The Resistance Hub Podcast
Why do some resistance movements collapse the moment they turn to violence, while others sustain decades-long campaigns? In this episode, we explore Dr. Gordon McCormick's equivalent response model and the concept of a "band of excellence" — the narrow range of violence that lets insurgents signal strength without triggering the backlash that destroys them. We trace how movements like the LTTE evolved from small guerrilla acts into a conventional fighting force, and how a single miscalculation — the assassination of Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi — cost them a vital external sanctuary. We look at al-Qaeda in Iraq, where Zarqawi's brutality against fellow Muslims triggered the Anbar Awakening, and at Sri Lanka's JVP, whose threats against soldiers' families provoked a swift and overwhelming state response. Along the way, we examine how political and economic hierarchies, foreign audiences, and simple trial-and-error shape where these thresholds actually sit. In the second half, we turn to the question of rationality itself: is violence a calculated tool, or does it follow its own internal logic once movements are underway? Drawing on rational choice theory, bounded rationality, and the psychology of fence-sitting populations, we unpack why insurgent decisions that look reckless in hindsight often make perfect sense from the inside — and why that internal logic so often fails to predict the reaction it provokes. A study in how violence communicates, how legitimacy is won and lost, and why restraint is sometimes the more strategic weapon.
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