top | item 10562986

Ask HN: What can we do against terrorist attacks, like the one in Paris?

19 points| mininao | 10 years ago

Hi, I live in paris, and I've been profoundly hit by the violence of tonight's attacks in Paris ( http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/14/world/europe/paris-shooting-attacks.html ) I think that as technology makers, we have a power to change the world. So my question is simple : What can we do to prevent these awful acts ?

Thanks. (I trust that the HN community is wise enough to discuss about this matter without violence, racism, etc..)

68 comments

order

kleer001|10 years ago

Technology can help increase empathy. At least I think it can. I hope it can.

That technology might help. Maybe by sharing the marginalized stories of vulnerable people.

We've tried fear and anger to stop these kind of things, but it's just like a whack-a-mole. Why don't we try empathy and understanding?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9IgOVOPLTYI

disclaimer: My heart goes out to all of those touched by needless violence. I in no way endorse violence of any kind, and the perpetrators of such deserve to be caught, tried, and if guilty, locked away for the rest of their lives. That said, those that do overt violence are not the root of the problem. They have (or had) friends and family that could have steered them in a different direction.

TurboHaskal|10 years ago

The more empathy the more effective terrorism becomes.

maxharris|10 years ago

The #1 thing you can do is to name the party responsible (once it is known for certain), and to name the ideology that motivates these repeated, ever more brazen attacks.

If this is what everyone thinks it is (but is cautiously tip-toeing around), "extremism" is not specific enough.

dynamic99|10 years ago

Didn't you just tip-toe around it?

kleer001|10 years ago

Hmmm, isn't that what they want? More attention?

stray|10 years ago

It is impossible to prevent while only criminals/terrorists have the weapons.

An armed citizenry is not so easily victimized.

notahacker|10 years ago

When your adversaries are armed with suicide bombs and have no intention of living, armed citizens are very easily victimised. Iraqi civilians have plenty of firearms, and minimal restrictions on carrying them.

What actually did reduce the magnitude of the damage caused in the Paris attacks was the kind of intrusive security checks on people entering the Stade de France that are usually rather less popular around here...

asadlionpk|10 years ago

Even if we don't count the side-effects of this. I don't think armed citizens stand a chance against highly trained militants with heavy weaponry.

miguelrochefort|10 years ago

The only true way to prevent these acts is to eliminate ideological conflicts altogether. Usually, this is done by letting the state pick a winning ideology and suppress those who don't adhere to it. This tends to ensure a level of homogeneity that makes violence obsolete.

A more moderate solution is to allow conflicting ideologies to exist as long as they don't reach extremes. This is usually done through mass surveillance, which supposedly should be able to catch extremists before they act. Sadly, we're still very far from Minority Report's level of accuracy.

Alternatively, we could adopt a more reactive approach which would focus on reducing the gravity of such events rather than trying to prevent them. Namely, law abiding citizens should be able to conceal-carry weapons. Although it couldn't stop all kinds of terrorist attacks, it could very well put a stop to most mass shootings. This assumes an important "good" to "bad" people ratio (where "good" is defined by the majority and/or by the state).

Basically, live in a society that's xenophobic and armed.

UnoriginalGuy|10 years ago

> Namely, law abiding citizens should be able to conceal-carry weapons. Although it couldn't stop all kinds of terrorist attacks, it could very well put a stop to most mass shootings.

Here we go again...

When I read this, in my head, this analogy comes to mind: "We could stop bombings by allowing all citizens to carry concealed bombs [to use in self-defense]."

Now obviously that is an absurd analogy, but it mirrors a lot of what you're suggesting: fight a dangerous weapon with another dangerous weapon, potentially put bystanders in harm's way, make it even harder to track/identify the good from bad, make it easier to obtain weapons.

The US has more mass killings than any other western nation, yet they also have concealed carry, clearly something isn't working here. Is the solution really "more guns, more guns?"

sirrocco|10 years ago

No, having guns won't help one bit. Just name one attack in the States that has been foiled by a citizen.

What will happen unfortunately is that the surveillance measures will increase exponentially, normal citizens will throw privacy out the window, terror attacks will still happen.

It's the world we live in.

lgieron|10 years ago

The terrosist attacks are caused by political, cultural and economic factors, I don't think technology has an important role to play in an eventual solution...

cJ0th|10 years ago

In the grand scheme of things this is possibly the correct answer. However, what technology can do is bring some meaning to more peoples life. One reason people do things like those which happened in Paris is due to the fact that these people are not integrated into a friendly, peaceful society. Thus they feel a void and need to fill it with something that gives them a sense of power and belonging. Technology can be used to enable people to create meaning for themselves. For Instance, the advent of digital music production enabled people who couldn't play a "real" instruments in the olden days to express themselves musically now. I know a guy who used to get into fights at night clubs until the day I introduced Cubase to him!

And even if these individuals are not strong enough to do something productive technology could at least give them a glimpse of power and belonging in online communities. For example, a person who is busy playing WoW all day won't get to shooting someone in the streets.

