Hopwin wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
When you start moving the definition of "threat" into "potential threat" territory, you run the risk of it continuing to move that way until it's being used to kill people, say, just because they went on a Hajj.
Isn't that pretty much what I said? If someone leaves a note saying they've strapped a bomb to their chest and are about to go blow themselves up in a crowd and that person is then spotted in a large crowd with a bulky coat on and maybe a cellphone or detonator in their hand would you kill them? Would you question an army/SWAT sniper for shooting him?
It is beyond me. I'd be inclined to say their statements + what appears to be opportunity & equipment would make it justifiable.
Words alone, no of course not, but words + potentially life-endangering actions does cross that line for me.
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That's where you're getting into trouble. You seem to think that the actions of people overseas working with terrorists are easily translated into equivalent criminal behaviors here.
As a purely practical matter of how they operate, terrorist blur the line between criminal and military. This is aprt of what they rely on for success; they want to be too tough for alw enforcement to handle, but seem weak enough, and blend in with the population enough that using the military seems heavy-handed.
Terrorist activities generally require money, training, and other support to be effective. Sure, any jackass can kill a few people with a gun, but even making small homemade bombs requires some training to avoid killing yourself in the process, and sophisticated attacks require a lot more than that.
Therefore, terrorists spend a lot of time getting things together for the actual terrorizing. That's partly why a lot of terror attacks that seem "easy" don't happen; they aren't all that easy because there's lots of little complexities and problems that most people aren't aware of because they lack tactical training. That's what the terrorists are doing, working out the logistics, funding, training, and other issues to make their super-duper-special attacks work.
Now, are these acts "potentially life-threatening behavior?" Well, yes, eventually they are, but they aren't immediately threatening. If they're being conducted by foriegners, then we drop a bomb on them or send a SEAL team in there or get the nation they're in to do it for us or whatever. That's national defense.
If it's happening here in the U.S. we get a SWAT team together and raid the place or whatever, and we arrest them, and maybe one or two get shot if they try to fight.
All well and good, but the issue here is American citizens on foriegn soil. If they're not actually engaging in some activity that's a threat to life
right now, such as, say, shooting missiles at passing airliners, then we can't just start letting the government target them for what they're doing because while learning to make bombs is fairly obviously intent to blow something up, how about just learning to shoot (a totally legal activity here). Or how about just sympathizing with terrorists and wanting to hang out with them? Or arranging money and other support for them? All of these might be arrestable behaviors, but they don't come to the level of needing deadly force. They aren't the same as sitting under the bridge with explosives; they're more like the guy making the explosives in his barn after telling everyone he's going to blow up a bridge. You can't shoot him unless he points a gun at you or something like that; you go in there and arrest him.
Therefore, the government shouldn't be targeting them. Ok, they're over there and we can't arrest them right now, but that's fine, either they stay there and out of the way or we arrest them when they get here.
If an American happens to get blown up or killed in the process of targeting the other terrorists, that's their tough luck (unless they're hostages in which case we'd probably re-think our course of action). Don't hang out with people the U.S. is likely to drop bombs on. If, however, you survive this, the U.S. should not be sending someone to downtown Cairo or wherever to get you because you think it's safer than a terrorist camp in Yemen.