Title: Chapter Fourteen: Terrorism in the United States
1Chapter FourteenTerrorism in the United
States
2Nationalistic Separatism The Case of
Puerto Rico
3Nationalistic Separatism The Case of Puerto Rico
- 1898- The United States captured Puerto Rico in
the Spanish-American war - The United States granted Puerto Rico
commonwealth status - Three opinions of the Puerto Rican population
- Some desire Puerto Rican statehood
- Some want to create an independent country
- Some want to maintain a commonwealth status
4Nationalistic Separatism The Case of Puerto Rico
- Revolutionary organizations that embraced the
nationalist terrorist campaign - Armed Forces of National Liberation (FALN)
- Volunteers for the Puerto Rican Revolution (OVRP)
- The Armed Forces of Liberation (FARP)
- The Guerilla Forces of Liberation (GEL)
- The Pedro Albizu Compos Revolutionary Forces
(PACRF)
5The Development of Right-Wing Violence
6The Development of Right-Wing Violence
- History of right-wing extremism
- The first incident of antifederal behavior came
shortly after the American Revolutionary War - 1791- The Whiskey Rebellion
- Antifederal attitudes were common in some circles
in the early 1800s - The Know-Nothings (a.k.a., the Order of the Sons
of America and the Sons of the Star Spangled
Banner) were anti-Catholic, anti-Irish, and
anti-immigration - The Civil War
- Southerners were fighting to keep the power of
local government
7The Development of Right-Wing Violence
- The Ku Klux Klan
- Founded by Nathan Bedford Forrest, the KKK was
created as an antiunionist organization that
would preserve southern culture and traditions - Shortly after the Civil War, hooded Knight Riders
terrorized African Americans to frighten them
into political and social submission - In the 1920s, the Klan sought political
legitimacy - The modern KKK grew after WWII, becoming up to
the present day, fragmented, decentralized, and
dominated by hate-filled rhetoric
8The Development of Right-Wing Violence
- Right-wing extremism from the 1930s to the
present - Michael Barkun says that a new religion,
Christian Identity, grew from the extremist
perspective - Anglo-Israelism saw white Americans as the lost
tribes of Israel. William Swift preached this
message beginning in the late 1940s - Two of Swifts disciples, William Potter Gale and
Richard Butler, went on to form right-wing
associations - Gale formed the Posse Comitatus
- Butler formed the Aryan Nation
- Christian Identity is based on the premise that
God was white
9The Development of Right-Wing Violence
- Identity theology
- Identity theology is based on a story of conflict
and hate. According to this theology, Jews have
gained control of the United States by conspiring
to create the Federal Reserve System. The
struggle between whites and Jews will continue
until whites ultimately achieve victory with
Gods help - Before the Christian Identity movement
- Before the Christian Identity movement, American
extremism was characterized by ethnocentrism and
localized violence
10Contemporary Right-Wing Behavior, Beliefs,
and Tactics
11Contemporary Right-Wing Behavior, Beliefs, and
Tactics
- Issues that hold the right-wing movement together
- The right-wing tends to follow one of the forms
of extremist religions - The movement is dominated by a belief in
conspiracy and conspiracy theories - Right-wing extremists continue to embrace
patriotism and gun
12Contemporary Right-Wing Behavior, Beliefs, and
Tactics
- Limit of right-wing terrorism
- Groups are rural and tend to emerge from
farm-based compounds
13Contemporary Right-Wing Behavior, Beliefs, and
Tactics
- Trends of the right-wing movement in 1984
- The White supremacy movement
- Ku Klux Klan
- Neo-Nazis
- Other White European or Aryan-based organizations
- Survivalism
- Survivalists withdraw from society, forming
compounds in rural areas - Religion
- Many right wing extremists follow Christian
Identity
14Contemporary Right-Wing Behavior, Beliefs, and
Tactics
- Rejuvenation of the extremist right
- The Brady Bill
- The Brady Bill caused many conservatives to fear
federal gun-control legislation Extremists felt
they had an issue that appealed to mainstream
conservatives - Ruby Ridge
- The Ruby Ridge incident had a strong symbolic
impact on the extremist right - The Waco siege
- Although David Koresh had nothing to do with
right-wing extremists per se, he had the formula
guns, a survivalist compound, and a belief in a
Warrior God
15Contemporary Right-Wing Behavior, Beliefs, and
Tactics
- Current situation of the extremist right
- After September 11, 2001, violent members of the
right-wing movement melted away from large
organizations and began to congregate in small
groups - The existence of the smaller groups engaged in
more individualistic violence
16Conspiracies, Militias, and the Call to Arms
17Conspiracies, Militias, and the Call to Arms
- Nordic Christianity
- Using ancient Norse rites, they claimed to
worship the Triune Christian Deity, but they
added Odin (Wotan) and Thor. Odin, the chief of
the Norse gods, called Nordic warriors to racial
purification from Valhalla, or the Viking heaven.
