TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「The safety of a South Pacific island nation was not the only illusion destroyed in #Christchurch on March 15, when a white supremacist showed up to two mosques with a carload of guns and a video camera on his helmet. Also undone was the popular conception of international terrorism, writes @charliecamp6ell. The attacks that took at least 50 lives established white supremacy as a threat to Western societies nearly as formidable as terrorism carried out in the name of fundamentalist Islam—and one that, if anything, appears to draw even more oxygen from the Internet. Long pigeonholed as “homegrown” or “domestic” terrorism, the violence of right-wing extremists emerged in remote #NewZealand as a transnational threat. Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern told TIME that governments around the world needed to “take a united front on what is a global issue,” especially in tackling the places on the Internet where radicalization takes root. In this photograph on March 17, a police officer helps move flower tributes at a Linwood mosque memorial site. Read more at the link in bio. Photograph by @virginiawoodsjack for TIME」3月22日 22時09分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 3月22日 22時09分


The safety of a South Pacific island nation was not the only illusion destroyed in #Christchurch on March 15, when a white supremacist showed up to two mosques with a carload of guns and a video camera on his helmet. Also undone was the popular conception of international terrorism, writes @charliecamp6ell. The attacks that took at least 50 lives established white supremacy as a threat to Western societies nearly as formidable as terrorism carried out in the name of fundamentalist Islam—and one that, if anything, appears to draw even more oxygen from the Internet. Long pigeonholed as “homegrown” or “domestic” terrorism, the violence of right-wing extremists emerged in remote #NewZealand as a transnational threat. Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern told TIME that governments around the world needed to “take a united front on what is a global issue,” especially in tackling the places on the Internet where radicalization takes root. In this photograph on March 17, a police officer helps move flower tributes at a Linwood mosque memorial site. Read more at the link in bio. Photograph by @virginiawoodsjack for TIME


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