But Israel and Palestine are NOT a terroristic region ... YES SURE! Part 2
Part 1: https://t.me/TerrorismTelegram/357
The first female Palestinian bombers also caused a huge media stir. The public in Israel and indeed the world over was shocked to find that the terrorist cause was not limited to Palestinian militant men, but that young women were also willing to don suicide belts (and backpacks) to go into Israel and detonate themselves.
As Israelis realized that Palestinian groups were taking advantage of this they began to include females at checkpoints or increasingly to automate their search procedures – a costly venture in both cases - involving increased labor and equipment costs.
For the most part male and female suicide terrorists share a similar set of motivations for carrying out suicide terrorism which vary less by gender and more by whether they are radicalized inside or outside of conflict zones. The main differences between them are that women face some increased psychological vulnerabilities to being radicalized into the extremist role of suicide bomber which include: increased incidence of traumatic stress; depression; anxiety; dissociative disorders; blocked roles; and they may be more reactive to the loss of familial and intimate relationships while seeing only one way to violently revenge such losses. But females also enjoy some increased protective factors from becoming suicide bombers: those in conservative societies are more restricted in general, and thus find it harder to interact with and join groups; there is often societal resistance to the terror group’s use of female bombers; and terror groups themselves often block their participation by refusing to send females as bombers. Another important difference is that, as in most of society, female bombers are much less likely to be in leadership roles within terror groups, which may mean that their radicalization trajectory is generally shorter ...
Related:
https://t.me/EuthanasiaTelegram/430
https://t.me/EuthanasiaTelegram/437
Part 1: https://t.me/TerrorismTelegram/357
The first female Palestinian bombers also caused a huge media stir. The public in Israel and indeed the world over was shocked to find that the terrorist cause was not limited to Palestinian militant men, but that young women were also willing to don suicide belts (and backpacks) to go into Israel and detonate themselves.
As Israelis realized that Palestinian groups were taking advantage of this they began to include females at checkpoints or increasingly to automate their search procedures – a costly venture in both cases - involving increased labor and equipment costs.
For the most part male and female suicide terrorists share a similar set of motivations for carrying out suicide terrorism which vary less by gender and more by whether they are radicalized inside or outside of conflict zones. The main differences between them are that women face some increased psychological vulnerabilities to being radicalized into the extremist role of suicide bomber which include: increased incidence of traumatic stress; depression; anxiety; dissociative disorders; blocked roles; and they may be more reactive to the loss of familial and intimate relationships while seeing only one way to violently revenge such losses. But females also enjoy some increased protective factors from becoming suicide bombers: those in conservative societies are more restricted in general, and thus find it harder to interact with and join groups; there is often societal resistance to the terror group’s use of female bombers; and terror groups themselves often block their participation by refusing to send females as bombers. Another important difference is that, as in most of society, female bombers are much less likely to be in leadership roles within terror groups, which may mean that their radicalization trajectory is generally shorter ...
Related:
https://t.me/EuthanasiaTelegram/430
https://t.me/EuthanasiaTelegram/437