
A prominent news magazine recently opened up for all to see their internal debate on the use of the word “terrorist.” As in, why is someone who hijacks an airplane and crashes it into the World Trade Center and kills thousands a terrorist, but a Texan who crashes his small plane into a local IRS center and kills two people merely a “tax protestor?”
One inevitable answer, supported by far too much commentary since, is that one is a foreign enemy and the other is not. Too bluntly put? Of course we have come to reserve the word “terrorist” for Eastern, Muslim attackers and the word “criminal” for all others. Hence, torture and infinite imprisonment for some, Miranda rights and American jails for others.
It’s not so much the lack of justice that perturbs me as the wholesale short-shrifting of the word terrorist.
“It is what comes out of a person that defiles. For it is from within, from the human heart, that evil intentions come … “ (Mark 7:20-21)
I imagine that if asked, most Americans would say that they are most afraid of foreign, Muslim terrorists, killing Americans overseas, coming to American to kill more of us here. I can understand – there is something particularly frightening about that elusive, exotic, strange figure emerging as if out of some dark, far-off mist.
How naïve and self-deceptive of us! For the truest fear is that our own worst enemy is ourselves, the lurking dark and angry soul which threatens us from within. Timothy McVeigh, Joe Stack, Scott Roeder, these are us, they look like us and live among us and hold a mirror up to our own darkest and deepest fears. The true evil in the world is not that enemy there, it is my own worse nature that is my greatest threat. It is what comes from within, what we have tended with our anger and carefully neglected with our apathy and willfully watched fester that will be our ultimate destruction.
Yes, Mr. Isikoff, there is a difference between these similar actions, and it ought to be evident which is worse and more deserving of the label terrorist. For while I know there are always enemies without demanding my vigilance and courage, it is the one within who is best armed and most capable of my destruction and against whom I ought be most on guard. It is there that the word terror is rightly applied.
One inevitable answer, supported by far too much commentary since, is that one is a foreign enemy and the other is not. Too bluntly put? Of course we have come to reserve the word “terrorist” for Eastern, Muslim attackers and the word “criminal” for all others. Hence, torture and infinite imprisonment for some, Miranda rights and American jails for others.
It’s not so much the lack of justice that perturbs me as the wholesale short-shrifting of the word terrorist.
“It is what comes out of a person that defiles. For it is from within, from the human heart, that evil intentions come … “ (Mark 7:20-21)
I imagine that if asked, most Americans would say that they are most afraid of foreign, Muslim terrorists, killing Americans overseas, coming to American to kill more of us here. I can understand – there is something particularly frightening about that elusive, exotic, strange figure emerging as if out of some dark, far-off mist.
How naïve and self-deceptive of us! For the truest fear is that our own worst enemy is ourselves, the lurking dark and angry soul which threatens us from within. Timothy McVeigh, Joe Stack, Scott Roeder, these are us, they look like us and live among us and hold a mirror up to our own darkest and deepest fears. The true evil in the world is not that enemy there, it is my own worse nature that is my greatest threat. It is what comes from within, what we have tended with our anger and carefully neglected with our apathy and willfully watched fester that will be our ultimate destruction.
Yes, Mr. Isikoff, there is a difference between these similar actions, and it ought to be evident which is worse and more deserving of the label terrorist. For while I know there are always enemies without demanding my vigilance and courage, it is the one within who is best armed and most capable of my destruction and against whom I ought be most on guard. It is there that the word terror is rightly applied.

