Captain Seafort wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:My general observation (because nearly all governments do this thing, of defining attacks against their military as 'terrorism') is that the character of Western laws on terrorism cannot be all that practical unless they have achieved practical success.
I don't see how success can be used as means of determining the appropriateness of a definition, because it's dependent of so many other factors in addition to that definition.
You have asserted that the definition of 'terrorist' given by 2000-era British law is superior to the common usage definition of 'terrorist,' on the grounds that a legal definition is better than a 'theoretical' definition. You supported this latter claim by arguing that the legal definition is
more practical because it is based on facts and experience.
If so, then it seems quite reasonable for us to put the alleged 'practicality' of this definition to the test, by assessing it on its
practical merits.
How well is it working out for us, this refusal to distinguish between armed guerillas fighting occupation forces, and terrorists attacking civilians with the intent of causing widespread panic and psychological revulsion among the general public?
Of course, you are free to point out (correctly) that you can't assume a definition is 'better' just because it is more successful, or 'worse' because it is less successful in real life.
The problem is that you then cannot use the 'practicality' of a definition to prove that it is the
right definition. Or a logically consistent one. Or a sensible one.
Either you can judge the definition by the track record of success and experience associated with it, or you can't.
It's largely a matter of principle to me - a murderer is a murderer, and the identity of his victim alone is irrelevant to that question. If that murder is carried out in an effort to influence the government, then that murder is terrorism.
Now, this is at least an honorable and understandable argument, and I would be happy to pursue it further- once we cut out the doublespeak.
So basically, either being a 'terrorist' is something that has to do with what actions you carry out, or it is a meaningless word that exists solely so governments can gratify their desire to insult and punish people they dislike.
Indeed - the word "violence" is central to the definition.[/quote]In which case your argument that "it doesn't matter what they do, a terrorist is a terrorist" falls flat.
And debate over
what terrorists do, that distinguishes them from non-terrorists, is legitimate. Your attempt to quell it is unjustified. But by all means, let us return to that debate.
I believe you still argue that what terrorists do, that distinguishes them from non-terrorists, is "practice violence with a political objective in mind while not being a state government."
If a group declares themselves to be the legitimate government of a territory, and a foreign government sends soldiers to suppress the group, and the group fights, does that make the group terrorists in and of itself?
Yes, because simple ambition does not a state make.
So literally
ALL those violent anticolonialist movements fighting the British military during the early and mid-20th century to drive them out of various nations in Asia and Africa were terrorists? The Plains Indians were terrorists for fighting the US government? The French Resistance were terrorists for fighting the Germans?
How convenient.
Why? Of course, the '45 is a different kettle of fish, because it's questionable whether its actions should be attributed to a non-state group (in which case it was certainly terrorism, despite having the trappings of a regular army, and requiring conventional military operations to defeat), or the Kingdom of France, which the Pretenders had been clients of for decades, as part of France's overall military strategy in the War of the Austrian Succession. I'd call it a French invasion.
That makes no sense; the troops themselves weren't French. Certainly they weren't in French uniform, either. At most they were a local revolt operating with French support- in which case, again, terrorists... backed by Louis XV, but still terrorists.
The problem is that a definition under which the Highland revolt of 1745 is terrorism is so wildly at odds with the common-use definition of the term that
it makes the concept of terrorism into a joke. It means there can be 'good terrorists' and 'bad terrorists' and 'neutral terrorists' and 'benevolent terrorists' who fight in an honorable manner as opposed to 'treacherous terrorists' who don't. There can be 'armies of terrorists' who fight in an organized manner indistinguishable from the armed forces of a nation state, except for the fact that foreign countries do not see fit to extend them formal recognition as a lawful government.
The net result is that if we adopt your standards, just saying someone is a 'terrorist' is about as relevant as saying they are a 'biped' or an 'oxygen-breather.' It is
POINTLESS to declare someone a 'terrorist' because 'terrorist' has stopped being either a useful technical term,
or a relevant insult.
So if you're right, then the British really have defined the term 'terrorist' until it is either meaningless, or means no more and no less than 'bunch of people Her Majesty's Government don't like."
I reject any such violence done against the English language. And I reject the notion that this legal definition is somehow superior to the common usage definition. Especially when the common usage definition is far more relevant and significant and
if used consistently makes us far less vulnerable to governments who want to demonize their enemies as 'terrorists.'