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One Year Later
(written Sept. 10, 2002)
For a long afterwards last year, Janna would look up at the sky
and say "I
don't think we'll ever look at planes the same way again"
Not me. Planes have been falling out of the sky (often for no
good reason)
since the early days of aviation. Half the time I can't see how
they stay
up there. And if a bunch of hate-filled fanatical lunatics used
a bunch of
them to knock over buildings and kill thousands of people, well,
frankly, it
really shouldn't come as a complete surprise. In a depressing,
horrifying
way, it's simply the "logical" progression of what started when
people began
taking airliners hostage with bombs. This was in part simply making
good on
that threat, as well as using the airliners as weapons.
And I honestly don't that's going to happen again any time soon.
I think
what happened over Pennsylvania was that some people were willing
to give
their lives for the greater good, once they knew what purpose
they were
going to be put to. I think any hijacker in the near future is
much more
likely to be killed by the passengers than in any commission of
a "terrorist
act", since few would want to be indirectly responsible for another
9/11
through an act omission.
And it's a sweet irony to fling at those who tut-tut about how
the
terrorists used our high technology and freedom against us; yeah,
maybe so,
but in the end these same things turned around and bit them in
the ass.
Clearly they hadn't anticipated what instant coverage and free
cellphones
(as well as a free, if occasionally irresponsible, press) really
mean. The
knowledge of what they were going to do was relayed to their potential
victims, and they foiled it.
No, for me the problem isn't looking up at planes. It's looking
down into my
tool drawer.
See, that's where my box cutter lives. Now, I really like my box
cutter.
It's one of those thick, solid orange-painted steel models. It
just screams
"I can take on any packaging!" And so it can. I used it just over a week
ago to cut new speaker wire. I've yet to encounter something it
couldn't cut
through.
And therein lies the problem. I can't help but remember what this
thing was
used for. It is able to cut through a lot of things - including people.
Partly I feel my hand should fly from it like a hot stone and
say "evil"! I
almost have trouble looking at it. And the awful thing, of course,
is that
no amount of airport screening of items at the time would have
stopped this
- there were no regs against box cutters - who would ever suspect
them of
ill use? (I'm convinced the rise - or at least the ubiquity -
of the box
cutter is one of the consequences of the "new economy", with everything
shipped rather than store bought*)
It is in the perversion of the everyday world where true evil
lies. People
in New York talk about how ordinary and everyday life around the
Twin Towers
had seemed, and how the change that happened would have been inconceivable.
And that change of view can extend even into my own tool drawer.
(* and for the truly paranoid, taped not stapled, for easy DEA
inspection)
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