And the damning thing which makes this incident so disturbing, is that unlike the Paris attackers who lived in Muslim ghettos and had regular contact with foreign jihadists, these two were basically American middle-class suburbanites with a steady 50K+ salary and a 6 month old daughter. This incident plays right into the worst fears and biases of xenophobes moreso than any foreign-initiated attack possibly could - mustering up "pod-people" type paranoia within American communities. The message a lot of Americans are going to take away from this incident is "we need to be more distrusting of Muslims, we need to enact laws which specifically target and restrict Muslims, etc."
Plus, there's no real obvious solution. Bomb Syria some more? Doesn't matter... these people didn't get any help from Syria. More gun control? I'm all for that, but that does nothing to curtail radical Islam.
I also think this case has a lot more in common with something like Columbine or Sandy Hook than people realize. This guy Farook was probably an introvert - disturbed, socially isolated, and he never really fit in with American workplace culture. (Nobody really fits in with American workplace culture, anyway...) Radical Islam served as a conduit for him to channel all his feelings of alienation and anger. The Columbine shooters didn't have a convenient religious template to use, so they simply adopted nihilism.
Of course, it's a strong possibility this wouldn't have happened if Farook didn't have a wider "support network" over the Internet and elsewhere of like-minded people encouraging his radicalization... but as far as we know he didn't receive any material support or funding. He purchased everything himself, which makes this something of a gun control issue - except he was a perfectly model citizen so under current laws there was no reason to deny him the sale of firearms.
There's definitely no great answer. All I can say is that it would be in the interest of the American Muslim community to start dumping a lot of money into PR right now, disassociating themselves from radical Islam.
Here's a quote from some Random American Citizen, (quoted from Al Jazeera news):
Some American woman wrote:
http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2 ... rdino.htmlIn any case, “it’s scary,” said Cheri Greth, who lives in the San Bernardino suburb of Grand Terrace. “First, I couldn’t believe anything like this could happen close by,” she said. “Then I thought it was terrorism the minute they said their names. I think she (Malik) was the one who radicalized him.”
And I won't lie. I basically "knew" this was terrorism (or probably "lone-wolf terrorism") as soon as I heard "Farooq" - a common Arabic name. And really, this is the reaction most Americans are going to have, realistically. This fucking idiot Farooq probably did way more damage to the Muslim community within the US than any kind of "+1" he scored in the name of Jihad.