{"title":"《愤怒的日子:美国激进地下组织、联邦调查局和被遗忘的革命暴力时代》","authors":"K. Lamb","doi":"10.5860/choice.192201","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Days of Rage: America's Radical Underground, the FBI, and the Forgotten Age of Revolutionary Violence Bryan Burrough Penguin Press, 2015Bryan Burrough's book is especially pertinent now, as public officials and terrorism experts warn that the U.S. faces the \"highest threat level\" at any time in U.S. history. According to Rep. Devin Nunes (R-CA), the \"radicalization\" of young people via the Internet, and their recruitment into Islamic terrorist groups, constitutes a major security concern. The post-9/11 realities of an unsecured border coupled with the inability to track foreign nationals once they enter the U.S. seem to be noticed by some officials, but little is being done to rectify these problems. Several key recommendations from the 9/11 Commission, now more than ten years old, remain unimplemented to this day.The present focus is largely on foreign terrorists who get into the country and unleash deadly violence on Americans, such as the 19 Middle Easterners who carried out the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, and the Chechen-born brothers, Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev, whose bombs at the Boston Marathon killed three people and injured another 264 on April 15, 2013. But what about the threat from American citizens, either immigrants who are resident aliens or naturalized citizens, or perhaps the second generation of naturalized citizens, who are U.S.-born, and are committed to revolutionary causes, seek to kill en masse U.S. citizens, and plot violent acts of terrorism?As Burrough shows, the threat of domestic terrorism is nothing new. The U.S. has experienced waves of terrorist acts in the past from bomb-wielding revolutionaries, anarchists, black militants, and sordid radical ideologues. Burrough chronicles a not-too-distant decade of violent mayhem in Days of Rage.The author describes a long-forgotten period that in some ways parallels the present-day concerns over terrorism and public safety that American citizens and officials must now confront. The big difference is that many of those who plotted and carried out numerous terrorist bombings two generations ago escaped prosecution, or received minimal prison sentences, and reemerged over the years to become teachers and professors who now lead relatively successful lives. In some cases these former underground fugitives remain unapologetic about their unlawful militant past, but have assimilated anonymously back into society.Burrough tells the sordid tale of this bygone era in a lively, engagingly descriptive account in the context of the times, but also with an eye on contemporary developments. Early in his book, the author revisits one terrorist plot that went fatally awry.Shortly before noon on Friday, March 6, 1970, an explosion destroyed a Greenwich Village townhouse in New York City. After sorting through the smoldering debris, rescue workers discovered the partial remains of three bodies, which included a severed head. Initially the explosion seemed to be a telltale sign of a fiery blast from a gas leak, but investigators soon discovered the source of the explosion-the basement contained enough bomb-making materials to level the entire block. Five members of the Weather Underground, a violent faction of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), had planned to use the dynamite packed, nail-filled pipe bombs later that evening at an officers' dance at the Ft. Dix Army base in New Jersey. One, however, detonated prematurely, killing three members of Weather Underground's New York cell. The explosion thus claimed the lives of militant revolutionaries who had declared war on the U.S.The 1970s were marked by a widespread campaign of domestic terrorist bombings. During an eighteen-month period in 1971 and 1972 there were 2,500 bombings in the U.S., nearly five a day. Often the targets were federal installations, military bases, judges, government buildings, and various national landmarks including the Pentagon and U. …","PeriodicalId":52486,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Social, Political, and Economic Studies","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2015-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Days of Rage: America's Radical Underground, the FBI, and the Forgotten Age of Revolutionary Violence\",\"authors\":\"K. Lamb\",\"doi\":\"10.5860/choice.192201\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Days of Rage: America's Radical Underground, the FBI, and the Forgotten Age of Revolutionary Violence Bryan Burrough Penguin Press, 2015Bryan Burrough's book is especially pertinent now, as public officials and terrorism experts warn