“…Displaced revenge-retaliatory acts that are directed not against the original perpetrator, but rather against a third person who was not directly involved in the original act-is a form of vicarious retribution (Lickel, 2012;Lickel, Miller, Stenstrom, Denson, & Schmader, 2006), and it is conceptually related to (but not identical with) displaced aggression (Marcus-Newhall, Pedersen, Carlson, & Miller, 2000;Miller, Pedersen, Earleywine, & Pollock, 2003). Vicarious retribution occurs whenever those not directly involved in the original offense are involved in the retributive act-such as in the case of James Foley; or in the case of U.S. American citizens endorsing military attacks against targets in the Middle East in response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks (e.g., Gollwitzer et al, 2014;Washburn & Skitka, 2014). Displaced revenge occurs when a victim retaliates against a specific target that merely belongs to the same social category or the same "group" as the original perpetrator.…”