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Apr. 14th, 2004 07:51 am
bryant: (Default)
[personal profile] bryant

From last night’s press conference:

“The report itself, I’ve characterized it as mainly history. And I think when you look at it you’ll see that it was talking about a ‘97 and ‘98 and ‘99. It was also an indication as you mentioned that that bin Laden might want to hijack an airplane, but as you said, not to fly into a building but perhaps to release a person in jail. In other words, serving as a blackmail. And of course that concerns me. All those reports concern me.”

I gotta wonder. What steps do you take to prevent a hijacking carried out in order to fly a plane into a building, and what steps do you take to prevent a hijacking carried out in order to free someone from jail? And how are they different? I can’t help thinking that the purpose of a hijacking doesn’t have so very much to do with how you prevent it.

Date: 2004-04-14 08:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] marphod.livejournal.com
It might.

People who are willing to die for their cause are willing to die. Which means potentially lethal prevention techniques are less likely to stop them, than people who want to live. I can imagine situations where the difference matters, although I'm not sure any of them are non-contrived differences (e.g. "Here, run across this mine field to get the plane.").

Date: 2004-04-14 09:52 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tahnan.livejournal.com
But the thing is that, while someone willing to crash a plane into a building isn't worried about dying, that doesn't mean that a lethal prevention technique won't stop them from achieving their goal. Insofar as they're goal isn't actually to die, per se.

Date: 2004-04-14 10:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] marphod.livejournal.com
But they are, inherently, willing to accept a generally greater degree of risk.

If they are planning to die, their finances and posessions aren't as much of an issue. THey won't need them after they're dead. Their physical health only needs to be good enough to carry out their plans -- it won't matter if they would die a few months or weeks later due to complications. Etc.

They may not be willing to die for _any_ cause, but as long as the reasoin they die is putting significant effort forth towards their goal, risk-taking behavior is much more likely.

Date: 2004-04-14 10:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] marphod.livejournal.com
b) Well, that is a possiblity. I meant that it is significantly more likely that they will want to live.

a) There are no sure-things. The issue is whether the hijacker will be able to continue, with a reasonable likelyhood of succeeding. If they've come to grips with their own death and accepted that fact, they are open to riskier activities that increase the likelyhood of success. Put it this way: Assume they have 2 opportunities; one where they have a 50% chance of getting to the plane, but have a 90% chance of success, if they get to the plane and another with 80% chance of getting to the plane but only a 20% chance of success, which would they take? Does it matter if they know they will die either way in the attempt?

Admittedly, this is entirely subjective, as I don't have any experience in the situation, but extrapolating from case where I've already accepted reprocussions for an action, I am generally more willing to accept risks to get to the goal.

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