrorist/
- ↑ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polls_about_9/11_conspiracy_theories