What I wrote above is, unfortunately, hugely idealistic. More realistically I see two options for this problem:

1. don't just bomb targets but level the ground. This is of course not something we actually want to do because it would kill many innocent people. Still from an unempathetic point of view: Is killing millions of people now worse than eventually allowing <made up stat>twice as many people to be killed over the comming decades</made up stat>? instead:

2. We have to fucking evolve and acknowledge that they found a bug in our system and "we are the best, democracy rules, those guys are in the wrong - why are they so mean?" as well as a couple of bombs simply don't cut it anymore. Instead, we should come off our high horses and work our ass off to address the (political, cultural, economical) domains OP mentions so that we can leave our current conception of the world behind us and progress to something that serves us better in the coming years. However, this is radical and it is hard to make a society move into this direction as all of us would have to question everything we do. Maybe finding time for teaching refugees your language for free is more important than working longer hours so that you contribute to pushing the GDP. Maybe moderate Muslims should do more to prevent those attacks even though it is neither their fault not their responsibility to do anything about it. Maybe the "average customer" should be more mindful when s/he goes shopping by making sure that s/he doesn't support supply chains which somehow benefit terror supporters. In short, every member of society has to work their ass of to bring some positive change about.

J_Darnley|10 years ago

Little at the moment. A largely open border to the rest of the Eurasian continent allows for an inflow of weapons even if you successfully collected all that are already here. Weak explosive devices can be made with common(ish) materials. Even with tight controls you will still get knife attacks. Just look at Palestine recently.

Tight controls will require a more authoritarian government. I for one don't want that but I expect we will get it and the masses will demand it. Yay for neighbours.

thrwwy123|10 years ago

Tech people can disable the forums where terrorists recruit and promote their ideology. There are many foreigners who join ISIS, and many who initiate attacks based upon what they read.

eivarv|10 years ago

Make people realize what types of thinking leads to these types of actions, in addition to under which conditions, how and why.

I think it's very strange that what we know of common errors of thinking (e.g. logical fallacies, cognitive biases, etc.) have no real place in our pop-, political or common intellectual culture. The fact that we don't use these "checklists" when evaluating ideas directly leads to the spread and rise of intellectually bankrupt ideas, or ways of thinking that make no sense (at best), all over the political spectrum.

Also: Education, equality, social mobility and inclusivity (all known to play their parts in this complex equation).

eivarv|10 years ago

Sorry; not to comment upon that which must not be commented upon, but I'd love to hear what people disagree with my post about, as opposed to not getting to know anything other than its popularity.

gesman|10 years ago

Long term - open dialogs.

Short term - allow law abiding citizens to carry guns to protect themselves. This will make life of police much easier and would save lives.

davidtron9999|10 years ago

suicides will increase overnight

colund|10 years ago

Unfortunately, I think the terrorists suffer from a severe lack of empathy. I'd say the terrorist seem to be psychopaths or schizofrenic. So probably they need to be de-brainwashed via some hard-to-reject facts. The problem with the world is that social structures work in cluster (especially with Internet) and it's hard to reach into social structures with people who have opposite beliefs for a meaningful discussion.

eivarv|10 years ago

I'm surprised so many people during the last days have said stuff like this here on HN, i.e. that these things have something to do with mental illness.

Do people really know this little about what mental illness (in this case psychopathy or schizophrenia) actually is?

I also thought it was widely known that very little is needed for people to be able to act abhorrently towards someone they identify as somehow other than themselves (e.g. sociological out-group, "otherization").

PerfectElement|10 years ago

I don't think it's hard to convince people to suppress or nurture their empathy towards certain groups, specially when they are indoctrinated from a young age. Just look at the way most of us care so much about certain animals' wellbeing, while completely ignore the suffering of others.

manuelh|10 years ago

Fight the causes, the real causes; stop neocolonialism (France has bombed Lebanon, Syria, Lybia, Afghanistan, Somalia, Iran, all Muslim countries, and I'm not quoting military intervention in Africa), education - but meaning sensibility from the West to Third country history (links to the technology issue below)

That's just to start.

atmosx|10 years ago

I hold equally responsible the extremist groups (ISIS, Al Qaida, etc.) and entirety of western and eastern governments (USA gov, EU, UK gov, China gov, Rus gov, France gov and my country's gov) for this mess. Our policies are the ones who allow these extremist groups to grow.

I feel that these events are connected a la V for Vendetta:

[0] In Afghanistan, tie between 9/11 and the war often gets lost

[1] U.S. Weaponry Is Turning Syria Into Proxy War With Russia

[2] Drone Strike in Yemen Hits Wedding Convoy, Killing 11

[3] EU and France deny any change in Syria policy

[4] Collateral Murder (Wikileaks - Iraq)

[5] Italy Arrests ISIS Terrorist Disguised As Refugee

[6] Syria: A human tragedy

[7] Cheney Insists Iraq War Was Worth It Because Of WMD

[8] Who are Isis? A terror group too extreme even for al-Qaida

[9] Charlie Hebdo Shooting

These are random links, I just collected from DDG mind you, nothing well-thought. I could start from the crusades I guess and everything would be equally aligned in my mind.

