Early this
month
the respected investor Warren Buffett, reputedly the second richest
man on earth, said that a nuclear attack on this country is virtually
a certainty. Vice President Dick Cheney says more terrorist
attacks are sure to come its a matter of when, not
if and FBI Director Robert Mueller adds that suicide bombings
here, like those afflicting Israel, are inevitable.
We are told that another major al-Qaeda operation, of unknown
but probably unpleasant nature, may be in the offing. Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has added his own grim warning, more
or less underlining all the others.
Meanwhile, controversy rages over whether President Bush was sufficiently
warned of terrorist hijackings last year but failed to take action.
Maybe it wasnt a failure to act, but a failure to imagine.
Before last September, the traditional understanding (so to speak)
of hijacking was the forcible diversion of a passenger plane,
usually ending with the safe return of plane and passengers; hijackers
might or might not escape, but it was taken for granted that,
either way, they would leave the plane alive.
Nobody imagined a suicide hijacking. That was the novelty that
defeated all security measures. It was to terrorism what the atomic
bomb was to conventional warfare: something horribly new under
the sun.
Since then, of course, countless new security measures have been
installed to prevent the exact repetition of a unique event. We
are now well protected against stupid terrorists. Anyone dumb
enough to try to smuggle a pistol aboard a passenger plane is
apt to get caught. The U.S. Government can foresee the past.
But not the future. Our rulers are still haunted by the possibility
that some terrorists may be too clever for them. They realize
how vulnerable we are on many fronts, right here at home. A single
nuclear incident in Manhattan even without Hiroshima-scale
fatalities could cripple the U.S. economy.
The worst of it is that the U.S. Government has indeed ignored
many warnings and is still doing so. The most basic has nothing
to do with the specific practical schemes of enemies; wise people
have been warning for years against the interventionist policies
that have made the United States, as Buffett observes, the most
hated country on earth. If so, the people who are supposed to
be protecting us are guilty of criminal responsibility in continuing
policies that put our lives in danger.
Our government has succeeded in bringing the wars of the Middle
East to our own shores. Symptomatic and highly symbolic
are the fights between Jewish and Arab students on American
college campuses. Its also symptomatic, and symbolic, that
these fights are not about the interests of ordinary Americans,
who dont participate in them. There is no patriotic student
group telling these people to take their quarrels elsewhere and
leave us out.
In fact were now told that its unpatriotic to want
our country to mind its own business. The average American has
been taught, and devoutly believes, that its natural for
his country to run the planet, in the words of one
hawkish neoconservative magazine. Fighting terrorism is just one
aspect of running a planet.
But how can the same government that provokes terrorism
a protean thing that takes many forms also hope to defeat
it? How can a problem be solved by the same institution that creates
it? Americans no longer have a rational philosophy of government;
they merely assume that government is a general pragmatic problem-solver.
Yet most of the problems its supposed to solve
the national debt, the annual Federal deficit, the Social
Security mess, economic turbulence, high taxes, failing schools,
international crises are of its own making. In a similar
way, Americans were told that World War I was the war to
end all wars. Its chief result was World War II, whose chief
result was the Cold War.
Some enormous mental block prevents people from seeing the simple
truth that a problem cant be its own solution. Dont
tell the proud parents, but a child born today is born $100,000
in debt his tax share of the debt his rulers have accumulated.
Of course he may not live to pay it off, since those rulers have
also made foreigners want to kill him.
In the meantime, he will attend public schools where he will learn
that the government is his friend, protector, and benefactor.
If he somehow manages to figure out that this is baneful nonsense,
he will be told that he is unpatriotic.
Joe
Sobran [send him mail] is
a nationally syndicated columnist. He also
edits SOBRAN'S, a monthly
newsletter of his essays and columns.
He
invites you to try his new collection of aphorisms, "Anything
Called a 'Program' Is Unconstitutional: Confessions of a Reactionary
Utopian." You can get a free copy by subscribing or renewing your
subscription to Sobran's. Just call 800-513-5053, or see his website,
www.sobran.com.
(He's still available for speaking engagements too.)
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(c) 2002 by Griffin Internet
Syndicate. All rights reserved.
Joseph
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