integer on Mon, 24 Sep 2001 12:30:50 +0200 (CEST) |
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> >>Although we do not know for sure the identities of the people > involved, > >>reports say they were mostly Saudis, Yemenis and an Egyptian (Atta). > No > >>information showing they spent any substantial time in Afghanistan has > > >>been presented to my knowledge, and Bush has refused to give evidence > to > >>the Taliban, but has said a case will be presented to Pakistan. I > hope > >>some version of those proofs is made generally public. Several of them > had > >>some US and European education. > > > >Thanks. Do you know what sort of education it was? Did it include > anything besides > >science, math, and technology? I understand from people in > international education > >that people like those we are discussing are adept at taking what they > want from American > >education, and leaving the rest. Will try to find that post. --I > wonder if one reason the extremist > >groups are opposed to the education of women is that women might bemore > susceptible > >to learning about values from other cultures than men, who seem more > readily able to restrict > >what they learn to how-to things. > > > >>Atta had a master's degree and was described as highly perceptive and > >>intelligent by his thesis advisor (see earlier reports). He flew the > >>first WTC plane. He obviously somehow felt deeply that this was an > >>honourable act. The ability of these groups to enlist intelligent > support > >>needs study. Education is not a very strong antidote to extremism. I > >>recall the oft stated point that 5 of the 9 men who planned the Nazi > final > >>solution had PhDs. > > > >I can understand that. A narrow technological education can leave > firmly > >held attitudes intact. _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold