Los Angeles Times

America has a terror problem

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Re “Are the recent mass shootings terrorist acts?” Opinion, Aug. 7

Virginia Heffernan’s attempt to clear the mass killers in California, Texas and Ohio of terrorism charges is a cry for help from the political status quo.

Leaving aside the incoherenc­e of her argument, which rambles from the French Revolution to political correctnes­s and various points in between, she defines terrorists as “those resisting a government or an occupying army.”

Heffernan’s standard would absolve the Saudi Arabian terrorists of 9/11, who were engaged in neither of those two actions.

The United Nations General Assembly has defined terrorists as those who commit “criminal acts intended or calculated to provoke a state of terror in the general public,” without regard to any specific political, religious or ideologica­l motivation.

By the United Nations’ definition, these mass killers in our country are clearly terrorists. Leigh Clark

Granada Hills

Heffernan’s column makes good points, including her statement that “it is imprecise to equate an ideology, white supremacy, which apparently motivated at least one of the attacks, with a tactic, terrorism.”

But in the El Paso shooting, the purpose appeared to be to terrorize that city’s majority Latino population to the point that they would no longer want to live in the United States. The alleged shooter drove nine hours to get to El Paso. The “invasion” rhetoric also had a hand in swaying the accused Pittsburgh synagogue shooter, who thought the Jewish parishione­rs were enabling this so-called invasion.

Similarly, the Ku Klux Klan should also be characteri­zed as a terrorist organizati­on, as it caused African American citizens to flee their communitie­s and tried to scare them away from voting. Ben Nethercot

Topanga

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