Joseph Stack had barely finished flying his airplane into a Texas office building when the battle over his legacy began.

Bloggers on the left asked why people — especially people on the right — weren’t calling him a terrorist. “If this had been done by a brownish-looking Muslim guy whose suicide note paralleled Islamist political themes,” wrote Matthew Yglesias, then right wingers would be “demanding that anyone who refused to label the attack ‘terrorism’ be put up on treason charges.”

Bloggers on the right, such as Conn Carroll, asked why people — especially people on the left — were acting as if Stack was a “conservative Tea Party nut” when the anti-tax animus that led him to point his plane at I.R.S. offices was only one part of an eclectic ideology.

These are arguments worth having, for two reasons.

✖ Via The New York Times: “The First Tea-Party Terrorist?” by Robert Wright, Feb. 23, 2010

About Robert Wright :

“Robert Wright, a senior fellow at the New America Foundation, writes every Wednesday about culture, politics and world affairs. He is editor-in-chief of Bloggingheads.tv and The Progressive Realist. He is the author of The Moral Animal, Nonzero, and, most recently, The New York Times best-seller The Evolution of God. He has written for The Atlantic, The New Yorker, Time, Slate, and many other magazines and has taught philosophy at Princeton and religion at the University of Pennsylvania.” (more)


• Mar 04, 2010 link notes tagged: communication  technology  critic  revolution  terror  terrorism  destruction  politic  society  plane crash 
technology news terror terrorism suicide lost loser destruction building plane_crash death critic
✖ Via Wikimedia Commons: Piper PA-28-236 Dakota

That’s the same model of plane as the one Andrew Joseph Stack III crashed in a IRS building last Thursday.



• Feb 23, 2010 link notes tagged: technology  news  terror  terrorism  suicide  lost  loser  destruction  building  plane crash  death  critic 
technology communication plane_crash destruction suicide self_destruction building lost loser alone society economy
✖ Via The Daily Dunklin Democrat: “Man angry at IRS crashes plane into building” Feb. 18, 2010. (AP Photo/Jack Plunkett)
“Firefighters work on putting out a fire at a seven-story building after a small private plane crashed into a building that houses the Internal Revenue Service in Austin, Texas on Thursday Feb. 18, 2010.” (more)

“The 2010 Austin plane crash occurred on February 18, 2010, when Andrew Joseph Stack III, flying his Piper Cherokee PA-28-236 (Aircraft registration: N2889D) plane, crashed into Building I of the Echelon office complex in Austin, Texas, United States. Two people were killed (including the pilot), and thirteen injured. An Internal Revenue Service (IRS) field office is located in the four-story office building along with other state and federal government agencies. Prior to the crash, Stack had posted a manifesto dated February 18, 2010 to his business website.” (wikipedia)


• Feb 22, 2010 link notes tagged: technology  communication  plane crash  destruction  suicide  self-destruction  building  lost  loser  alone  society  economy 

skandalon


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