Boxlicker101
Licker of Boxes
- Joined
- Apr 5, 2003
- Posts
- 33,665
From the material you linked "The September 11, 2001, attacks account for the largest number of fatalities in the United States in a single or closely-related attack resulting from violent extremism in recent decades. While the September 11, 2001, attacks were perpetrated by foreign violent extremists, from September 12, 2001 through December 31, 2016, attacks by domestic or “homegrown” violent extremists in the United States resulted in 225 fatalities, according to the ECDB. Of these, 106 were killed by far right violent extremists in 62 separate incidents, and 119 were victims of radical Islamist violent extremists in 23 separate incidents."
So essentially it is a nearly equal chance on the domestic side, because the radical muslims were more efficient. But as far as I am aware there haven't been many/any cases of international white supremacist terrorism in the US.
Do you mean to say you haven't read or heard about extremists coming to the US from Sweden or Germany or England to plant nail bombs and commit other hostile acts?
BTW, your figures above can't be correct. The total is 225, but how about attacks and murders by violent black extremists?