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Curing the Political Disease of Terrorism
by
Jacob G. Hornberger,
January 2002
Since the U.S. government's bombing of Afghanistan has failed to bring Osama
bin Laden to justice "dead or alive," the U.S. government has now decided to
permanently extend its empire to that part of the world. Moreover, the
bombing has killed thousands of innocent civilians, whose surviving friends
and family members now have the incentive to hate the United States and
commit acts of terrorism against Americans. The U.S. government will
undoubtedly continue to use its "war on terrorism" to justify
ever-increasing assaults on the liberties of the American people. Caught in
this vise between terrorism and their government, the American people would
be wise to use this period of time to do some serious soul-searching about
how to cure the political disease of terrorism. Some people insist on
focusing only on the symptoms -- that is, capturing or killing people who do
bad things (Timothy McVeigh and Osama bin Laden) in retaliation for bad
things that the U.S. government does to people (Waco and the Iraqi embargo).
But in order to cure the political disease of terrorism, it is necessary for
the American people to also focus on the root cause of the disease by
putting a stop to the bad things that the U.S. government does to people,
both at home and abroad. Otherwise, Americans might as well resign
themselves to spending the rest of their lives waging perpetual war against
perpetual enemies and losing ever-increasing parts of their liberties in the
process
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