Jagz Mario / CC BY-SA 2.0

After reviewing terror attacks carried out in the U.S. since 2001, the New America Foundation discovered that the majority of the culprits had been none other than white Americans. Twice the number of people have been killed by white supremacist terrorist acts as in attacks by others, and that’s not even including the Sandy Hook, Chapel Hill or Aurora shootings, because these weren’t considered “ideological violence” by the organization and thus didn’t fall under the label of “terrorism.”

Good thing we went to two wars abroad to fight terrorism, huh?

From GlobalPost:

Almost twice as many people have died in attacks by right-wing groups in America than have died in attacks by Muslim extremists. Of the 26 attacks since 9/11 that the group defined as terror, 19 were carried out by non-Muslims. Yet there are no white Americans languishing inside the prison camp at Guantanamo Bay. And there are no drones dropping bombs on gatherings of military-age males in the country’s lawless border regions.

Attacks by right-wing groups get comparatively little coverage in the news media. Most people will struggle to remember the shooting at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin that killed six people in 2012. A man who associated with neo-Nazi groups carried out that shooting. There was also the married couple in Las Vegas who walked into a pizza shop and murdered two police officers. They left a swastika on one of the bodies before killing a third person in a Wal-Mart parking lot. Such attacks are not limited to one part of the country. In 2011, two white supremacists went on a shooting spree in the Pacific Northwest, killing four people.

Terrorism is hard to define. But here is its basic meaning: ideological violence. In its study, the New America Foundation took a narrow view of what could be considered a terror attack. Most mass shootings, for instance, like Sandy Hook or the Aurora, Colorado movie theater shooting — both in 2012 — weren’t included. Also not included was the killing of three Muslim students in North Carolina earlier this year. The shooter was a neighbor and had strong opinions about religion. But he also had strong opinions about parking spaces and a history of anger issues. So that shooting was left off the list.

Read more here.

—Posted by Natasha Hakimi Zapata

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