NuclearNed
Raconteur
I don't know why, but I was thinking about the American Revolutionary war today. Remember those pictures in your old history books of soldiers lining up in straight lines on opposite sides of the field and firing at each other like ducks in a shooting gallery? I remember one of my teachers saying that back then this was the "honorable" way people waged war. Also, she said something about how the British thought that colonial Americans were cowardly savages for taking cover, engaging in sneak attacks, and other tactics that are part of modern warfare. I'm sure the British at one time would have never imagined stooping so low as to try to dodge incoming fire from their enemies, yet today things are different.
So I started thinking about how I think that terrorists are cowardly people with little honor because of the methods they use to achieve their goals. I'm not in any way trying to justify their tactics, and until the day I die I will think of them as madmen. But as time goes on, will terrorist tactics (i.e. attacking non-military targets and civilians) become more of the norm of warfare?
So I started thinking about how I think that terrorists are cowardly people with little honor because of the methods they use to achieve their goals. I'm not in any way trying to justify their tactics, and until the day I die I will think of them as madmen. But as time goes on, will terrorist tactics (i.e. attacking non-military targets and civilians) become more of the norm of warfare?