penpusher: (CNN)
Breaking News: A Coup is taking place in Turkey. The military leaders have taken over the government and all flights into and out of the country have been suspended... Martial Law has been declared and the military has also taken control of the media...

This as a response to an ISIL threat on the Syrian border...

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2016/07/15/turkish-military-attempts-coup-of-erdogan-government.html
penpusher: (Pen)
Are we headed for a terrorist attack, daily?

I'm trying to imagine attending an Independence Day celebration, watching fireworks turning to leave and having a truck plow through the crowd running over everyone in its path, then the driver pulling out a gun to shoot people in addition. It's unspeakable.

Everything is going haywire, and now we are becoming more aware of just what that's about.

There's a lot more to deal with when it comes to what we need to deal with from here on out.

More coming.

Search Me.

Jul. 22nd, 2005 01:00 pm
penpusher: (Flag)
Thanks to the terrorists, we now have the added issue of people searching your backpacks, knapsacks, shopping bags, messenger bags, oversized bags of every kind to be certain you have no WMDs when you get aboard a New York City subway train. It's in response to the bombings in London, that you might have heard about over the past couple of weeks and days.

Since I carry a fairly large sized backpack wherever I go... my Felix The Cat style bag of tricks (but with no devices that can destroy anything), I know I'm going to be on the watch list.

Actually, my bag gets searched fairly often. And it has been searched fairly often over the years. I remember going to Palladium (the once upon a time dance club that was on 14th Street near 3rd Avenue) and having some "security" guy search through my bag. He missed the bottom compartment which held my retractable umbrella. But instead of an umbrella, it could have been a machete, a pistol, grenades... So right away, the first problem to deal with is that a "search" isn't thorough. It's really cursory. The same thing happened on my last visit to the main branch of the NY Public Library this past Tuesday. They looked in the bag, but didn't look in every compartment. And if I wanted to smuggle a bomb into some building, I sure wouldn't put it where you could see it when you opened the bag.

Besides that, I was already inside the building when they searched me! I don't know how effective the security is if I'm inside the edifice before they look in my bag.

So what is it really about? Two things. First, it's trying to scare the terrorists from attempting to try to get on the subway with a bomb. See? We're looking through the bags of people. So you better not try to sneak in. Ha. Trying to scare the terrorists. Mm. Yeah, that'll work.

The problem with trying to secure the NYC subway is that it's a huge system. There are hundreds of stops on dozens of lines and once you are in the system, you can get to any one of them. So, a terrorist can go to a station where the security is very low, like out in some of the remote sections of The Bronx, Brooklyn, or Queens and ride to Times Square or Grand Central or Penn Station pretty much without any examination. Sure, there are cops looking in bags and examining passengers when the trains arrive at those platforms, but by then, it's too late. The bomb could be detonated and the train and station destroyed. So, unless they're doing searches at every single station stop, this process is completely ineffective.

The other issue about this search process is that you are now being asked to show what's in your bag to someone. Maybe you don't want to do that, for whatever reason. But, now, this is "Our New Way Of Life." The right to privacy is gone because of it.

Recently, there had been cases on the New Jersey Turnpike of patrollers pulling over vehicles because of the ethnicity of the drivers/passengers. "Racial profiling" was the misnomer used to describe this practice of selecting and targeting "suspicious" motorists. Basically, you've got the same thing being celebrated here by local politicians and law enforcement agencies, and even many citizens. They're doing something to protect us! Hooray!

Maybe they'll bring back the interment camps that they used for Japanese Americans during WWII as well. We all saw how good and useful those turned out to be.

Random searches aren't fair and they aren't even random! And that's another part of the problem. They're calling it "random" but I think we all know the truth. They may never admit what's going on, but we do know. This is the NEW United States. Same as the OLD United States, to paraphrase The Who.

Which brings us to England and the bombings there, and their responses to them. As far as I've heard, they are not instituting "random" searches as you enter the London Underground, at least they haven't yet, and that's where the bombs were found! The reactions are very different.

There is a definite sense that our liberty is being taken for no good purpose. Yes, the claim is to stop an attack before it happens, but the only thing being accomplished is having some government official taking a look into a little bit of your life. Once that starts, it could continue into far more and far worse. Has any person with a bomb ever been stopped in this manner? And if they did get stopped, wouldn't they just set off their device right where they were, rather than be captured?

Look. I'm for safety. Of course I am! But measures like these don't make us any safer. They just permit more intrusion by public servants into our private lives. Once the government institutes these mandatory searches, there's no going back. Just as sure as the "Terror Alert" will never, ever drop back down to Blue or Green, we will never have the government out of our bags and our lives once they get in there.

