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Terrorism Chic
Wall Street Journal ^ | Sept 21, 2001 | Sam Tanenhaus

Posted on 9/21/2001, 5:14:34 AM by gcruse

Taste Feature
Terrorism Chic

By Sam Tanenhaus. Mr. Tanenhaus, a contributing editor of Vanity Fair, is the author of "Whittaker Chambers: A Biography."

In the aftermath of last week's terrorist attack many are saying we have reached a turning point. Everything has changed, the editorials announce. Our country and the world both look different today.

This is true enough. But what needs re-thinking is not so much the present as our understanding of the past and the prominent role terrorism has played in our politics and culture for many years now.

[Illustration]
A Greenwich Village bomb factory, March 6, 1970. Fawning profiles of the Weather Underground followed right up to Sept. 11, 2001.

Consider the news reported in the weeks, days, and even hours preceding the horrific events. There was, first, the case of Kathy Boudin, a New Left extremist recently denied parole for her conviction in the 1981 robbery of a Brinks truck in Rockland County, N.Y., which resulted in the deaths of four people. That was not an isolated crime. In 1970, Ms. Boudin, a member of the Weather Underground, was part of a team that was building bombs in a Greenwich Village townhouse before their bungling caused an explosion that killed two of their own. Thomas Powers, who wrote a searching account at the time of one of those who died in the blast, Diana Oughton, subtitled the book "The Making of a Terrorist."

But blunt language of that kind is distinctly absent from current discussions of the late 1960s and early 1970s. You won't find the word "terrorist" in a story that appeared in the New York Times on Tuesday, Sept. 11, the day of the World Trade Center attack. It was an affectionate profile of Ms. Boudin's comrade-in-arms and Ms. Oughton's boyfriend, Bill Ayers, author of a boastful memoir of his exploits 30 years ago. "I don't regret setting bombs," Mr. Ayers told the Times interviewer in the living room of his spacious Chicago home. "I feel we didn't do enough." Mr. Ayers, wrote the dazzled reporter, "still has the ebullient manner, the apparently intense interest in other people, that made him a charismatic figure in the radical student movement." As if this weren't enough, the Times returned to Mr. Ayers a few days later, in the Sunday magazine, with another fawning interview.

Of course Mr. Ayers's "intense interest" assumed a different meaning when "other people" became the objects of his violent fantasies. The terrorists of his generation would have approved of the targets selected by last Tuesday's suicide pilots -- the World Trade Center is an emblem of American commerce, the Pentagon a fortress of our military might. In fact, Mr. Ayers got there first, way back in 1972. "Everything was absolutely ideal on the day I bombed the Pentagon," he writes in his memoir. He describes in detail how the bomb was built and then placed in a Pentagon restroom. Reflecting on the incident today, Mr. Ayers evades responsibility. "Even though I didn't bomb the Pentagon -- we bombed it, in the sense that the Weathermen organized it and claimed it." He also helped bomb New York City Police headquarters in 1970 and the Capitol in 1971. Sound like terrorism? Not to the Times, which calls these "daring acts." But weren't last Tuesday's suicide missions "daring acts," too?

In 1969, Mr. Ayers's present wife, Bernardine Dohrn, once the New Left's mini-skirted Joan of Arc, gushed over another "daring act" -- the murders committed by Charles Manson and his followers. "Dig it!" she told a student audience. "Manson killed those pigs, then they ate dinner in the same room with them, then they shoved a fork into a victim's stomach." Nowadays Ms. Dohrn disavows those comments -- sort of. "It was a joke," she explains. "Even in my most inflamed moment I never supported a racist mass murderer." But what if Mr. Manson had been a racially sensitive mass murderer? Would his "daring act" then be OK?

The evils of racism no doubt motivated Patrick Dolan Critton, a schoolteacher in Mount Vernon, N.Y. He too appeared in the news on the morning of the World Trade Center attack, after he was arrested for a crime committed in 1971. Mr. Critton is accused of hijacking a DC-9 in Ontario and forcing the crew to fly him to Havana. This came after he robbed a bank, had a shootout with police and then, as a member of a black "liberation" group, assembled pipe bombs in an explosives "factory" on the Lower East Side. Today, the Times reported, Mr. Critton has "the appearance and demeanor of a gentleman," nothing like his earlier self. Nor was that earlier self a terrorist. He was "a revolutionary with a taste for" -- yes -- "the most daring of crimes."

Why the romantic language? The message seems to be that we must not confuse "good" terrorists, like those who belonged to the Weather Underground, with "bad" terrorists, like those who claimed some 5,000 lives on Sept. 11. But are the two really so easily distinguished? In Europe controversy has lately engulfed the "68ers," student radicals who wrought so much havoc in France, Germany and Italy some 30 years ago and in some instances went on to become establishment figures. One such, Germany's current foreign minister, Joschka Fischer, has been under fire ever since photographs published in Stern, the popular magazine, captured him and four others engaged in another daring act in 1973 -- the brutal beating of a policeman. Mr. Fischer has apologized for that deed. He has been less forthcoming about other items on his résumé, however.

According to The New Republic, Mr. Fischer "attended a meeting of the Palestine Liberation Organization in Algiers back in 1969, at which the PLO adopted a resolution to achieve final victory, which is to say, the destruction of Israel."