Thor, the god of thunder, sounded the call with a
hammer that shook the heavens
18Conspiracies, Militias, and the Call to Arms
- Creatorism
- Creatorists call for a holy war or RAHOWA
- Creatorism is a religion with more violent
tendencies than Christian Identity
19Conspiracies, Militias, and the Call to Arms
- Free-Wheeling Fundamentalists
- The majority of right-wing extremists retreated
to more conservative churches and relied on
individual interpretations of scripture from lay
preachers along the American frontier to justify
antigovernment actions. This group can be
described as Free-Wheeling Fundamentalists - They believe that the federal government and
local governments are their enemies and the God
will assist them in their confrontation with evil
20Conspiracies, Militias, and the Call to Arms
- Militias
- Militias thrive on conspiracy theories.
- They believe the U.S. government is leading the
country into a single world government controlled
by the United Nations and that the New World
Order is a continuation of a conspiracy outlined
in the Protocols of Zion, a document written
after World War I, claiming that Jews are out to
control the world - Militias are almost always religious, but few
embrace Christian Identity, Nordic Christianity,
or Creatorism. For justification, they rely on
Free-Wheeling Fundamentalism and violent passages
of Christian scripture quoted out of context. - Simply joining a militia group does not make a
person a terrorist
21Conspiracies, Militias, and the Call to Arms
- Paramilitary groups
- Paramilitary groups, or armed civilian militias
that organize themselves in a military manner,
operate on different levels - Paramilitary groups come in a variety of shapes
and sizes, and most of their action is rhetorical
22Conspiracies, Militias, and the Call to Arms
- Third position
- The Third Position tried to unite both left- and
right-wing extremists - Both extremes found that they had some things in
common They hate the government, they have no
use for large corporations, and they distrust the
media
23Conspiracies, Militias, and the Call to Arms
- Small violent groups after September 11, 2001
- These small groups embrace the ideas of
Marighella and felt that any act of violence
would help to create the mayhem necessary to
topple the government
24Pierces Blueprint for Revolution
25Pierces Blueprint for Revolution
- William Pierce
- William Pierce was a White supremacist with
headquarters in rural West Virginia. He led an
organization called the National Alliance,
purchased Resistance Records, a recording label
for Skinhead hate music
26Pierces Blueprint for Revolution
- The Turner Diaries
- The Turner Diaries is a diatribe against
minorities and Jews - From a technical standpoint, it is a how-to
manual for low-level terrorism
27Pierces Blueprint for Revolution
- Dangers of The Turner Diaries
- It could inspire copycat crimes
- Some who have read this book have taken action
- Robert Matthews founded The Order
- Timothy McVeigh was arrested with a worn copy of
The Turner Diaries
28Pierces Blueprint for Revolution
- Hunter
- Hunter tells the story of a lone wolf named
Hunter who decides to launch a one-person
revolution - It could and has inspired copycat crimes
29The Decline of the Left
30The Decline of the Left
- Contributions to the demise of left-wing
terrorism - Intellectual elites controlled the movement, yet
the movement lost its base when student activism
began to disappear from American academic life - Left-wing groups had engaged in symbolic violence
- Guilt may have been a factor in the demise
- Left-wing movements became more specific,
focusing not only on certain political behavior,
but on particular causes
31Ecoterrorism, Animal Rights, and Genetic
Engineering
32Ecoterrorism, Animal Rights, and Genetic
Engineering
- Earth Liberation Front (ELF)
- ELF migrated from Europe to the United States
- The alliance has been responsible for more than
six hundred criminal acts since 1996 - Its tactics include sabotage, tree spiking,
