The two men who carried out apparent terror attacks on New Year’s Day — killing 15 people by plowing a pickup truck into a crowd of New Year’s revelers in New Orleans, and detonating a Tesla Cybertruck outside a Trump hotel in Las Vegas — both had U.S. military backgrounds, according to the Pentagon.

From 1990 to 2010, about seven persons per year with U.S. military backgrounds committed extremist crimes. Since 2011, that number has jumped to almost 45 per year, according to data from a new, unreleased report shared with The Intercept by Michael Jensen, the research director at the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism, or START, at the University of Maryland.

Military service is also the single strongest individual predictor of becoming a “mass casualty offender,” far outpacing mental health issues, according to a separate study of extremist mass casualty violence by the researchers.

  • @njm1314
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    3 days ago

    Was the second one a terrorist attack? Certainly doesn’t seem like it. Seems like it was a political protest didn’t it?

    • @[email protected]
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      13 days ago

      That’s a definitional question, but I think a bomb in public that kills others somewhat randomly counts as terrorissm. And yes, terrorism is one kind of protest.

      • @njm1314
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        13 days ago

        It probably would. Yet that isn’t what happened. Only he died.