that the U.S. faces the \\\"highest threat level\\\" at any time in U.S. history. According to Rep. Devin Nunes (R-CA), the \\\"radicalization\\\" of young people via the Internet, and their recruitment into Islamic terrorist groups, constitutes a major security concern. The post-9/11 realities of an unsecured border coupled with the inability to track foreign nationals once they enter the U.S. seem to be noticed by some officials, but little is being done to rectify these problems. Several key recommendations from the 9/11 Commission, now more than ten years old, remain unimplemented to this day.The present focus is largely on foreign terrorists who get into the country and unleash deadly violence on Americans, such as the 19 Middle Easterners who carried out the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, and the Chechen-born brothers, Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev, whose bombs at the Boston Marathon killed three people and injured another 264 on April 15, 2013. But what about the threat from American citizens, either immigrants who are resident aliens or naturalized citizens, or perhaps the second generation of naturalized citizens, who are U.S.-born, and are committed to revolutionary causes, seek to kill en masse U.S. citizens, and plot violent acts of terrorism?As Burrough shows, the threat of domestic terrorism is nothing new. The U.S. has experienced waves of terrorist acts in the past from bomb-wielding revolutionaries, anarchists, black militants, and sordid radical ideologues. Burrough chronicles a not-too-distant decade of violent mayhem in Days of Rage.The author describes a long-forgotten period that in some ways parallels the present-day concerns over terrorism and public safety that American citizens and officials must now confront. The big difference is that many of those who plotted and carried out numerous terrorist bombings two generations ago escaped prosecution, or received minimal prison sentences, and reemerged over the years to become teachers and professors who now lead relatively successful lives. In some cases these former underground fugitives remain unapologetic about their unlawful militant past, but have assimilated anonymously back into society.Burrough tells the sordid tale of this bygone era in a lively, engagingly descriptive account in the context of the times, but also with an eye on contemporary developments. Early in his book, the author revisits one terrorist plot that went fatally awry.Shortly before noon on Friday, March 6, 1970, an explosion destroyed a Greenwich Village townhouse in New York City. After sorting through the smoldering debris, rescue workers discovered the partial remains of three bodies, which included a severed head. Initially the explosion seemed to be a telltale sign of a fiery blast from a gas leak, but investigators soon discovered the source of the explosion-the basement contained enough bomb-making materials to level the entire block. Five members of the Weather Underground, a violent faction of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), had planned to use the dynamite packed, nail-filled pipe bombs later that evening at an officers' dance at the Ft. Dix Army base in New Jersey. One, however, detonated prematurely, killing three members of Weather Underground's New York cell. The explosion thus claimed the lives of militant revolutionaries who had declared war on the U.S.The 1970s were marked by a widespread campaign of domestic terrorist bombings. During an eighteen-month period in 1971 and 1972 there were 2,500 bombings in the U.S., nearly five a day. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
《愤怒的日子:美国的激进地下组织、联邦调查局和被遗忘的革命暴力时代》布莱恩·伯勒《愤怒的日子:美国的激进地下组织、联邦调查局和被遗忘的革命暴力时代》布莱恩·伯勒的这本书现在显得尤为重要,因为政府官员和恐怖主义专家警告说,美国面临着美国历史上任何时候都没有过的“最高威胁级别”。加利福尼亚州共和党众议员德文·努内斯(Devin Nunes)表示,年轻人通过互联网“激进化”,并被伊斯兰恐怖组织招募,构成了一个主要的安全问题。一些官员似乎注意到了9/11后的现实,即边境不安全,加上外国人进入美国后无法追踪,但几乎没有采取任何措施来纠正这些问题。9/11调查委员会提出的几项重要建议至今仍未得到实施,这些建议至今已有十多年的历史。目前的重点主要是那些进入美国并对美国人发动致命暴力的外国恐怖分子,比如对世贸中心和五角大楼发动袭击的19名中东人,以及出生于车臣的焦哈尔和塔梅尔兰萨纳耶夫(Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev)兄弟,他们在2013年4月15日的波士顿马拉松赛上制造的炸弹造成3人死亡,264人受伤。但是,来自美国公民的威胁又如何呢?这些美国公民可能是作为永久外国人的移民,也可能是归化公民,或者是在美国出生的第二代归化公民,他们致力于革命事业,试图大规模杀害美国公民,并策划暴力恐怖主义行为。正如伯勒所说,国内恐怖主义的威胁并不是什么新鲜事。过去,美国经历了一波又一波的恐怖主义行为,其中包括持炸弹的革命者、无政府主义者、黑人武装分子、肮脏的激进理论家。伯勒在《愤怒的日子》中记录了不太遥远的十年暴力混乱。作者描述了一个被遗忘已久的时期,在某些方面与当今美国公民和官员必须面对的对恐怖主义和公共安全的担忧相似。最大的不同是,在两代人之前,许多策划和实施了大量恐怖爆炸事件的人逃脱了起诉,或者得到了最低限度的监禁,多年来,他们重新出现,成为教师和教授,现在过着相对成功的生活。在某些情况下,这些前地下逃亡者对他们的非法武装过去仍然没有道歉,但已经匿名地融入了社会。伯勒在时代背景下生动、引人入胜地描述了这个过去时代的肮脏故事,同时也关注了当代的发展。在书的开头,作者回顾了一次恐怖分子的致命阴谋。1970年3月6日,星期五,快到中午的时候,一场爆炸摧毁了纽约市格林尼治村的一栋联排别墅。在对闷烧的残骸进行分类后,救援人员发现了三具尸体的部分残骸,其中包括一颗被砍下的头颅。起初,爆炸似乎是煤气泄漏引起的剧烈爆炸的迹象,但调查人员很快发现了爆炸的根源——地下室里的炸弹制造材料足以夷平整个街区。“地下气象”是民主社会学生组织(SDS)的一个暴力派别,该组织的五名成员计划在当晚晚些时候在新泽西州迪克斯堡陆军基地举行的军官舞会上使用装满炸药、钉满钉子的管状炸弹。然而,其中一枚炸弹过早引爆,炸死了“地下气象”纽约分部的三名成员。这次爆炸夺去了向美国宣战的激进革命者的生命。20世纪70年代,国内恐怖主义爆炸活动广泛开展。在1971年和1972年的18个月期间,美国发生了2500起爆炸事件,几乎每天5起。袭击的目标通常是联邦设施、军事基地、法官、政府大楼和包括五角大楼和U. ...在内的各种国家地标