If we are really interested in preventing these acts, we need to assess the situation a little more carefully. Right now, what we are doing will not "protect" us.

But really, that isn't what this is about, anyway.
penpusher: (Pen)
Humans are self-interested beings. I guess that's what we have in common with all of the other living creatures on the planet. We are self-interested. We want to live, to survive, to thrive. We want things in life to go our way. Even in a case of animals sacrificing their lives for their progeny, it's still a self-interested case of keeping their species alive.

The question is, what do we do to make things go our way, to make sure we succeed? More importantly, do we act with the thought that our actions will make what we would like to have happen occur? Or is it just a chance to release the energy and emotion we carry that causes an event to take place?

Yesterday, a friend and I were discussing the bombings in London and saying how ineffective they were as a method of "getting what they want" from the western world. It only causes some mayhem, touches a random few people in very tragic ways, and doesn't have a message attached to either explain their position or list off demands. What is the point?

And then today, more bombings in London. Damn! It is the very definition of senseless.

A suggestion was put forth that maybe the USA hasn't gotten tough enough. Maybe we should threaten to pull out the nukes on these countries and just vaporize them off the map if these activities don't stop. But, truly, that isn't going to happen. The word is oil, and we aren't about to turn those vast supplies into radioactive material, until we've dug up Alaska and discovered some previously unknown ocean-sized oil field underneath the feeding grounds of baby seals, excavated and stripped out of the tundra.

Again, many of our problems are due to the fact that we don't speak the language; we don't understand the mindset. And not only that, we aren't interested in learning. How can we possibly hope to wrap our minds around their concepts if we can't even talk to them?

I don't know if you've been watching TNT's miniseries, "Into The West." I have. It is a beautiful, tragic and at times unbearable tale of how the Native Americans were forced out of their homeland because the settlers wanted to take that land for themselves. In a way, things haven't really changed since then. It's still a matter of forcing the will, demanding and getting what you want. There is a metaphor there. We, as a Western society, have gotten what we wanted, from everyone, for the last couple of hundred years. We have been arrogant. We have been thoughtless. We have been controlling. We have been in charge.

Our way of life is available for everyone to see. Our entertainment programs go to every country. Our movies are seen the world over. Our fast food restaurants, soft drinks and other products are available in some very unlikely places.

I don't know how I'd feel if my culture was being overtaken by things that I felt had little or no value to me. In a way, that's what's happening right here in the USA, to US! Between the celebrity tabloid news and the unimportant stories like a women's lacrosse team wearing flip-flops to the White House, where is the information that we need to make some smarter decisions, to become more intelligent people?

But we aren't supposed to become more intelligent. If we did that, then we might not buy a ticket to see "Wedding Crashers."

Profit.

That's the bottom line, everywhere. Those at the tops of Corporate America are interested in profit for their companies and themselves. That's why so many rushed in to help rebuild Iraq. This wasn't any humanitarian call. These were people who were going to get a payday, and a US Gov't manufactured one, at that.

Profit. So ugly. So incidious. Profit creates a need to layoff hundreds of union employees and send jobs to Mexico where the cost of labor is a fraction of workers here. Profit demands people think about the bottom line before everything else. Profit is slowly strangling the life out of our country.

Yes, a company that is successful is giving you a good return, nice stock quotes and helps out the GNP. But that's just part of the statistics. When corporations merge, a lot of people lose work. And when that happens, things go badly.

So, yes, we might be showing a good profit, but that profit is going to a fraction of the population, while the rest of us are treading water or are drowning.

But how does this relate to terrorist bombings in London? Easy. Our attention has been in the wrong place all the while. Rather than profit, we needed to be focused on communication. Instead of ignoring rumblings from various areas of the globe, we should have been in there, talking. Instead of reacting first, then responding to the needs of the people, we should have assessed the needs and likely outcomes before we acted.

It's tough to play "Might Makes Right" games with people who are willing to die to make a counterpoint.

Are there any chances of talks/negotiations with Middle East leaders who can help us stop the terrorists from continuing these insane attacks? Impossible to say. Our Commander-In-Chief has shown who he is, and I haven't seen any real signs of diplomacy from him. And these terrorists don't think highly of leaders that are willing to talk with us. The guns are out and blazing from both sides, and even if the target in our scopes isn't the one we really wanted, it is a target, it's an example for the rest of the world to see, and it's accomplishing something.

What happens now? Are these London bombings another wave of terror all over the world, after New York and Madrid? Or will they just serve as an opportunity for certain companies to profit from the repairs needed to get things back to where they once were, and back to business?

The anger is growing: The anger that the terrorists want to convert into fear for us. It's all just the nature of the beast. It's been that way since before time began. No need to think it's going to change, now or ever.

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