http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/12/magazine/12FOB-IdeaLab-t.html
Gambetta
and Hertog found engineers only in right-wing groups — the ones that
claim to fight for the pious past of Islamic fundamentalists or the
white-supremacy America of the Aryan Nations (founder: Richard Butler,
engineer) or the minimal pre-modern U.S. government that Stack and
Bedell extolled.
Among Communists, anarchists and other groups whose shining ideal lies in the future,
the researchers found almost no engineers. Yet these organizations
mastered the same technical skills as the right-wingers. Between 1970
and 1978, for instance, the Baader-Meinhof gang in Germany staged
kidnappings, assassinations, bank robberies and bombings. Seventeen of
its members had college or graduate degrees, mostly in law or the
humanities. Not one studied engineering.
The
engineer mind-set, Gambetta and Hertog suggest, might be a mix of
emotional conservatism and intellectual habits that prefers clear
answers to ambiguous questions — “the combination of a sharp mind with a
loyal acceptance of authority.” Do people become engineers because they
are this way? Or does engineering work shape them? It’s probably a
feedback loop of both, Gambetta says.
http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/why-are-engineers-prone-becoming-jihadi-terrorists-middle-east-1530669
http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/why-are-engineers-prone-becoming-jihadi-terrorists-middle-east-1530669
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