Thus do the passions of the New Left mingle with those of the New Fanatics, and the daring acts of good terrorists find common cause with those of the bad. This is not surprising. The "critiques" of America offered by the likes of Osama bin Laden and the Palestinians who jubilantly filled the streets after the attacks on the World Trade Center echo those made long ago by the New Left. They, too, branded our nation, its leaders and citizens, as war-mongering, imperialist and all the rest.

Does the New Left bear any responsibility for last Tuesday's horrific events? Obviously not. The point, rather, is that while those crimes may appear to signal the beginning of a new era, they should be seen instead as the climax of malign, inchoate energies that have been at large, here and abroad, for a generation now, ever since it became not only commonplace but fashionable to despise the U.S. and all its works in the name of radicalism.

Joschka Fischer has come a long way. He now supports NATO, another longtime symbol of American "imperialism." Yet how many other veterans of the New Left have owned up to the reality of their appalling misreading of what the Western democracies have really stood for during the past half-century or more? And how many alumni of the Weather Underground acknowledge today the part they played in fostering a culture of terrorism in which assaults on the U.S. and its citizens are wreathed in the glory of "daring acts"?


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 9/21/2001, 5:14:34 AM by gcruse
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To: JMJ333
It's called 'compartmentalization,' right, M?
2 posted on 9/21/2001, 5:15:48 AM by gcruse
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To: gcruse
Great column from Tanenhaus. I have got to read his biography of Chambers. I've been meaning to for a long time but I haven't been able to get around to it.
3 posted on 9/21/2001, 5:26:32 AM by beckett
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To: beckett
Okay.  No more excuses. :)


 

4 posted on 9/21/2001, 5:42:02 AM by gcruse
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To: gcruse
I was about to post this article but found it had already been posted after doing a search.

I am on the tail end of the baby boom (age 41) and I used to actually look up to these idiots. Oh, they were "revolutionaries" who were dedicated to "freeing the masses" from the oppressive thumb of "the man." As a teen, I considered myself a radical and walked around in US Army fatigue shirts and smoked dope, spouting "Free Huey Newton, blah blah blah..." What an insipid and vapid world view I learned from these losers.

In my early 20s I started to wise-up and see just how great we have it in this country, and how moronic was the rhetoric of those who would tear it down. I assumed that they, too, would grow up. But imbeciles like Ayers continue to vomit their leftist tripe to this day. And, of course, the media continues to unquestioningly worship at the altar of 60s radicalism.

Truly pathetic.

5 posted on 9/21/2001, 11:18:33 AM by Skooz
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To: Skooz
Conjugation?

I am a fundamentalist.
You are a radical.
He is a terrorist.

 

6 posted on 9/21/2001, 9:20:50 PM by gcruse
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To: gcruse
huh?
7 posted on 9/21/2001, 10:14:56 PM by Skooz
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To: Skooz
Oh, well. There is an equality implied there that really doesn't exist. Never mind. :)
8 posted on 9/21/2001, 10:21:24 PM by gcruse
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To: gcruse, Hugh Akston
Why does the New Left seem to arise when we think of terrorism?

This is the second article I've seen (the other may have been in the weekly standard) relating the NYT adoration piece on these old terrorists that appeared on the day of the arrival of the new terrorists.

Coincidence?

9 posted on 9/26/2001, 4:45:32 PM by GEC
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To: GEC
See post #6.
10 posted on 9/26/2001, 7:23:54 PM by gcruse
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To: gcruse
For all the horror of 9-11, I might feel a tiny bit better if I could think that it finally resulted in the death (or mortal wounding)of:

Political correctness.

I can't tie it in with any specific event or events, but it's been a bug up my butt for years.

Yes, my libertarian butt. We're not all that different, Freepers. I simply maintain a love of Liberty, which our enemies (and yours) are literally dying to take away.

Read some of today's articles posted on Townhall.com. Their (quite conservative) writers explain it better than I ever could.

I want all these people who are threatening my country --dead, dead DEAD! By any means available! And if it starts a world war with us and wimpy socialist countries, KILL THEM TOO! I would RATHER DIE than give up the freedom I have been blessed to enjoy here.

As many complaints as I have about the U-S Government, I WILL SUPPORT HER MILITARY ACTIONS UNTIL MY DYING BREATH.

If it were a matter of hugs, I'd be the first to give one.

BUT IT IS NOT.

It truly is THEM OR US. And some of us might have to smack a pacifist or two in the face to get them to think about it.

WE WILL FIGHT, OR WE WILL SURELY DIE.

I will not give up my Constitutional rights, and will oppose my own government if it comes to that.

BUT I WILL FIGHT!

I WILL NEVER SURRENDER!

One person's opinion.

11 posted on 9/26/2001, 8:23:46 PM by ihatemyalarmclock
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To: ihatemyalarmclock
One person's opinion.

Make that two, at least.
Well stated.

12 posted on 9/26/2001, 8:31:48 PM by gcruse
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To: gcruse
Excellent article! Speaking of "good terrorists," people might like to read Doris Lessing's book, "The Good Terrorist." It's an odd book, because you wouldn't have expected it of a lefty like Doris Lessing (written some 15 years ago, I think), but it is an excellent snapshot of the mind of a middle-class loser who has set herself up as judge and jury of her fellow citizens. And indeed, most of the 60s radicals were just that: losers. The spiteful vengeance of terrorism was the only power they could ever have achieved. It's just unfortunate that the media never saw them for that; but then, I suspect there are a lot of losers in media-land, too.
13 posted on 9/26/2001, 9:22:46 PM by livius
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