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http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,34301,00.html
Ideals Are Terrorists' Most
Deadly Weapons
Thursday, September 13, 2001
By Wendy McElroy

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People who call the terrorist destruction of the
World Trade Center towers an act of "cowardice" do not
understand what happened. The act is far worse than that.
Terrorists willing to die for their political
convictions are not cowards. They are fanatical idealists whose ideals
are evil. They make no money, gain no great fame for acts of anonymous
suicide. They die to express what they believe to be true and moral
about the world.
And they can happily murder innocent people in the
process because they define "innocence" in a totally different
manner than you or me. The WTC towers were destroyed as much by ideology
as by exploding airplanes. This is a non-trivial point. Terrorists
cannot be countered with accusations of "cowardice." They must
be taken seriously as idealists and attacked on ideological as well as
practical grounds.
The strategy of punishing collective guilt dates
back (at least) to Bolshevik activism in pre-Soviet Russia where
communist anarchists threw bombs into crowded restaurants on the
assumption that only capitalists could afford to eat in such
establishments. Anyone who died was a member of the class that oppressed
workers. Women, children, the accidental guest, waiters—whoever was in
the restaurant was part of the problem and guilty.
The strategy was called "propaganda by
deed."
Similarly, the fanatics who dove into the WTC did
not believe they were killing innocent Americans. To them, no such
category existed. Average Americans—the woman in a grocery store, the
child in grade school, your neighbor mowing his lawn—are collectively
responsible for every act of the American government. Each is held
personally guilty for the bombing of hospitals in Iraq, the plight of
Palestinians ...virtually every global wrong.
All Americans are guilty simply by being an
American. To the terrorists, there were no innocent people in the WTC
towers.
The burning question this tragedy poses is whether
individuals are personally responsible for their own acts or whether
they share a class guilt based on being white, male, American, Jewish,
gay...whatever.
A man who holds individuals personally responsible
for their acts may murder. For example, he may kill his landlord or
employer. A man who believes in class guilt will kill any and all
landlords and employers, even ones he has never met. And, so, it becomes
possible for "idealists" to kill absolutely blameless people
who belong to a "guilty" class.
What does "class guilt" mean? A class is
nothing more than an arbitrary grouping of people that serves the agenda
of the person doing the analysis. For example, if the classifier is a
doctor who treats cancer, it would be useful for him to divide his files
according to the sex of patients in order to separate ovarian cancer
from prostate.
The last few decades have seen a surge in the
political division of people according to classes in order to ascribe
collective guilt or collective victim-hood. Men subjugate women, whites
exploit minorities, Americans oppress the world. It doesn't seem to
matter what people do as individuals. The relevant political factor has
become: what class do you belong to?
The concept of class guilt annuls the ideal of
individualism—the belief that each human being should be judged on his
or her own actions and merits.
I’ve spent much of my life fighting for political
causes like freedom of speech. I have argued endlessly against the use
of violence as a strategy for social change or as a valid political
statement. The people arguing against me usually held some view of
collective guilt that allowed them to dismiss as irrelevant the
possibility of innocent people being harmed.
But terrorists go one step farther. They target innocent
people. Or rather, they define innocence in such a manner that the
definition includes what a reasonable person would call a civilian.
There are no civilians in their war.
The terrorists will never stop. I know this because
I know that if I believed in a political cause so deeply that I was
willing to die and kill by-standers, I too would never stop.
Happily, I believe in individual rights and
personal responsibility above all else. I also believe in the individual
goodness of Americans. But it is a goodness that must, for its own
safety, understand that terrorists desperately care for
"justice." But they define "justice" in a violently
different manner that contradicts our cultural understanding. Another
definition that includes the deaths of innocent people.
In the justified and healthy rage that will follow
the murder of innocent, average Americans, I hope the fury is turned
against those who are individually responsible and not against classes
of people. Not Arabs in general, nor the innocent, average citizens of
other nations. To do so would only perpetuate the vicious cycle from
which terrorism was born in the first place.
McElroy is the editor of www.ifeminists.com.
She also edited Freedom, Feminism, and the State (Independent Institute,
1999) and Sexual Correctness: The Gender Feminist Attack on
Women(McFarland, 1996). She lives with her husband in Canada.
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