RSN Fundraising Banner
FB Share
Email This Page
add comment

writing for godot

BOSTON: HOW IMPORTANT IS TERRORISM?

Print
Written by tom kando   
Tuesday, 16 April 2013 22:18
Since April 15, I have been wondering whether to add my voice to the cacophony about the Boston Marathon bombing on Patriots’ Day, and if so, do I have anything original to add? Well, I have found my angle. Taking a big risk, I am going to argue that this terrorist attack was less important that we are made to believe...

How dare you, Kando! You callous idiot! What if YOUR 8-year old son had died? Etc. My Dutch friends might ask, ‘Jees, Kando do you always have to be ‘in the contramine’? (do you always have to be the devil’s advocate?)

You are right. I am a terribly insensitive person for saying this. Nevertheless, I will now plough through with my argument:

You see, I am worried that once again we are going to draw the wrong lesson from this heinous act. Heinous it was, indeed. I hope that we catch the culprits and that we punish them harshly. I also support vigorous efforts to maximize security and to fight crime and terrorism.

But the problem is, whenever something like this happens, we react by urging ourselves to “Do More!”

Well, how about NOT doing more? How about staying the course? How about NOT panicking? How about NOT going further down the road toward paranoia and police state conditions? How about NOT making the lives of 330 million Americans increasingly uncomfortable? How about NOT barricading ourselves in our homes and our gated and guarded communities? How about NOT changing our culture even more than it already has?

Bad things happen. They happened in Oklahoma City in 1995, in Atlanta in 1996, in Fort Hood in 2009. They happen in Europe even more often - in Madrid in 2004, in London in 2005, in Norway in 2011.

Terrible. Continued vigilance is important. But staying calm is also important. Keep in mind that the danger from terrorism is infinitesimally smaller than that from driving to work, to school, to Safeway, than that from road biking (which I do every day), from walking in the rain, from smoking and from bad eating habits. Just about everything else you do puts you at greater risk than terrorism does.

We have gotten used to the hassles of flying. At the airport, you can no longer eat and shop beyond security check, unless you are traveling that day. Bummer. Walking up to the top of national shrines such as the Statue of Liberty and the Washington Monument is no longer possible. So be it.

Now, following the Boston Marathon attack, they are talking about “improving security” at marathons, including other ones such as the Sacramento CIM.
And since the Newtown school shooting, the NRA-types want to post armed guards in all schools and arm school teachers. Nuts!

The media don’t help either. Take the April 9 Texas knife attack: On that day, ALL major TV channels were transfixed by that event, hour after hour, endlessly broadcasting meaningless interviews with bystanders, police clerks and others only remotely connected to the event. The event was vastly over-reported, considering that there wasn’t a single fatality. It could have been used judicially to argue for gun control, as it demonstrated that GUNS indeed kill people, much more so than knives and other less lethal means. But that was not the lesson which people drew from that event.

I have run the Boston Marathon several times, and I would not hesitate to do it again. Former CIA and FBI official Philip Mudd said: “We understand that this is a risk in today’s world. But we’re not at the point where we are as resilient as the Europeans or the Israelis.” To which Rep. Adam Schiff, a member of the House Intelligence Committee added: “There’s not going to be any way to protect the country completely against individual attacks. (We should) not let this change our way of life.” (Sacramento Bee, April 16, 2013). Amen to that.
e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
Email This Page

 

THE NEW STREAMLINED RSN LOGIN PROCESS: Register once, then login and you are ready to comment. All you need is a Username and a Password of your choosing and you are free to comment whenever you like! Welcome to the Reader Supported News community.

RSNRSN