100% Scared: How the National Security Complex Grows on Terrorism Fears !
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- kennymotown
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http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/06/09-4
Great information!by Tom Engelhardt
Here’s a scenario to chill you to the bone:
Without warning, the network -- a set of terrorist super cells -- struck in northern Germany and Germans began to fall by the hundreds, then thousands. As panic spread, hospitals were overwhelmed with the severely wounded. More than 20 of the victims died.
No one doubted that it was al-Qaeda, but where the terrorists had come from was unknown. Initially, German officials accused Spain of harboring them (and the Spanish economy promptly took a hit); then, confusingly, they retracted the charge. Alerts went off across Europe as fears spread. Russia closed its borders to the European Union, which its outraged leaders denounced as a “disproportionate” response. Even a small number of Americans visiting Germany ended up hospitalized.
In Washington, there was panic, though no evidence existed that the terrorists were specifically targeting Americans or that any of them had slipped into this country. Still, at a hastily called news conference, Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano raised the new terror alert system for the first time from its always “elevated“ status to “imminent” (that is, “ a credible, specific, and impending threat”). Soon after, a Pentagon spokesman announced that the U.S. military had been placed on high alert across Europe.
Commentators on Fox News, quoting unnamed FBI sources, began warning that this might be the start of the “next 9/11” -- and that the Obama administration was unprepared for it. Former Vice President Dick Cheney, in a rare public appearance at the American Enterprise Institute, denounced the president for “heedlessly putting this country at risk from the terrorists.” In Congress, members of both parties rallied behind calls for hundreds of millions of dollars of supplementary emergency funding for the Department of Homeland Security to strengthen airport safety. (“In such difficult economic times,” said House Speaker John Boehner, “Congress will have to find cuts from non-military discretionary spending at least equal to these necessary supplementary funds.”)
Finally, as the noise in the media echo chamber grew, President Obama called a prime-time news conference and addressed the rising sense of hysteria in Washington and the country, saying: “Al-Qaeda and its extremist allies will stop at nothing in their efforts to kill Americans. And we are determined not only to thwart those plans, but to disrupt, dismantle and defeat their networks once and for all.” He then ordered a full review of U.S. security and intelligence capabilities and promised a series of “concrete steps to protect the American people: new screening and security for all flights, domestic and international;... more air marshals on flights; and deepening cooperation with international partners.”
Terrorism Tops Shark Attacks
The first part of this scenario is, of course, a “terrorist” version of the still ongoing E. coli outbreak in Germany -- the discovery of an all-new antibiotic-resistant “super toxic variant” of the bacteria that has caused death and panic in Europe. Although al-Qaeda and E. coli do sound a bit alike, German officials initially (and evidently incorrectly) accused Spanish cucumbers, not terrorists in Spain or German bean sprouts, of causing the crisis. And the “disproportionate” Russian response was not to close its borders to the European Union, but to ban E.U. vegetables until the source of the outbreak is discovered.
Above all, the American over-reaction was pure fiction. In fact, scientists here have been urging calm and mid-level government officials have been issuing statements of reassurance on the safety of the country’s food supply system. No one attacked the government for inaction; Cheney did not excoriate the president, nor did Napolitano raise the terror alert level, and Obama’s statement, quoted above, was given on January 5, 2010, in the panicky wake of the “underwear bomber’s” failed attempt to blow a hole in a Christmas day plane headed from Amsterdam to Detroit.
Ironically, non-super-toxic versions of E. coli now cause almost as much damage yearly in the U.S. as the recent super-toxic strain has in Europe. A child recently died in an outbreak in Tennessee. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have estimated that earlier in the decade about 60 Americans died annually from E. coli infections and ensuing complications, and another 2,000 were hospitalized. More recently, the figure for E. coli deaths has dropped to about 20 a year. For food-borne disease more generally, the CDC estimates that 48 million (or one of every six) Americans get sick yearly, 128,000 are hospitalized, and about 3,000 die.
By comparison, in the near decade since 9/11, while hundreds of Americans died from E. coli, and at least 30,000 from food-borne illnesses generally, only a handful of Americans, perhaps less than 20, have died from anything that might be considered a terror attack in this country, even if you include the assassination attempt against Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords and the Piper Cherokee PA-28 that a disgruntled software engineer flew into a building containing an IRS office in Austin, Texas, killing himself and an IRS manager. ("Well, Mr. Big Brother IRS man, let's try something different; take my pound of flesh and sleep well" went his final note.)
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Mark701
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Englehardt makes some excellent points. Another way to view how the US reacts to the "terror threat" is to compare it to our response to nuclear annihilation.
From the early 50's right through to the fall of Soviet Communism the world stood on the brink of nuclear annihilation. Despite that we managed to keep our democracy alive without excessive long term intrusion by government into the lives of individual citizens. We got by without a Dept of Homeland Security, without eavesdropping on the entire country, without armed guards in airports, without a trillion dollar defense budget, without lots of things we consider "necessary" to our security today. Yet a single terrorist attack that killed 3000 people created a wave of insanity that we still haven't recovered from.
