Sound or Silly?
by
Robert Klassen
by Robert Klassen
While surfing
the Internet yesterday, I came across this tidbit:
The University of Nebraska Medical Center has built "the largest
biocontainment center in the world." I had to ask myself, what
are they talking about? A hundred beds, a thousand beds? No, they
built a ten-bed unit to deal with a bioterrorist attack.
Okay, I realize
that institutions like that employ people to sift through federal
legislation for further sources of tax revenue, and here they scored
a million bucks, peanuts really, but I wonder how they justified
it? And why?
I can’t answer
those questions, but I’m strongly reminded of the 1995 movie Outbreak,
starring Dustin Hoffman, as the model for this fraud. A portable
ten bed unit in a rural town of thirty-thousand people might make
some kind of sense in a movie, but in the real world a ten bed unit
in a city of over four-hundred thousand people would accomplish
exactly nothing in the event of an attack. The still unexplained
assault with military grade anthrax in 2001 might have been handled
in a ten bed unit if it had been localized, which it wasn’t, but
a widespread assault with some kind of military grade biochemical
agent in an urban area would overwhelm every medical facility in
the region.
I am also reminded
of the propaganda-induced anxiety during the Cold War, and how easy
it was to provoke people into doing silly things. Personal bomb
shelters were a big item in the suburbs in those days, if you could
afford one. What good would they do? Nobody was sure, but it seemed
like a good idea at the time.
Meanwhile the
Defense Department was busy building NORAD inside a granite mountain
that could withstand a direct hit; that is, a real bomb shelter.
In my home
town in northern Indiana during the Cold War, we had the Civil Air
Patrol Auxiliary, an association of women who did not have to work
– yes, during the ’50s wives usually didn’t have to work – who got
together to scan the skies for Russian bombers during daylight hours.
The probability of spotting Russian bombers anywhere near Indiana
was zero, but that didn’t matter. They were doing their patriotic
duty, and having nice day outings with friends.
Meanwhile the
Defense Department was busy building the early warning radar installations
in the Arctic; that is, a real detection system.
As far as I
know, the Ladies Auxiliary didn’t cost the taxpayer a cent, and
I don’t believe the private bomb shelter was tax-supported either,
so this foolishness was a matter of personal choice. And while they
were entertaining themselves, feeling virtuous, and getting photographed
by the local newspaper, their taxes were paying for the real thing.
Somehow I don’t
think the Omaha containment unit represents the same illusion, although
it may represent a much more serious delusion, namely that the government
will protect us in the event of a real bioterrorist attack.
I see this
as a more sophisticated version of the plastic sheet and duct tape
nonsense dished out in 2001 your own personal biological
bomb shelter – only more dangerous, if people believe it. The intentional
release of really bad bugs in an urban area wouldn’t infect only
ten people, it could infect thousands. Then what?
Too bad the
feds didn’t put that million bucks into the New Orleans levees instead.
January
28, 2006
Robert
Klassen [send him mail]
retired from a forty-year career in critical-care respiratory therapy.
He is the author of five books, including Atlantis:
A Novel about Economic Government,
and Economic
Government, which describe a solution
to the problem of political government. Here's
his web site.
Copyright
© 2006 Robert Klassen
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