I can't see where that gets them, though. What could happen as a result of people losing confidence in the government's ability to maintain law and order that would benefit any terrorists' cause?
You see why I am so genuinely puzzled. None of this makes sense unless it's just psychotics killing because they get a thrill out of killing, which is what I'm leaning to as an explanation, that most "terrorism," especially if individual rather than by a group, is simply psychosis whatever doctrine the crazy may dress it up with.
First there clearly can be a muddle of motives. Expecting clear logical thinking in all terrorist actions would be a stretch.
But in some case there is a logic to random systematic terror. Some ideologies believe that they cannot seize power through lawful actions in a society. To them, the only viable path to power is to create a vacuum, a "failed state" such as in Somalia where they can then move with a small force to take over what they could not seize if any effective resistance were mounted. This is actually classic revolutionary theory on both the left and the right. Think of the Cuban Revolution. What great battle did Castro win?
None. When Batista and the moneyed class fled Havana, he moved in.
The myth about Hitler being elected is another example. He won a plurality in a multi-party election and formed a coalition government. Days later the Reichstag burned to the ground. Laws that made him virtually a dictator were rammed through the legislature. But the centerist political parties had been discredited, and the army and industrialists thought they could control Hitler and stood on the sidelines.
Terrorism is a way to create a power vacuum into which a small revolutionary party can move to seize power. It doesn't matter if that party is communist, fascist, religious, or any other ideology just so long as it is willing to use terrorist means to achieve the end of power.
Hitler didn't rise through terrorism (he DID terrorism, I am aware of his large numbers of Bavarian troops, some 6000, and his threat to march on Berlin in early years.) He rose via a sort of
coup d'etat that I would not call terrorism; his route to power was not unlike Napoleon's, and his wasn't terrorism either. I mean, sometimes a strongman just moves in and takes over a chaotic situation, and I'd say that was the history with Castro, too.
The best example of what I'd call terrorism is the famous Hotel David attack by Jews in Israel when the British still controlled it. They were clear: they wanted the British out. They kept on and on attacking targets until the British did a cost-benefit analysis and decided it wasn't worth it, and they did leave. That was clear, it was purposeful, it was terrorism proper.
What I am thinking now is that
if it's not clear, it's not terrorism! It has to at least communicate, surely. In the case of Boston, the target wasn't political and the goal doesn't seem to be political in any way that makes any sense, and no one is claiming they did it -- a way to make an attack coherent and purposeful.
Instead, I think it's just part of our great
epidemic of homocidal mania going on now. It's like a zombie attack, every day another couple colleges attacked by knife or gun-wielding maniacs fantasizing eating off peoples' faces. Elvis impersonators sending ricin widespread through the mail. The mass murdering has started spreading out from assault rifles to other weapons: poison, bombs, box knives, whatever.
We have a terrible epidemic going on. It's not about terrorism at all: they don't care about terror or politics, I think,
they just want a high kill count for the thrill of competing with other mass murderers. In a better day, we used to shut up people like this in mental hospitals in locked wards!! Now we let them run around bombing marathon races and mailing poison.
It's a major failure of our society that we are not managing homocidal mania better.