and all other forms of terrorism is
the divine government of God.
World Government Coming
The government of God is based
on the laws of God. If these laws
were followed, the causes of terror–
ism at every leve! of human en–
deavor would be removed.
Notice Isaiah 2:2: " In the last
days Jerusalem and the Temple of
the Lord
will
become the world's
greatest attraction, and people from
many lands will fiow there to wor–
ship the Lord ..."
(The Living
Bible).
Continuing on to verse 4:
"The Lord
will
settle international
disputes;
all the nations will convert
their weapons of war into imple–
ments of peace. Then at last all wars
will stop and all military training
will end."
Nations will no longer be allowed
to squabble and war. Political ter–
rorist groups will be punished.
Criminal behavior will disappear as
God's Law becomes written in the
minds of men everywhere.
Says God, ''This is the agreement
1 will make with the people of Israel
[and ultimately all humankind] ... 1
will write my laws into their minds
so that they will always know my
will, and I will put my laws in their
hearts so that they will want to obey
them" (Hebrews
10:16,
The Living
Bible).
Would-be terrorists willlearn that
God commands, "Thou shalt not
kill" (Exodus 20:
13).
They willlearn
that kidnapping and stealing are
capital sins
in
the eyes of God -
punisbable by death. They will be
taught that even harboring thoughts
of hatred is the same as having mur–
der in one's heart (I John 3:
15).
Under God's government, anyone
who even contemplates skyjacking
will hear a voice behind him warn–
ing, "No, this is the way; walk here"
(Isaiah
30:21,
The Living Bible).
Air
piracy will be stopped before it has
a chance to get started!
That is the way to stop airborne
terrorism. And it will work!
o
8
PROFILEOF THE
PIRATES
DAV ID G.
HUBBARD,
a Dalias psychiatrist whose studies of some
50 sky pirates hove made him one of the world's foremost authori–
ties on the character and personality of sky jackers . In a recent in–
terview with
The
PLAIN TRUTH,
Hubbard discussed some remarkable
conclusions about these highly publ icized men.
Y
ou
M I GHT
expect the typical
airborne terrorist to display
about the same characteristics as
any bank robber, kidnapper, or ex–
tortionist. But according to Dalias
psychiatrist David G. Hubbard, it
just isn't so.
Dr. Hubbard strongly maíntains
that most ai r pirates, particularly
those involved in U. S. skyjackíngs,
comprise a unique group of indi–
viduals possessing remarkable sim–
ilarities in
background,
personality, and character. His
conclusions are based on personal
interviews over the past four years
with sorne 50 captured skyjackers
themselves. (Dr. Hubbard has
published his findings in a book
entitled
The Skyjacker
-
His
Flights ofFancy.).
Instead of the brave desperados
they are purported to be, Dr. Hub–
bard found the typical skyjacker to
be weak - a loner whose act of pi–
racy was the culmination of a life
offailure and frustration.
Parent al lnfluence
Dr. Hubbard told
The
P LAIN
T RUTH
in a recent interview that
most of the men he talked to had
alcoholic fathers who were prone
to fits of violence. Strangely
enough, their mothers tended to be
very religious. Most skyjackers
grew up detesting "the old man"
whi le siding with "Ma." As a re–
sult, they usually carne to associate
their mothers with the forces of
"good" and God, whereas they as–
sociated their fathers with t he
forces of evil and the Devil.
Due largely to their mothers' re–
ligious infiuence, most grew up ex–
tremely church-oriented. Many
lived in hope of heaven and
in
fear
of hel l. (For the clear Bibl ical ex–
planation of these doctrines, write
for our free articles "What Is the
Reward of the Saved - Heaven?"
and "There ls a Real Hell Fire!")
Most skyjackers neither smoked
nor drank. Many expressed them–
selves in religious platitudes. Sorne
recalled earlier aspirations to the
ministry.
Loners
Dr. Hubbard discovered that the
air pirates he interviewed, almost
to the man, had failed in virtually
every aspect of life. Most were
loners and extremely shy. Most
had unusually slow, plodding per–
sonalities.