I wonder how we would react if 50,000 of us got killed in
one whack, as apparently has happened in the China earthquake.
Or, God forbid, 121,000, which is the high estimate for the
number of dead in the Myanmar cyclone.
Judging from our reaction to the terror attacks against the
World Trade Center and the Pentagon, which claimed 3,000 lives,
I suspect we would go nuts. Back in 2001, it became Terror Week
on television, so that we got to see the damage endless numbers
of times. Politicians were scrambling for flag pins and trying
to remember the words of the national anthem. Hardly a family
pet could be buried without the TV cameras and the mayor showing
up.
The president said it was our patriotic duty to spend money
and then declared world war on terrorists everywhere, even though
the 9/11 attackers had nothing to do with the others.
I infuriated one of the TV talkie boys one night. I accused
him of being fearmonger because he was ranting about the ever-present
menace of terrorism. I pointed out that while terrorists had
killed 3,000 Americans, 17,000 had killed themselves in falls,
15,000 had been murdered by homegrown criminals and 109,000
died in accidents. He shouted and hung up.
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Never let the news media set your priorities for things to
worry about. They will be hopelessly wrong. Any one American's
chances of being killed by a terrorist is minuscule. The only
thing you have to do to protect yourself from a bomb is be somewhere
else, and in a country of 3 million square miles, the odds are
that most of us will be somewhere else.
There is no worldwide network of terrorists. Al-Qaida is the
only group we have to worry about, and it is small and not very
influential. Hamas, Hezbollah and Islamic Jihad have no quarrel
with us. Their quarrel is with Israel. Colombia's terrorists
are trying to overthrow the Colombian government, and that goes
for most guerrilla organizations in the world.
A sensible administration would have taken out Osama bin Laden
a long time ago. It's pretty embarrassing when you can't find
a guy who is 6 feet 6 inches tall in a country where most people
are short.
We need to develop some stoicism, because it is possible that
we could lose a large number of people. A powerful earthquake
in Los Angeles or San Francisco at rush hour could kill a good
number of people. We're 30 minutes from 150 million people dead
as long as nuclear missiles sit in silos in Russia and China.
The most stupidly dangerous thing this administration has done
is allow our relations with Russia to deteriorate. When the
Russians needed our help, we tried to exploit them instead.
Now they have become an energy superpower and have little or
no use for us.
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin proved to be a smarter
man and a better leader than George W. Bush. Russia's economy
is booming; ours is in decline. Russia is energy-independent;
we are desperately dependent on energy imports. Russia's power
and influence are on the rise; ours are in decline. That's what
happens when we vote jovial dullards into office who surround
themselves with ideologues. Other than throw out a couple of
baseballs, what has Bush done right? I can't think of anything.
I'm not excited about any of the possible replacements. I just
pray that whichever one it is will have more brains and less
arrogance than the present occupant. Forgive me for sounding
cynical, but I've been listening to politicians promise to solve
these same problems for 40 years, and the problems have all
gotten worse, not better.