Blue_Max
Diamond Member
- Jul 7, 2011
- 4,223
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I keep seeing the adjective "cowardly" being used in reference to the Charlie Hebdo massacre. Can someone please explain to me how in any way what the Kouachi brothers did was cowardly?
I mean, what they did was an act of surpassing evil and ignorance and intolerance and brutality and heartlessness. But how - in any way - was it "cowardly?" It seems to me that these two knew for sure that a consequence of their act was that there was no way they would live out the week. In a different context, that would be called "courageous."
I'm not in any way trying to make these two out to be anything other than monsters, but those using "cowardly" to describe the Charlie Hebdo attack are engaging in cheap emotionalism.
One way to see it to make "cowardly" work, is that they weren't in a fair fight in the least. They were well-trained, heavily armed, and rushed in to surprise unarmed civilians. The cops at least were armed, which is why they were taken first by complete surprise.
Both pure evil AND cowardly.
