I'm more interested than the validity of dictionary definitions than 'some asshole went and killed a bunch of people' for the umpteenth time this year.
Which is more or less what I said: you can cite the dictionary all you want if someone's willfully misusing a term. If they're using it in a way in line with popular usage, though? No good. When the media's been painting a very distinct picture for a decade and a half? The dictionary definition's probably outdated.
And normally I would agree with you. Whether it's "terrorism" or not is of secondary importance to the fact that it was a horrific and despicable act of mass murder. (And here comes the debate on whether three people counts as "mass" murder.
)
The problem though, it that the media specifically engages in the practice of misusing terms to suit their preferred narratives or to push a certain agenda. So that very distinct picture they've been painting? It's wrong. And because most people spend much more time paying attention to the media than they did in English class, those intentionally distorted meanings become common use.
So no, I don't agree that a popular usage based on deliberate misinformation trumps the original definition.
True, but it feels like they're still trying to put that spin on it despite all the people coming forward.
All the people coming forward and saying that the murderer never said anything political?
Yet somehow . . .
From the article I linked to:
Zigmond Post, a neighbor, said one of the few interactions he had was when Dear brought him some anti-Obama pamphlets. "That's about all I've run into him," he said.
That's literally the only example in the article of someone who actually interacted with the shooter prior to the attack. Where are all these other people who claim that he "never said anything political?"
Well, it fits the FBI's definition of domestic terrorism, for what that's worth.
What political goal has the murderer declared?
So far, none.
A declared political goal is not required.
"Domestic terrorism" means activities with the following three characteristics:
- Involve acts dangerous to human life that violate federal or state law;
- Appear intended (i) to intimidate or coerce a civilian population; (ii) to influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion; or (iii) to affect the conduct of a government by mass destruction, assassination. or kidnapping; and
- Occur primarily within the territorial jurisdiction of the U.S.
Note the wording: "Appear intended", the FBI's definition does not rely on actual or stated intentions.
Words have definitions, which if you can't tell by now I'm rather big on.
Words do indeed have definitions.
And without that declared political goal by the murderer, classifying this as terrorism is not possible, as that is an essential element of the definitions.
Nope.
So yeah, it's terrorism. Trying to argue the definitions or claiming that they aren't that clear is just a troll-tactic used to stall and derail. Hence the popularity of this tactic with lawyers and politicians.
So no, it is a crime with an unclear motive.
But yes, you are just going with a troll-tactic to derail and score political points, as are the lawyers, politicians, and media hacks leaping to call it terrorism without any functional evidence.
Well, I confess, I did have an ulterior motive when I chose to engage dman11235 on the subject of terrorism's definition:
You see it's not just the word "terrorism" that gets deliberately misused by politicians and the media. They also do the same thing with "anarchism." Riots are referred to as "anarchy in the streets." Violent attacks against the government are immediately blamed on "anarchists." Politicians and pundits warn that repealing restrictive legal policies "will lead to anarchy."
The word is treated as being synonymous with "violent chaos," and the word "Anarchist" is treated as synonymous with "anti-government terrorist," when they absolutely are not. But because this deliberately false definition gets pushed on us with such frequency, it's become the commonly accepted one--to the point that new generations of people are mis-applying the label to themselves, and it has become nearly impossible for those who actually believe in anarchy as a political view to be taken seriously.
This last bit, of course, has been the goal all along. To redefine the
terms in order to undermine their opponents without actually engaging them. Why debate a philosophy's merits when you can just call it criminal and wrong? It's basically just a very involved form of ad-hominem attack, but one that attempts to enshrine it's slander in the English language itself.
We see the same thing with politicians and the media conflating
Daesh with Islam, despite the fact that Islamic law and religion have some
very specific prohibitions regarding warfare--many of which are being flagrantly violated by Daesh.
A widely held misconception is still a misconception.
Terrorism is not unique to brown people or those from another country.
Terrorism is not consistent with the Muslim faith.
Terrorism is not consistent with the political philosophy of Anarchism.
No matter how much the media and the government tells you otherwise.