I don't think anyone had a problem calling the USS Cole bombing an act of "terrorism," even though it was a military target, so I'm not sure why the New York Times would decline to use the term anywhere in this story.
4 comments:
Anonymous
said...
Um, because Irish-Catholics are a people who have been oppressed for centuries by the British. Was Bloody Sunday a state-sponsored police action or "terrorism"? Maybe you and your capitalist pig friends approve of imperialist brutality, but the non-hating Celts among this find this indictment of freedom fighters a little hard to swallow.
I can't show them to you. I'm still trying to smoke them out of their caves. My contention is that this is an example of a freedom fight. Show me a people that have been as oppressed as long as the Irish. It's like an inverted Irish curse.
I got smoked out of a cave once. I immediately crushed two bags of Fritos and a steak bomb.
4 comments:
Um, because Irish-Catholics are a people who have been oppressed for centuries by the British. Was Bloody Sunday a state-sponsored police action or "terrorism"? Maybe you and your capitalist pig friends approve of imperialist brutality, but the non-hating Celts among this find this indictment of freedom fighters a little hard to swallow.
Show me the terrorist that doesn't think they have a legitimate beef.
I can't show them to you. I'm still trying to smoke them out of their caves. My contention is that this is an example of a freedom fight. Show me a people that have been as oppressed as long as the Irish. It's like an inverted Irish curse.
I got smoked out of a cave once. I immediately crushed two bags of Fritos and a steak bomb.
Show me a people that have been as oppressed as long as the Irish.
Cubs fans.
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