yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Former CIA Operative Reveals 3 Roots of Terrorism: Wages, Liberty, Language |Amaryllis Fox/Big think


3m read
·Nov 3, 2024

Processing might take a few minutes. Refresh later.

I think one of the really scary and overwhelming things about terrorism can be the idea that it’s this giant boogeyman that is really difficult to comprehend, and is terrifying, and comes along in the night out of nowhere and steals your family members or loved ones away.

And for me, my life’s work has really been understanding the small logical puzzle pieces that when taken together create that boogeyman so that you can take it apart into manageable pieces and actually begin to understand what drives these inconceivable actions.

So, when you take this overwhelming boogeyman of terrorism and you begin to tease it apart based on the data and look for patterns that turn up again and again each time a terrorist plot is planned in a different territory throughout the historical data, you begin to notice patterns that might not seem obvious to begin with.

So, things like the percentage beneath livable wage that a border guard gets paid, which, of course, gives rise to the possibility of accepting a bribe to let somebody just sneak across the border or hand a package to you. If that bribe is the difference between being able to feed your kids that month or not, it’s a pretty understandable small choice for that individual actor and yet has given rise to perhaps a terrorist act being able to take place even though the law of the territory should have prevented it.

So, another example would be the rate of change of things like freedom of the press or freedom of speech—not the scores themselves, but the rate of change—which goes to the difficulty that societies experience when they suddenly open up and allow liberties that many of the more traditional members of society haven’t been accustomed to in the past.

There are strategies for taking communities through those evolutions, but without those strategies in place, it can seem very jarring. And we experience that even in a mature democracy like ours, where when certain changes take place quickly, it can take portions of the community time to be comfortable with them and to catch up in a political environment.

Another example would be the ratio of hookah bars to madrasas, and there you begin to see, you know, tensions between more traditional, religious elements in society and a younger demographic. In many countries where you have more than 50 percent in that youth demographic, there’s a big cultural rift there that can often give rise to lack of understanding or the feeling that young people are not being incorporated into society and need some other outlet for their feelings of frustration (and eventually rage).

Another really interesting one that we see is how good machine translation is for a local language. So often we think that libraries in the olden days and now the provision of hardware and internet access points can be a great tool in the fight against extremism.

All of a sudden, young people in a given area have access to the sum total of human knowledge. How great is that? And yet, if the language that’s spoken, the dialect in that region is not very well translated by Google Translator or other artificial intelligence programs, then really access to the internet for the majority of young people who don’t necessarily speak another language or dialect is not terribly meaningful, because they’re generally seeing sites that for small dialects are actually created in their vicinity and may not offer perspectives that are particularly different from what they’re hearing around them in a given day.

So, there are a number of these correlations, and the beauty, you know, my dad’s an economist and I grew up in a household that loved throwing data around around the dinner table.

And the beauty of data is that you can look at huge sets across many different time periods and geographies and see patterns that emerge so starkly that you can’t ignore them.

These kinds of inputs are really helpful in understanding how regular human beings, like you and me, who grew up in different environments subject to different inputs could find themselves with different perspectives...

More Articles

View All
Animal communication
Let’s talk a little bit about animal communication. In general, communication is one party giving information to another party somehow. It doesn’t even have to be one to one; it could be one person giving or one animal—if we’re talking about animal commun…
Variance of a binomial variable | Random variables | AP Statistics | Khan Academy
What we’re going to do in this video is continue our journey trying to understand what the expected value and what the variance of a binomial variable is going to be, or what the expected value or the variance of a binomial distribution is going to be, wh…
Ranger Mentality | No Man Left Behind
Part of the Ranger creed is: I will never leave a fallen comrade. To follow it to the end of an enemy, that’s just one part of the Ranger creed. The Ranger creed has six stanzas to it, and we would say it every morning. Every morning before we started wor…
Alexander the Great takes power | World History | Khan Academy
Going to talk about one of the most famous conquerors in all of human history, and that is Alexander the Great. But before talking about all of the things that he conquered, let’s think about how he got started out, and in particular, how he’s able to con…
Help Khan Academy this giving season
Hi everyone, Sal KH here from Khan Academy. I’m here to ask if you’re in a position to do so to seriously think about supporting Khan Academy and its mission of free, world-class education for anyone, anywhere. As you can imagine, that is a very big miss…
PR + Content for Growth by Kat Mañalac and Craig Cannon
Now we have Cat and with Craig later to talk about PR for content, PR and content for growth. Thanks, thank you. Jeff. Hi everyone, I’m Cat Min. Alec, I’m a partner at Y Combinator, and during my time at YC, I’ve helped hundreds of companies with their l…