Quote of the day
4.23.2013 Leave a comment
As a response to the post-Boston Lockdown euphoria, Andrew Levine writes:
For anyone who watched the World Trade Center collapse on television in the days after September 11, 2001, the repetitive display of pictures of the terror attack on the Boston Marathon was déja vu all over again.
Not having been there, I can’t judge the mood, but reports of the demonstrations after the capture of nineteen year-old Dzhokhar Tsarnaev were disturbingly familiar too. The chant — “USA, USA” — recalled the reaction to the news that Barack Obama’s assassins had finally gotten to Osama Bin Laden and dumped his body into the sea — in time for the upcoming elections.
Perhaps the comparison is unfair. As in New York and Washington after 9/11, the crowd was surely expressing solidarity with the victims and also relief that the ordeal was finally over. Civic pride, an estimable virtue, was on display too.
And even if the demonstrations had a jingoistic tinge, people cooped up inside all day watching Wolff Blitzer can justifiably plead mitigating circumstances. It requires fortitude to endure mindless commentary masquerading as journalism — cable news, in other words — and not run amok.
Greek tragedies, those of Aeschylus especially, recount the (fragile) triumph of civilization over primitive longings for revenge. This is the basis for the rule of law and the monumental advances that follow from it.
Too bad for us, and for the world, that, under the leadership of our two twenty-first century Presidents, the Lesser Evil one especially, we Americans seem to be abandoning lessons learned nearly two and a half millennia ago.
It isn’t just the rule of law that George W. Bush and Barack Obama have put in jeopardy. Under their leadership, ours is becoming a “civilization” that, without shame, uses revenge as a pretext for war.
It would be wrong to claim that war-making is the only project at which the United States excels. The United States mostly loses the wars it fights. To be sure, the Pentagon can destroy states and societies. But it leaves wastelands ruled by militaristic kleptocracies in its wake.
And what of Boston today? Levine continues:
An entire metropolis in lockdown? Thousands, perhaps tens of thousands, of militarized police arrayed against a lone wounded kid who, it turns out, was bleeding almost to death under a tarp covering a boat in someone’s driveway?
Austerity got left behind. Millions for the illusion of “homeland security,” not one penny for anything that actually makes people better off!
Events like the Boston Marathon Bombing and its aftermath are as significant as they are bizarre. They point to a future wherein the security-surveillance apparatus often and openly impinges on America’s somewhat civil everyday life, that is, to a future moment when our inverted totalitarian system becomes an obvious dictatorship. This is one implication that can be identified in the massive official response to the wounded fugitive, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. The Tsarnaev brothers were considered members of Boogey Man’s legion. Uncle Sam — Superpower! — had to take the revenge in order to cleanse himself of the stain generated by the bombing. The prodigious waste of money involved was as necessary as the initial dénouement, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev’s capture. There is always money ready at hand for such projects, even in an age of planned deprivation.
Related articles
- Tsarnaev won’t be tried as enemy combatant; could face death penalty (wtvm.com)
- Boston Marathon bombing suspect awake, answering questions (krem.com)
- Dzhokhar Tsarnaev Charged In Boston Marathon Bombings (theobamacrat.com)
- Boston bombing suspects likely acted alone (cbc.ca)
- Dzhokhar Tsarnaev: ‘Boston bombs were Tamerlan’s idea’ (theweek.co.uk)
- Boston marathon suspect charged (bbc.co.uk)
- Boston bombings: Dzhokhar Tsarneav says brother was driving force behind attack (telegraph.co.uk)
- Boston Marathon suspect cornered in backyard boat (cnsnews.com)
- Boston bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev: It was just us (pix11.com)
Bombs exploded at the Boston Marathon
4.15.2013 Leave a comment
This is Patriot’s Day, Marathon Monday; it is also Tax Day — but otherwise insignificant.
There were at least three explosive devices in Boston; two detonated near the Marathon’s finish line. The police disarmed the third.
At this moment the perpetrators have not been identified. Their grievances remain private. They targeted no one person in particular. The Marathon enjoys worldwide fame; it lacks political significance, however. Mercifully, the death count seems low. But these killings and maiming are intolerable.
One point is clear, however: The extensive security-surveillance apparatus which emerged after the 9.11 attacks failed to deter this attack. Trillions of dollars were spent, allegedly to secure the nation against attacks like this one.. The apparatus thus constructed impinges upon civil life every single day. Americans now lack a reasonable expectation of privacy in their personal affairs. Yet this effort and expense failed to save those now dead or maimed.
A secure peace originates only from a just and reasonable kind of human solidarity.
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Filed under Commentary Tagged with Boston, BostonMarathon, Explosive device, Marathon, Patriots Day, Tax Day, Terrorism