Yes, and so were the Catholics who tried to blow up Parliament in 1605, the IRA and Orange Volunteer terrorists in Northern Ireland,
I'm sorry, do you think I don't know about Northern Ireland? Are you seriously saying that?
You're so fixated on the single tree of terrorism that you're missing the forest of my overall point.
I am, see above, have a working understanding of the IRA. I haven't finished watching Caprica yet (the back half is still airing here), but if I
was going to draw an IRA analogy, the attempts at gun-running to Tauron probably fit best. In these episodes Tauron emigrants living on Caprica feel a patriotic interest in sending money back to Tauron to fight the struggle - something that actually happened with Irish-Americans and the IRA.
The approach of the STO and the ideology of the STO are clearly more inspired by Islamic terrorism and, to be specific, international Islamic terrorism (the absence of any apparent nationalist agenda means it's not as like, let's say, Hamas). So we are dealing witha particular kind of terrorism.
The closest one gets to a nationalist type of terrorism - more akin to the Basque, Irish, and Palestinian situations - would be on Gemenon, where the church is based and fights wars with the Gemenese polytheists. Even here the church is portrayed as an international organization, though, which happens to have its spiritual center at Gemenon.
Irish terrorism, for example, is explicitly couched in nationalist terms: On the Unionist side, it is about maintaining the link with Great Britain, and on the Republican side, it is about uniting the island as one republic. Religion works tribally - Unionists are traditionally ethnically Scots-Irish and denominationally Protestant, while Republicans are traditionally ethnically Irish Gaels and denominationally Catholic. This is not universally true, obviously, but it's the baseline it's drawn across. So while religion is part of the identity politics - bound up with race and professed nationality - it does not have a stated internationally religious component.
The terrorism of al-Qaeda, however, has an internationalist bent influenced by Sayyid Qutb and a broad, specifically pan-Sunni Islamic agenda... which is a little closer to STO than the IRA.
It's the same in that what's normative in our society is treated as a fringe belief in the Moore fantasy universe.
No, I'm aware of that. What I was pointing out that in
Caprica, a normative belief - monotheism - is relegated to a fringe belief, but in a way that mimics the real world place one variety has as a fringe belief. So it works on the first level (beliefs reversed) but then it's interesting to note the way they have
not been reversed.