james_davis_nicoll (
james_davis_nicoll) wrote2014-10-22 02:48 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Possible terrorist event in Ottawa
Parliament Hill came under attack today after a man with a rifle shot a soldier standing guard at the National War Memorial in downtown Ottawa, before seizing a car and driving to the doors of Parliament Hill's Centre Block nearby.
MPs and other witnesses reported several shots fired inside Parliament, and a gunman has been confirmed dead inside the building, shot by the House of Commons sergeant-at-arms, according to MPs' eyewitness accounts.
no subject
no subject
Since, so far as we now know, the guy involved in isn't whatsoever. Narrative isn't your friend; facts might be useful, but a story won't be.
no subject
Sources: Ottawa gunman had ties to jihadists
http://edition.cnn.com/2014/10/23/world/ottawa-shooting/
no subject
If quartering yourself on a mosque without permission or prior arrangement is "ties to jihadists", Richard I Lionheart had "ties to jihadists".
Michael Zehaf-Bibeau was a (certainly) homeless (probable; he said he was) drug addict with a whole pile of personal issues who said and claimed a lot of things. It's not obvious any of them were factual. (It's not obvious the 2011 court-ordered psych assessment was a jewel of accuracy, either.)
Me, I'd kinda like to know how the homeless drug addict with no income got a rifle. I'm pretty sure the investigators are interested in that, too, so how about not deciding you know what's going on until there's some actual facts in the case? It's much better for the digestion than either CNN or frightening yourself with Islamic bogey-men.
no subject
We've got an ideology based in a book that has nothing but hatred on nearly every page. (You'd know that if you'd bothered to read it. But you have not, and you will not.)
That ideology was begun by a warlord child rapist. Again, you'd know that if you'd read their other texts on the life of Mohammad.
We've got people following its commands every day, all over the world. They refer to their book, they refer to their prophet. Sometimes they even quote chapter and verse, WHILE they're doing their slaughter.
And STILL people like you refuse to admit this is Islam.
Contrast this situation with the few incidents there have been in America of people killing abortionists. In that case, you'd be calling them a Christian from the start and not waiting until any facts were known. (Though there are no facts to support such a thing, since Christianity neither commands nor condones such acts.)
To this day I still see Timothy McVeigh referred to as a Christian, when there is ZERO evidence that he professed any such thing, and when there is ZERO evidence that the Bible commands or condones such acts.
But here? Nope. Nothing to do with Islam!
Remarkable. As I said, I ought to be used to it by now. But the willful blindness of people even in the face of blatant reality still shocks me.
no subject
Fear, though, fear is definitely relevant to behaviour because fear makes you stupid.
You're ostensibly selling fear, but you're also selling additional stupid; the idea that there's a billion people out there with this one thing in common and it makes them all the same is risible from first principles.
I'm not buying.
no subject
So?
"I don't see people's religion as especially relevant to their behaviour, though it is likely to be relevant to their rationalizations."
What were your thoughts in this regard when you read the Koran?
Oh, wait. You've never read it. Right?
You know NOTHING about Islam. You care NOTHING about the facts regarding Islam.
And yet you will excuse and defend it and rationalize it until the day you die - even if it's at the hands of someone who is giving you chapter and verse on why they are slitting your throat.
It's simply remarkable how people continue and continue and CONTINUE to deny the obvious, while at the same time REFUSING to read the Koran or any of the hadith.
no subject
It doesn't matter what's written in the Koran. (Or the Bible, or the Rig Veda, or various Sutras, or any such thing.) It matters what people want to do. That controls the stories they tell themselves about themselves.
no subject
Fairly early in the coverage, the CBC interviewed a construction worker who suggested there was a second, possibly unarmed, suspect but either that was not the case or the police are sitting on the info.
I haven't heard whether the other wounded individual (leg wound) was injured by the suspect or by friendly fire.
I haven't checked our host's link but there is a Globe and Mail video showing the advance down the corridor that resulted in the death of the suspected shooter.
no subject
no subject
no subject
I don't know how one would compare that to being in charge of Parliamentary security, since the things are not the same kind of things at all, but the mace means something.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
I'm an idiot, I know.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
No facts have emerged from the investigation as yet beyond names and corpses; that the events in Ottawa and Quebec are linked hasn't been established.
Trick is to not get stuck in a narrative.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
smoke and mirrors
bullshit
*looks askance*
Re: *looks askance*
Re: *looks askance*
Re: *looks askance*
no subject
Back in 1983 when I traveled to Washingon, D.C. as part of a trip to Worldcon that year in Baltimore, I and a friend who lived there went to visit the U.S. Capitol and we both just walked in and strolled around the empty Senate chambers. No guards, no nothing for security. It was kinda cool. Then a few months later this happened:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1983_United_States_Senate_bombing
and that was that for the U.S. Capitol being casually open to the public. I don't know what additional security measures will be taken on Parliament Hill after this attack, but I'm sure there will be limits placed on easy access.
no subject
Plus there's something of a tradition of having Parliament Hill open to pedestrians, as distinct from the Houses of Parliament.
If the narrative goes "pitiful nutcase", even Harper is going to have trouble instituting tougher measures. It's really tough in conservative frames to impugn the competence of the Sergeant-at-Arms who personally shot the attacker. Especially given Harper's own prompt departure to an unknown secure location.
no subject
As for Harper's quick departure during the incident, GOOD! The last thing that's needed is to complicate things by having a head of state present. You delegate matters instead to those prepared to deal with it, like the Seargant-at-Arms did.
no subject
Evacuating the building if instructed? Sure, that's only sensible. Getting on a plane and vanishing into an unknown location? Especially as the cabinet wasn't? It looks more than a bit skittish.
The Mop and Pail are, down at the bottom, hopelessly authoritarian, and thus subject to freakouts. They should calm down in a day or two and look embarrassed.
no subject
no subject