9-16-2001: I've
now been overpowered. With two trips back-to-back (Alpine Bay
last week, the annual Mega Foundation conclave this coming week),
plus a new computer to set up, plus a move to daytimes at a different
address, I've been unable to prepare enough web pages in advance
to keep the pipeline full. I'll have to catch up when I return
a week from tomorrow.
9-15-2001:
I've thought more about the payoffs for the terrorists who attacked
America on Tuesday. The idea that the U. S. might be angered into
antagonizing its friends could be a rational, although perverted
terrorist goal. It's also possible that they may have gotten the
world's attention with this stunt. A lot of people have peered
out at New York City from the observation floor of the World Trade
Center. This time, it was New York City and Washington. Next time,
it may be London or Canberra or Kuala Lumpur.
9-14-2001:
Humanity appears to me to be on the threshold
of prosperity for all. With population projected to peak at 9,000,000,000
in 2070, it sounds as though the world could provide adequately
for all of its people, with a flat or slowly rising standard of
living for first-world nations, and a rapidly rising standard
of living for second- and third-world citizens, until the world
plateaus with comparable comforts for all. We are certainly becoming
a global village. I think that many if not most of us would be
willing to sacrifice to help our less-fortunate neighbors if we
knew that they were really in need, and that they were really
deserving. After all, most of us lead lives doing for others,
anyway.
Politically, it may be necessary to blend
governments and economies over time, as Europe is doing. I can
see a disadvantage to that in terms of the centralization of power
it would engender, and the opportunity for a sick, power-hungry
autocrat to take control. However, it may be necessary to grow
the world together in order to restrain warfare. We know it can
be done. We're doing it in the United States.
This, I believe, is where we need to go.
Seen in this light, Tuesday's wanton mass
murders are acts of witless evil. Even given the most compelling
reasons to hate the United States, the end does not justify any
means, particularly means that were as vicious and feckless as
Tuesday's blood baths. I've been at a loss to imagine what these
terrorists thought they would accomplish. One possibility, though,
might be to draw the United States into a quagmire like Vietnam
or the Soviet-Afghanistan morass. Provoking us into provoking
others would be a rewarding move. Other questions that concern
me are what our side might or might not have done, or be doing
abroad.
I've thought that the most effective punishiment
for the fanatics who are perpetrating these acts would be, if
they could be caught, to sentence them to caring for the orphans
they've created. When you have to explain to a three-year-old
why you murdered her parents, it might get next to you in spite
of yourself.
A few thoughts on the part of someone
who doesn't know enough to say more:
(1) I think we mustn't lump Mid-Easterners with a handful of Mideastern
thugs. That would be like identifying all Americans with Timothy
McVay or Ted Kaczynski. The U. S. is full of native-born Americans
with roots in the Middle East. I could imagine that many Middle
Easterners died in the World Trade Center towers and on board
the hijacked aircraft.
(2) We are fighting ideas and ideologies
(3) The Middle East appears to bear some resemblance to the Balkans.
The hatreds that are developing between the Israelis and the Palestinians
seem only to escalate.
(4) In making restitution, we must be careful that we don't assault
our friends.
Here are a few additional references I
found that address what has happened. These lead on to many other
references.
They
Can't See Why They Are Hated - Wired News
Lessons
from the front line in the war to counter terrorism