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They're Terrorists - Not Activists
http://www.netwmd.com/ ^ | September 7, 2004 | Daniel Pipes

Posted on 09/07/2004 10:36:59 AM PDT by forty_years

"I know it when I see it" was the famous response by a U.S. Supreme Court justice to the vexed problem of defining pornography. Terrorism may be no less difficult to define, but the wanton killing of schoolchildren, of mourners at a funeral, or workers at their desks in skyscrapers surely fits the know-it-when-I-see-it definition.

The press, however, generally shies away from the word terrorist, preferring euphemisms. Take the assault that led to the deaths of some 400 people, many of them children, in Beslan, Russia, on September 3. Journalists have delved deep into their thesauruses, finding at least twenty euphemisms for terrorists:

And my favorite:

The origins of this unwillingness to name terrorists seems to lie in the Arab-Israeli conflict, prompted by an odd combination of sympathy in the press for the Palestinian Arabs and intimidation by them. The sympathy is well known; the intimidation less so. Reuters' Nidal al-Mughrabi made the latter explicit in advice for fellow reporters in Gaza to avoid trouble on the Web site www.newssafety.com, where one tip reads: "Never use the word terrorist or terrorism in describing Palestinian gunmen and militants; people consider them heroes of the conflict."

The reluctance to call terrorists by their rightful name can reach absurd lengths of inaccuracy and apologetics. For example, National Public Radio's Morning Edition announced on April 1, 2004, that "Israeli troops have arrested 12 men they say were wanted militants." But CAMERA, the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America, pointed out the inaccuracy here and NPR issued an on-air correction on April 26: "Israeli military officials were quoted as saying they had arrested 12 men who were ‘wanted militants.' But the actual phrase used by the Israeli military was ‘wanted terrorists.'"

(At least NPR corrected itself. When the Los Angeles Times made the same error, writing that "Israel staged a series of raids in the West Bank that the army described as hunts for wanted Palestinian militants," its editors refused CAMERA's request for a correction on the grounds that its change in terminology did not occur in a direct quotation.)

Metro, a Dutch paper, ran a picture on May 3, 2004, of two gloved hands belonging to a person taking fingerprints off a dead terrorist. The caption read: "An Israeli police officer takes fingerprints of a dead Palestinian. He is one of the victims (slachtoffers) who fell in the Gaza strip yesterday." One of the victims!

Euphemistic usage then spread from the Arab-Israeli conflict to other theaters. As terrorism picked up in Saudi Arabia such press outlets as The Times (London) and the Associated Press began routinely using militants in reference to Saudi terrorists. Reuters uses it with reference to Kashmir and Algeria.

Thus has militants become the press's default term for terrorists.

These self-imposed language limitations sometimes cause journalists to tie themselves into knots. In reporting the murder of one of its own cameraman, the BBC, which normally avoids the word terrorist, found itself using that term. In another instance, the search engine on the BBC website includes the word terrorist but the page linked to has had that word expurgated.

Politically-correct news organizations undermine their credibility with such subterfuges. How can one trust what one reads, hears, or sees when the self-evident fact of terrorism is being semi-denied?

Worse, the multiple euphemisms for terrorist obstruct a clear understanding of the violent threats confronting the civilized world. It is bad enough that only one of five articles discussing the Beslan atrocity mentions its Islamist origins; worse is the miasma of words that insulates the public from the evil of terrorism.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Israel; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: 3; 400; activists; assault; attackers; away; beslan; bombers; captors; children; deaths; deep; delved; euphemisms; extremists; fighters; finding; from; generally; islam; islamic; islamism; islamist; journalists; many; militants; nidalalmughrabi; not; people; preferring; press; russia; september; shies; terror; terrorism; terrorist; terrorists; the; thesauruses; twenty; word

1 posted on 09/07/2004 10:37:08 AM PDT by forty_years
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To: forty_years

Yeah. And they urge "negotiations" with these demons. Negotiate? With who? We don't know who they are, pretty much, until they pop up and massacre a bunch of kids.


2 posted on 09/07/2004 10:41:30 AM PDT by Terriergal (""Woe to you...Blind guides, who strain out a gnat and swallow a camel!"Matthew 23:23a,24)
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To: forty_years

Agreed. A favorite tactic of the left is the art of 'redefinition', i.e., illegal alien = undocumented worker; local pain in the a** = community activist; whore = sex-worker. Whatever it takes to confuse, delay, and obfuscate.


3 posted on 09/07/2004 10:50:44 AM PDT by Res Nullius
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To: forty_years

Any media outlet that calls these people "terrorists" or "assassins" or "Islamic killers" may be their next target.


4 posted on 09/07/2004 11:16:37 AM PDT by jolie560
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To: forty_years

I thought they were "freedom fighters."


5 posted on 09/07/2004 11:26:48 AM PDT by Doomonyou (Molon Labe! FMCDH!)
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To: forty_years; Alouette; SJackson; yonif

Good Pipes article for your lists.


6 posted on 09/07/2004 5:05:16 PM PDT by agrace
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