AgNoStiC MuSliM
ADVISORS
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2007
- Messages
- 25,259
- Reaction score
- 87
- Country
- Location
Yes, I was referring to those in bold, which was the case of the Babri Mosque and Gujrat riots. Obviously a riot that breaks out from a protest over poverty, inflation, unemployment etc. can be argued to be a more spontaneous event, though the role of protest movement leaders in instigating violence with the express purpose of making a 'bigger splash' cannot be ruled out.Not really, riots happen for many reasons, sometimes no reason at all that can be told, and are usually a reaction to current events or environment. They are a function of population density and class stratification. Terrorism is premeditated violence to instill fear, which in turn brings about change in government policy or social order. It happens regardless of population density, even in fairly egalitarian situations. A riot needs no goal.
It is like comparing hurricanes and car wrecks.....They are both terrible, and do damage, but the mechanisms and reasons are unrelated.
Now, intentional, directed riots inspired by political leaders are a different matter...
Nonetheless, such protests are not grounded in religious motives at least. That cannot be said about the examples I mentioned, which did indeed have religion as a primary motive, and the Hindu leadership leading the riots had violent acts against those of another religion as a primary goal of their actions.