Thesis: The Taliban incorporates fear by means of intimidation to obtain the control they want.
TS: Power is one word that would go along with the strong reputation of the Taliban.
FB: The Taliban have established a name for themselves, not a positive one, but a very well-known name.
ES1: Who the Taliban are and their reasons for coming into power help for an understanding of the effect they have on the people they control. “The Taliban is a predominantly Pashtun, Islamic fundamentalist group that ruled Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001, when a US-led toppled the regime for providing refuge to alQaeda and Osama Bin Laden.” (Laub, 2014 p.1).
ES2:
SB:
ES1: “More than 220,000 Syrians have been killed since the start of the war in their country.”
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FB: The Taliban came into the country with their own ideas on how things should be done and how they felt they could make it better.
ES1: Their ideas to make life better was not better in the eyes of people in Afghanistan. In a recent article Zachary Laub writes "...enforced prohibitions the Taliban deemed in-Islamic, requiring women to wear the head-to-toe burqa, or chardi, banning music and television; and jailing men whose beards it deemed too short." (Laub, 2014 p.2).
ES2: In the novel The Kite Runner examples of this type of behavior is prominent when citizens get in trouble for cheering too loudly at sporting events. "The sight of him drew cheers from the few spectators. This time, no one was struck with a whip for cheering too loudly." (Hosseini, 2003 p.271).
SB: With the rise of the Taliban came the rise of their power and control over the countries they
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"...hurled the stone, at the blindfolded man in the hole. It struck the side of his head. The woman screamed again. The crowd made a startled "OH!" sound. I closed my eyes and covered my face with my hand." (Hosseini, 2003 p.271).
TB: With the control and power the Taliban hold also comes great fear for the people they use it against.
ES1: Fear of something can change the way you act and live your life just like it does for some in Afghanistan. "There is not much space for art or intellectual life when people fear going out, because getting caught in traffic might mean being blown up by a car bomb." (Giovanni, 2014 p.3)
ES2: Most of the novel had some degree of fear for at least one of the characters, for Amir one moment was waiting to speak directly to a Taliban official after witnessing the same man murder someone earlier that day. "I was thousands of miles from my wife, sitting in a room that felt like a holding cell, waiting for man I had seen murder two people that same day. It was insanity." (Hosseini, 2003 p.275).
CS: The appearance of the Taliban in everyday life for Afghans today, along with the lives of the characters in The Kite Runner have been impacted, without a doubt, in many