Fear and security are relative things. The difference in our response to four decades of potential nuclear annihilation where billions MIGHT die and an attack where 3000 DID die shouldn't surprise us. Americans have lived in a (false) security bubble for well over a century. Bad things have happened around us but very little has happened to us. When things DO happen to us, we go off the deep end. The internment of thousands of Japanese-Americans after Pearl Harbor, McCarthyism and 9/11 are the most obvious examples that come to mind. In each case Americans gladly sacrificed the principles established in the United States Constitution for a false sense of security.
Our current insanity regarding terrorism is therefore not surprising. What IS unusual is that we haven't been allowed to get over it and move on. 9/11 was a media extravaganza. The attacks were shown on television, daily, for months after the event occurred. The fear it generated was reinforced by a reckless US Administration supported by a radical GOP noise machines like FAUX "News", Limbaugh, Hannity, ORielly, Beck et al. Finally our ability to come together and work things out has been crippled by the vitriolic dialog that is now the standard when talking about the other side. (Something I am also guilty of).
The result of all this is that we no longer live in a democracy. I mean this quite literally. Our democracy was deeply wounded during the Reagan Administration which had no qualms about transferring the power of people to US corporations. But the death knell came in 2000 with the SCOTUS selection of a an absolutely clueless President who actually believed in Reaganism, American Exceptionalism and US global dominance. All that was needed was the trigger like 9/11 to put it all in place. The result: two wars that are sapping us dry, a trillion dollar "defense budget" a wrecked economy, multi trillion dollar bail outs of the richest people and corporations in America, the death of the middle class, and the SCOTUS Citizens United travesty. Last but not least, where would a ravaged country be without it's carpet (tea)-baggers! Enter the Sarah Palins, Rand Pauls, Michelle Bachmanns etc whose sole purpose is to pick the last bits of meat off the corpse of democracy while distracting the dim witted about how great things would be if they were in charge.
- 1 year ago
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Mark701
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Incredulous
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Mark701:
outstanding synopsis in a very relevant historical context. well done!
- 1 year ago
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Incredulous
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rustyred
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People need to keep themselves informed on the state of the planet. Not necessarily through mainstream media. The information is out there. One needs only look. For this, we MUST maintain net neutrality at all costs. Once well-informed, a person can know if he or she is being bamboozled, hornswagled, lied to. Then we will not have to experience unnecessary fear. Stay Informed!
- 1 year ago
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rustyred
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PressCore
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Assuming there is a terrorist threat, and that it's not a collaboration
of crooked media in cahoots with the CIA to promote a phony terror
threat scam, so what ??? It's been proven time & again there's more
horrific danger from your own Government's unsupervised renegade
crooked bad hires & their minions than there ever could be from any
disgruntled religious fanatics. When I look at what passes for upright
American citizens with a sense of right & wrong, that alone should be
enough to scare the shit out of anyone. The mere idea that someday
I might live to be so ancient as to be infirm, and have to rely on those
kind puts me on my mettle. Still...When you learn not to live with fear,
you free yourself from the entrapment of fools. And when you realize
that you create your own reality you recognize the awesome power
that exists within you. As you can tell, I disdain sheeple, both on
Capitol Hill and mainstreet USA. They are the emotional imbeciles
of this world. There are things which should instill fear for those
who have enough sense to know what's safe from what's not. But
fear is like any other disease. It's best kept contained, controlled,
and quarantined so as to minimize the harm to oneself & others.
Live Free or Die. - 1 year ago
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PressCore
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kennymotown
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PressCore:
Awesome comment!
- 1 year ago
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kennymotown
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PressCore
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kennymotown:
I noticed the public service adverts aired after 9/11, when kids who didn't
know any better were scared, and asked their parents fearful questions yet
couldn't get satisfactory answers to their questions. One I focused on advised
people to simply go about their business, and stop being afraid of their own
shadow. They didn't phrase it like that of course. But that's what it amounts to.
There's never been any real security in this world. It doesn't exist in nature.
It's an artificial construct of human civilization. When you realize the earth is
never at rest, but always in upheaval..The same holds for human societies
too. Living prudently, developing backups, keeping one's wits about them..
These and many other techniques have enabled people to get through
life from birth to death without being hung up on the idea that some things
are simply fated to happen. The 2003 remake of H.G.Wells The Time Machine
by his grandson Simon Wells proves that point. Man proposes, God disposes. - 1 year ago
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PressCore
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kennymotown
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PressCore:
It is really quite comical how fear sells in this country!
- 1 year ago
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kennymotown
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dalistuff
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kennymotown:
i agree, For Only Xenophobes...make $ on the ignorance of the mass. sell snake oil in the afternoon and go to a different city and repeat the song and dance with a grin ear to ear.
- 1 year ago
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dalistuff
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kennymotown
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dalistuff:
Totally!
- 1 year ago
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kennymotown
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Incredulous
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Good post Kenny, Engelhardt's Z Space page...
http://www.zcommunications.org/zspace/tomengelhardt
and his other page:
- 1 year ago
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Incredulous
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kennymotown
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Incredulous:
Thanks for the info!
- 1 year ago
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kennymotown
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Incredulous
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kennymotown:
he's an interesting guy with a lot to say, thanks for the post!
- 1 year ago
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Incredulous
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kennymotown
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Incredulous:
He certainly does have much to say, now if we can get people to listen!
- 1 year ago
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kennymotown
