"The most extreme individuals and factions in Islamic countries are now more motivated than ever to kill Americans, and the number of potential terrorists has greatly expanded"
About this Quote
Fear does a lot of work in this sentence, and it does it with the cool, managerial cadence of a policy brief. Olver isn’t painting a scene of chaos; he’s building a rationale. “Most extreme individuals and factions” narrows moral responsibility to the fringe, but it also quietly expands the target set: “factions” can mean militias, parties, clerical networks, diaspora funders. The phrase “in Islamic countries” is the tell. It’s a geographic label that slides easily into a civilizational one, inviting listeners to mentally staple “Islamic” to “terrorist” without having to say it outright.
The line’s core move is escalation. “Now more motivated than ever” implies a before-and-after, a catalytic event that changed the incentive structure for violence. In early-2000s American political speech, that “now” usually pointed to U.S. actions abroad (wars, occupation, sanctions, alliances) even when speakers avoided naming them. The subtext is transactional: policy produces backlash, and backlash increases risk at home. That framing can be sober realism or a political lever, depending on how it’s deployed.
Then comes the statistic-shaped punch without statistics: “the number of potential terrorists has greatly expanded.” “Potential” is elastic enough to cover everyone from trained operatives to angry teenagers with internet access. It’s a warning, but also a permission slip for broad security measures and open-ended conflict. The intent reads less like cultural panic than legislative persuasion: justify surveillance budgets, interventions, or “homeland” infrastructure by recasting terrorism as an expanding labor market, with America as the recruiter-in-chief.
The line’s core move is escalation. “Now more motivated than ever” implies a before-and-after, a catalytic event that changed the incentive structure for violence. In early-2000s American political speech, that “now” usually pointed to U.S. actions abroad (wars, occupation, sanctions, alliances) even when speakers avoided naming them. The subtext is transactional: policy produces backlash, and backlash increases risk at home. That framing can be sober realism or a political lever, depending on how it’s deployed.
Then comes the statistic-shaped punch without statistics: “the number of potential terrorists has greatly expanded.” “Potential” is elastic enough to cover everyone from trained operatives to angry teenagers with internet access. It’s a warning, but also a permission slip for broad security measures and open-ended conflict. The intent reads less like cultural panic than legislative persuasion: justify surveillance budgets, interventions, or “homeland” infrastructure by recasting terrorism as an expanding labor market, with America as the recruiter-in-chief.
Quote Details
| Topic | War |
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