These barriers are non-sensical and create the perception that our city is less safe than it was three days ago. It is not. This was not terrorism. The Monday tragedy we mourn was an unfortunate, random, criminal act.http://www.blogto.com/city/2018/04/toronto-erects-concrete-barriers-around-major-pedestrian-zones/ …
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It will unfortunately
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People think they're not "organized" enough to be considered a threat, but what does "organized" even mean these days? You get enough like-minded people to subscribe to an aberrant ideology on 4Chan and you've got yourself an organization.
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Exactly
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Also, they're not exactly independent thinkers. If anyone's likely to just cut-and-paste a method of violence it's these dudes.
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He was well enough to hold jobs. https://www.toronto.com/news-story/8569272-exclusive-he-was-the-best-hire-we-never-hired-recruiter-says-of-alek-minassian/ … I was told I should be more empathetic that he probably needed mental help & was lured into misogyny. (Yeah, I couldn’t even)
End of conversation
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It is most certainly terrorism. He had an agenda, and he was supported by a group with radically disturbing attitudes about women's autonomy. Just because he was local doesn't make it less so. December 6, 1989 was an act of terrorism. This is an act of terrorism.
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