On a personal note feel terrorized. I was planning a trip to Paris this year. Now, I don't know. The only thing that remains, unfortunately, is fear. We can't see straight anymore.

Obama calls Paris attacks 'outrageous'. Is he willing to stop fueling the war in Syria?

“An eye for an eye will only make the whole world blind.” - Ghandi

“Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent.” - Asimov

[0] http://articles.latimes.com/2011/sep/10/world/la-fg-afghanis...

[1] http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/13/world/middleeast/syria-rus...

[2] http://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/13/world/middleeast/drone-str...

[3] http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/03/16/us-mideast-crisis-...

[4] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5rXPrfnU3G0

[5] http://dailycaller.com/2015/11/09/italy-arrests-isis-terrori...

[6] http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/insidesyria/2014/03/syri...

[7] http://thinkprogress.org/security/2013/10/29/2853061/cheney-...

[8] http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jun/11/isis-too-extrem...

[9] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charlie_Hebdo_shooting

junto|10 years ago

There is very little we can do in the short term. We have to understand the reasons why ISIS are targeting the west. They have a multiple pronged approach:

- Provoke the west to further attacks on Muslims. Ideally the deaths of Muslims in Muslim lands should include innocents. Drone strikes and bombings are good, because it helps them turn the local people to their side.

- Provoke the west to hatred and bigotry of the greyzone Muslims (moderates) living in the west. Ideally they feel further marginalised and excluded. They need to be turned to fight for the caliphate, or be killed with the rest of the 'kuffār' (western non-believers).

- Provide young impressionable marginalised Muslim male youths with 'heroic' role models. Ghettoes in Paris where the 2005 riots took place are an ideal breeding ground for marginalization. Most are unemployed, have no education and no opportunities.

- Removal of despotic dictators from Muslim lands. Promoting instability, unemployment and isolation improves the chances of additional soldiers to join the fight.

I highly recommend an article called "THE EXTINCTION OF THE GRAYZONE" [1]:

  The Muslims in the West will quickly find themselves between
  one of two choices, they either apostatize and adopt the 
  kufrī religion propagated by Bush, Obama, Blair, Cameron, 
  Sarkozy, and Hollande in the name of Islam so as to live 
  amongst the kuffār without hardship, or they perform hijrah 
  to the Islamic State and thereby escape persecution from the 
  crusader governments and citizens.
This shows how the aim is two end up with two sides. No greyzone. Finally this highlights what we are up against:

  As the world progresses towards al-Malhamah al-Kubrā, the 
  option to stand on the sidelines as a mere observer is being 
  lost. As those with hearts diseased by hypocrisy and bid’ah 
  are driven towards the camp of kufr, those with a mustard 
  seed of sincerity and Sunnah are driven towards the camp of 
  īmān.

  Muslims in the crusader countries will find themselves 
  driven to abandon their homes for a place to live in the 
  Khilāfah, as the crusaders increase persecution against 
  Muslims living in Western lands so as to force them into a 
  tolerable sect of apostasy in the name of “Islam” before 
  forcing them into blatant Christianity and democracy.
  
  Muslims in the lands ruled by the apostate tawāghīt will 
  find themselves driven to the wilāyāt of the Islamic State, 
  as the tawāghīt increase their imprisonment of any Muslim 
  they think might have a mustard seed of jealousy for his 
  religion, or lead them to apostatize by working as agents, 
  soldiers, and puppets serving the banner of the tāghūt.
  
  Mujāhidīn in the lands of jihād will find themselves driven 
  to join the ranks of the Khilāfah, or forced to wage war 
  against it on the side of those willing to cooperate with 
  the munāfiqīn and murtaddīn against the Khilāfah. If they do 
  not execute these treacherous orders, they will be 
  considered khawārij by their leaders and face the sword of 
  “independent” courts infiltrated by the Sufis, the Ikhwān, 
  and the Salūlī sects.

  Eventually, the grayzone will become extinct and there will 
  be no place for grayish calls and movements. There will only 
  be the camp of īmān versus the camp of kufr.
ISIS believe in a prophesy. They are trying to make it come true. If you look at the list of things above, we are falling slowly into their hands, one step at a time.

The sad thing is that there is no quick fix. We could leave the middle east and stop interfering. It would be a good first step to defusing tensions based on our presence there, but it would simply open the door to ISIS at the moment, leaving a vacuum for them to fill.

If we go full out war, with boots on the ground then we end up joining a fight that we cannot win.

I've heard calls to "nuke them back to the stone age". That's great, but many of them are living amongst us. Paris has had several terrorist attacks and the vast majority of the attacks were French born. The same went for the attacks in London.

Long term we need to add to the grey zone. In fact we need to westernise and have inclusive policies to make sure the marginalized Muslim youth (in fact all disenfranchised youths) are included in society. They need to see that they have a future.

The best thing we can do is to train them and employ them, making them valuable members of society and giving them something to feel proud of.

At the moment, poisonous Mullahs are doing that job a hell of a lot better than we are.

[1] Source: THE EXTINCTION OF THE GRAYZONE: https://archive.is/VE0jj#selection-459.1-463.388