I've never really thought of Nero as a terrorist.
Somebody attacks an American naval vessel, executes the captain, and destroys the ship. Years later, he nukes New York. He says he’s going to destroy Washington next, then St. Paul, and all major American cities, one by one. He explains to a captive American captain that he’s doing this to avenge America’s crimes against his homeland, and to create a world free of America, the only way his homeland can ever be truly saved.
Is he a terrorist?
What is his homeland?
Traditionally his homeland is unnamed, but in Season 8 it’s the Islamic Republic of Kamistan.
What crimes? What ideology is he fighting for? What does he hope to achieve and why?
All of these are relevant factors in deciding this.
Oh, please. If this were happening, do you doubt everybody watching the news would consider him a terrorist? How could he
not be a terrorist?
Ryan, I don’t understand what’s going on with you. You said Nero’s a bad character because his behavior is unrealistic and has no explanation beyond the all-purpose excuse “He’s insane and that can explain anything.”
I disagreed. I pointed to many examples of real-world behavior that is similar to Nero’s. You said none of the examples is
exactly like Nero’s situation, so they’re immaterial.
I labeled him a terrorist. He does the kind of things terrorists do, he gives the kind of justifications terrorists give, and he fits the profile of real-world terrorists as described in WBATAW.
I moved the action from the 23rd century to a more familiar early 21st-century setting. I figured this behavior would be recognized by anyone as terrorism. Now you ask for details of the 21st-century Nero’s story, apparently hoping that in the details I give you you’ll find some kind of technicality that disqualifies him from some narrow definition of terrorist and invalidates the whole analysis.
I don’t want to kick blindly at moving goalposts. Let’s come to an agreement of what terrorism is. You reject WBATAW’s characterization of terrorism, so tell me how
you define it.
Also, a big part of terrorism to me is the scale. Terrorists wouldn't be capable of destroying America, much less entire worlds. That seems beyond terrorism.
You’re
really grasping at straws.
If al Qaeda acquires a WMD technology that can destroy American cities, they won’t use it because that’s “beyond terrorism”? Is that what you’re saying?
People like Nero don't really exist, and if they do it's incredibly rare.
I think we have established that people like Nero do really exist, they just don’t have the same kind of weaponry at their disposal.
I can understand that you believed at the beginning of this discussion that people like Nero don’t really exist. I have provided ample evidence that behavior like Nero’s does exist and is not exceptional. It’s not inconsistent with reality, it’s only inconsistent with the understanding of reality you had at the start of the discussion. What I don’t understand is why you don’t modify your understanding of reality to incorporate the real-world evidence presented in this thread.