Days of Rage: America's Radical Underground, the FBI, and the Forgotten Age of Revolutionary Violence
Days of Rage: America's Radical Underground, the FBI, and the Forgotten Age of Revolutionary Violence Bryan Burrough Penguin Press, 2015Bryan Burrough's book is especially pertinent now, as public officials and terrorism experts warn that the U.S. faces the "highest threat level" at any time in U.S. history. According to Rep. Devin Nunes (R-CA), the "radicalization" of young people via the Internet, and their recruitment into Islamic terrorist groups, constitutes a major security concern. The post-9/11 realities of an unsecured border coupled with the inability to track foreign nationals once they enter the U.S. seem to be noticed by some officials, but little is being done to rectify these problems. Several key recommendations from the 9/11 Commission, now more than ten years old, remain unimplemented to this day.The present focus is largely on foreign terrorists who get into the country and unleash deadly violence on Americans, such as the 19 Middle Easterners who carried out the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, and the Chechen-born brothers, Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev, whose bombs at the Boston Marathon killed three people and injured another 264 on April 15, 2013. But what about the threat from American citizens, either immigrants who are resident aliens or naturalized citizens, or perhaps the second generation of naturalized citizens, who are U.S.-born, and are committed to revolutionary causes, seek to kill en masse U.S. citizens, and plot violent acts of terrorism?As Burrough shows, the threat of domestic terrorism is nothing new. The U.S. has experienced waves of terrorist acts in the past from bomb-wielding revolutionaries, anarchists, black militants, and sordid radical ideologues. Burrough chronicles a not-too-distant decade of violent mayhem in Days of Rage.The author describes a long-forgotten period that in some ways parallels the present-day concerns over terrorism and public safety that American citizens and officials must now confront. The big difference is that many of those who plotted and carried out numerous terrorist bombings two generations ago escaped prosecution, or received minimal prison sentences, and reemerged over the years to become teachers and professors who now lead relatively successful lives. In some cases these former underground fugitives remain unapologetic about their unlawful militant past, but have assimilated anonymously back into society.Burrough tells the sordid tale of this bygone era in a lively, engagingly descriptive account in the context of the times, but also with an eye on contemporary developments. Early in his book, the author revisits one terrorist plot that went fatally awry.Shortly before noon on Friday, March 6, 1970, an explosion destroyed a Greenwich Village townhouse in New York City. After sorting through the smoldering debris, rescue workers discovered the partial remains of three bodies, which included a severed head. Initially the explosion seemed to be a telltale sign of a fiery blast from a gas leak, but investigators soon discovered the source of the explosion-the basement contained enough bomb-making materials to level the entire block. Five members of the Weather Underground, a violent faction of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), had planned to use the dynamite packed, nail-filled pipe bombs later that evening at an officers' dance at the Ft. Dix Army base in New Jersey. One, however, detonated prematurely, killing three members of Weather Underground's New York cell. The explosion thus claimed the lives of militant revolutionaries who had declared war on the U.S.The 1970s were marked by a widespread campaign of domestic terrorist bombings. During an eighteen-month period in 1971 and 1972 there were 2,500 bombings in the U.S., nearly five a day. Often the targets were federal installations, military bases, judges, government buildings, and various national landmarks including the Pentagon and U. …
期刊介绍:
The quarterly Journal of Social, Political and Economic Studies (ISSN 0193-5941), which has been published regularly since 1976, is a peer-reviewed academic journal devoted to scholarly papers which present in depth information on contemporary issues of primarily international interest. The emphasis is on factual information rather than purely theoretical or historical papers, although it welcomes an historical approach to contemporary situations where this serves to clarify the causal background to present day problems.