• @Keeponstalin
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    1912 days ago

    Depends on the root cause. If the terrorism comes from a place of desperation for liberation or emancipation, addressing the underlying material conditions would prevent that kind of terrorism. A great example of that is Apartheid South Africa and Ireland. On the other hand, if the terrorism comes from a place of Fascism, like ISIS or the KKK, I think funding progressive and democratic opposition and also education would have the most positive effect. Holding the terrorists responsible for their actions and jailing them accordingly is really important, but to solve the underlying cause is critical to end it entirely. Otherwise, if the root cause isn’t addressed, there is no reason to believe the terrorism will stop.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      411 days ago

      I think the material conditions in Iraq had a major impact on the ability of ISIS to recruit and spread their ideology.

      • @Keeponstalin
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        211 days ago

        Admittedly, I don’t know much about the details of the history of ISIS. But from what I understand I agree, the material conditions that resulted from the US’s invasion of Iraq was a major significant factor in the rise of ISIS

        https://www.vox.com/2014/8/25/6065529/isis-rise

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      -312 days ago

      ISIS aren’t fascist, they don’t have a desire to rule, they just want to fight and kill. They’re wardogs

        • @[email protected]
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          fedilink
          012 days ago

          That is their stated goal, but their actions show otherwise.

          They mostly fight other Sunni Muslim organizations like Taliban, Hamas, Al Qaeda, which does not help in their stated goal.

          They claim to follow the teachings of an author called Sayed Qutb, who is a really big figure in the Muslim brotherhood (which Hamas comes from) yet they attack Hamas.

          Also

          IS ideologues rarely uphold adherence to Islamic scholarship and law manuals for reference, mostly preferring to derive rulings based on self-interpretation of the Qur’an and Muslim traditions


          Compare ISIS with the Taliban, an actual fascist organization which wants to rule in such a manner. Taliban mainly operated in Afghanistan, against invaders be they Russians, NATO, whatever. They did not operate in foreign countries like ISIS does. ISIS openly admits that it wants to destabilize other countries and radicalize Muslims living abroad to convince them to commit acts of terror

          ISIS wants to stir religious hatred in Europe and the United States – so that Muslims no longer feel they belong in the West, and either carry out attacks in their homelands or leave to join the caliphate.

          If they genuinely wanted to establish a caliphate they would first focus on gaining regional dominance, then either freeing Al quds, and occupying mecca.

          Instead they fight Hamas, and try to get Muslims to commit acts of terror abroad

      • Aatube
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        fedilink
        212 days ago

        They’re effectively wardogs but their desire is to establish a large and radically Islamic empire