Hollywood's
New Terror Flicks
by
Bill Sardi
On
February 20, 2002, I
reported at www.lewrockwell.com on the uncanny timing of Hollywood
in the production of new war flicks, filming which began long before
the September 11 terrorist attacks. Well, now Hollywood has done
it again.
Just
as tensions rise over the possibility of a nuclear conflict between
Pakistan and India (which is likely to serve as a distraction in
the news just when FBI agents will be giving testimony in Congress
over the apparent failure to pursue clues to terrorists working
within the US), Hollywood has released The Sum of All Fears
(Paramount Pictures), a movie based upon a
Tom Clancy novel.
The
movie is about a "dirty nuclear bomb" that gets in the hands of
terrorists who plan to use it at the Super Bowl. The "dirty bomb"
is obtained from Russia after a Kremlin chief dies. Muslim terrorists
have been removed from the script and replaced by European neo-Nazi
terrorists, "partly because of consistent protests by Arab-American
groups," says www.upcomingmovies.com.
Of course, this terror film started production on February 12, 2001,
long before the threat of terrorism was on the minds of Americans.
Within
ten days of Sept. 11, the International Atomic Energy Agency claimed
terrorists may try to contaminate whole cities by making a "dirty
bomb." [Hindustantimes.com, Sept. 21, 2001] But the American Institute
of Physics reported on March 12, 2002, that the radiation emitted
from a "dirty bomb" is likely to be too low to calculate, and that
the greatest risk from a "dirty bomb" is panic, not radiation. [American
Institute of Physics, March 12, 2002] Most Americans are likely
to think of a mushroom cloud-like explosion when they hear the term
"dirty bomb." Actually, a "dirty bomb" is simply a regular explosive
that disperses radioactive material.
As
if working as an advance man for the movie promoters, former Clinton
Defense Secretary William Cohen told a Senate panel on April 23,
2002, about a month prior to the release of The Sum of All Fears
movie, that the most likely place terrorists will obtain ingredients
for a weapon of mass destruction is from Russia. [Newsmax.com April
24, 2002]
If
the public can get beyond the headlines they will understand that
there is more likelihood that radioactive material will be stolen
from an x-ray machine in a doctor's office than from Russia. The
overseas transport of nuclear material to the US would likely expose
any terrorist to harmful doses of radiation. A true nuclear bomb
would be very heavy, would be very difficult to transport, and would
likely expose terrorists to lethal doses of radiation before it
could be transported and detonated.
Wanna
get a view of the future? Keep your eyes on upcoming movies. A new
version of The
Attack Of The Killer Tomatoes is likely to raise suspicion.
June
4, 2002
Bill
Sardi [send him mail] is a health
journalist who dabbles from time to time into current events. He
is the author of the book The
Iron Time Bomb.
His website is www.askbillsardi.com.
Copyright
© 2002 Bill Sardi Word of Knowledge Agency, San Dimas, California.
Not for commercial reproduction without permission of the author.
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