property damage, intimidation, and arson
33Ecoterrorism, Animal Rights, and Genetic
Engineering
- The Monkey Wrench Gang, by Edward Abbey
- In The Monkey Wrench Gang, the heroes drive
through the western states sabotaging bulldozers,
burning billboards, and damaging the property of
people they deem to be destroying the environment - Abbey, however, is an environmental activist
rather than a hate-filled ideologue
34Ecoterrorism, Animal Rights, and Genetic
Engineering
- Ecoterrorism today
- Most violence associated with ecoterrorism has
taken place in the American West - From 1995-1999, damages total 28.8 million
- ELF activities have increased each year since
1999 - Ecoterrorists are uncompromising, illogical
extremists just like their right-wing
counterparts They use ecology as a surrogate
religion
35Antiabortion Violence
36Antiabortion Violence
- Tactics of antiabortionists
- Antiabortionists began with bombing and arson
attacks - Today assault and gunmen along with bombing and
arson are antiabortionist tactics
37Antiabortion Violence
- Justification for antiabortion acts
- Violent antiabortionist advocates justify their
actions in the same manner as other political
extremists - Accepting the status quo is worse than using
violence to change behavior. It is the standard
justification for terrorism
38Antiabortion Violence
- Explanations for violent political behavior
- Social control breaks down under stress and
urbanization - Violence increases when people are not satisfied
with political outcomes - Violence can be reinforced by social and cultural
values - Violence can stem from a groups strength or
weakness, its lack of faith in the political
system, or its frustration with economic
conditions
39Antiabortion Violence
- David Nice and abortion clinic bombings
- Bombings tend to be regionalized
- Most of the bombings occurred in areas of rapidly
expanding population and declining social
controls. This means bombings tended to occur in
urban areas - Bombings also reflected a method a communicating
frustration with political processes and outcomes - States that experience bombings also exhibit a
greater toleration for crimes against women - Bombings are a sign of weakness
- Killing was a means of communication
40Black Hebrew Israelism An Apocalyptic Single
Issue
41Black Hebrew Israelism An Apocalyptic Single
Issue
- Black Hebrew Israelism
- Black Hebrew Israelism is a Christian Identity
with an African twist - Black Hebrew Israelites believe that the original
Israelites were dark-skinned Africans - The mythology of Black Hebrew Israelites and
their beliefs dates back to the Civil War. In the
latter part of the twentieth century, again like
Christian Identity, the group developed an
elaborate theology to explain the status of
African Americans - The African Heritage Study Bible is used to
demonstrate that the Jews who Moses led out of
Egypt were black
42Black Hebrew Israelism An Apocalyptic Single
Issue
- Hulon Mitchell Jr.
- Mitchell and Linda Gaines moved to Miami,
Florida, in 1979 and laid the foundation for a
Black Hebrew Israelite group known as the Nation
of Yahweh - By 1985, the Nation of Yahweh developed into a
group of worshippers who focused their attention
on Mitchell - Mitchell began expanding his theology, teaching
that whites were devils and his followers were to
kill them in the name of God. He created an
internal group called the Brotherhood, and one
could obtain membership only by killing a white
person - Over the next few years, Mitchell dispatched
Death Angels to kill whites in the Miami area
43Black Hebrew Israelism An Apocalyptic Single
Issue
- The tension between believing and acting
- Black Hebrew Israelism is indicative of the
tension between believing and acting, and it
presents a dilemma for those charged with
security - The problem for those charged with preventing
violence is that when a belief system degrades or
demonizes another group, violence often follows