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The Fear of Terrorism?

By Sean Gonsalves, AlterNet. Posted August 27, 2007.


The national media have fallen short on providing context in the "war on terror," aiding and abetting America's foreign policy cataracts problem.
Gonsalves

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Thanks to Temple University math professor John Allen Paulos, it can be demonstrated mathematically why the threats to our civil liberties should be of more concern than terrorism threats.

Paulos’ approach to terrorism draws on probability theory and a bit of common sense, specifically, on “the obvious fact that the vast majority of people of every ethnicity are not terrorists.”

Imagine a near-perfect, information gathering and interpretation system that could identify terrorists and stop them before the act of terrorism is committed. Because no system is perfect, Paulos’ system is assumed to be 99 percent accurate. And, of course, for this near-perfect terrorist fly-trap to be really effective it would also have to be able to correctly identify nonterrorists 99 percent of the time.

Such a system would only catch terrorists, right?

“Well, no,” Paulos wrote in an analysis for the LA Times back in 2003. It bears repeating, as the terrorism-centered presidential campaign season heats up, brought to you by Fear Inc.

Paulos applies the near perfect data-mining numbers to a country about the size of America -- a nation of 300 million in which 1,000 “future terrorists” lurk among the citizenry.

With a 99 percent detection rate, the system will identify 990 of 1,000 future terrorists. Pretty good.

But the flip side is ugly. In a nation of 300 million (minus 1,000 future terrorists) there are 299,999,000 nonterrorists. If the system is 99 percent accurate, one percent will be improperly detained as an “enemy-combatant.” How much is one percent of 299,999,000? Just under 3 million. That’s 3 million innocent Americans for every 990 Jose Padillas.

Just to bring it home, we’re talking about 3,000 times more innocent Americans being caught in the dragnet than the number of guilty ones! That alone ought to have each one of us thinking real hard about political priorities.

Despite my miniscule efforts and those of others in the dreaded “mainstream media,” the national media have fallen short on providing context in the “war on terror,” aiding and abetting America’s foreign policy cataracts problem.

How often do you see reports of terrorism with context that points out the relative rarity of actually being a victim of terrorism? And how many articles do you see that call into question the alarmism of say, Gen. Richard Myers, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who said that if terrorists were able to kill 10,000 Americans in an attack, they would “do away with our way of life.”

As John Mueller wrote in a recent of issue of The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, it’s the subtext of this kind of fear-mongering that’s most interesting. “These hysterical warnings suggest: the ‘existential’ threat comes not from what the terrorists would do to us, but what we would do to ourselves in response.”

Mueller also refers to the 1999 Gilmore Commission, a government-funded advisory group that assessed domestic response to WMD terrorism.

The group “pressed a point it considered ‘self-evident,’ but one that nonetheless required ‘reiteration’ because of the ‘rhetoric and hyperbole’ surrounding the issue: Although a terrorist attack with a weapon of mass destruction could be ‘serious and potentially catastrophic,’ it is ‘highly unlikely that it could ever completely undermine the national security, much less threaten the survival, of the United States.’ To hold otherwise ‘risks surrendering to the fear and intimidation that is precisely the terrorist’s stock in trade.’”

Over the weekend, GOP Sen. John Warner, who wants U.S. troops to start coming home from Iraq by Christmas, said he may support Democratic legislation ordering withdrawals if President Bush refuses to set a return timetable soon.

And, then fear-mongering followed. Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas), who is also a member of Senate Armed Services Committee, responded by saying: “I don’t think it’s in our best interest to put so much pressure on the new Iraqi government that it absolutely collapses. We don’t want to allow that to happen, because it would make us less safe here at home.”

Fear isn’t just the “stock in trade” of terrorists. It’s a booming industry in America. And if we continue to trade true freedom for security, in fear, the “war on terror” will defeat us from the inside.

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See more stories tagged with: fear, civil liberties, war on terror

Sean Gonsalves is a Cape Cod Times staff reporter and a syndicated columnist.

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Every month another 911 on the highway
Posted by: ScottP on Aug 27, 2007 8:20 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With about 40,000 auto deaths a year, every month the US suffers as much loss as 911, in similarly sudden and unexpected circumstances. And that hasn't sunk the union, even after going on for decades. The terrorism deal is the MSM playing with fundamental fears, and a populace that willingly goes along with it.

Here's my advice to those who still think terrorism is an real threat: relax, get in your car (40,000 deaths a year), and go get some fast food (heart disease, 500,000 deaths/year) and maybe a pack of cigarettes (cancer, 500,000 deaths/year). You'll kill yourself long before some terrorist (300 deaths/year) comes to get you.

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» RE: Relax Posted by: Edward George
I don't get it.
Posted by: Sojourner on Aug 27, 2007 9:04 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The premise of a 99% perfect system is admitted to be a complete fiction. What useful conclusions can be drawn from a complete fiction. No fictional system can either identify or misidentify. So what's the point?

Isn't it called "mystification" when some expert manufactures out of thin air a circumstance and then continues to elaborate as if it were more than that? Isn't it a definition of serious mental problems when someone treats their fantasies as real?

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» RE: I don't get it. Posted by: EKSwitaj
» Thanks for trying. Posted by: Sojourner
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Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Penny McIlraith
Posted by: Greensleaves on Aug 28, 2007 3:48 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Perhaps if Bush had not been so successful in his public relations, fear-mongering, election campaign, there would not be so many Americans still living in fear that they will be attacked where they sleep throughout the country.

Bush's administration has terrorized its own citizens and sent soldiers into a war that was completely preventable, as there were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. There were also never any ties between al-Qaeda and Saddam Hussein. What there was in Iraq (and previously in Kuwait) was oil. And securing oil fields for oil corporations is of much more importance to the Bush administration, than have any thoughts about sending young men to die in a needless war.

Bush kept nurturing the fear through the Homeland Security and its announcements and the security alerts that always seemed to be occurring. The media did not help as it did not maintain any objectivity in its reporting, nor did government representatives in accusing anyone who did not support the war as being a traitor. Freedom of speech is a human right under the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights.

It is interesting that many Americans really cannot see how the U.S. has made itself hated enough in the Muslim world to make itself a target for terrorists. For example, in supporting dictatorships (the Saudi royal princes, the Shah of Iran and even Saddam Hussein at one point), the United States has not made itself a friend to Muslims around the world. Supporting dictators also support for the repression of human rights, freedom and any chance of democracy.

Another issue from the perspective of very religious Muslims, is that is considered a desecration to Saudi Arabia's holy sites, such as Mecca, for Americans as unbelievers, whether politicians or soldiers or advisers, to be in the country, on the same soil as the holy sites.

Muslims are also not happy that the Palestinian issue has not been settled, particularly when they know what kind of monetary support goes from the U.S. to Israel. The U.S. could have used its monetary support in such a way as to require Israel to move more quickly on the issue or have used some of the money that would have gone to Israel to build permanent housing for the Palestinians who have been living in refugee camps for decades.

The Bush administration has preyed on their own citizens' fears over September 11th, by the use of such phrases as "weapons of mass destruction" and "war on terror", and the belief that pre-emptive strikes are necessary to preserve safety at home.

However, there are concrete steps that the U.S. can take to turn around the hatred they have caused in Muslim countries. Stop desecrating Saudi Arabia in the eyes of religious Muslims, break ties with dictators, resolve the Palestinian issue by withholding monetary support from Israel if necessary, refrain from overthrowing governments and making "pre-emptive strikes" and stay home and look after its own problems rather than sticking its nose where it does not belong. If America and Americans want peace, just stop going to war.

Be careful though, there may be enough time before the election for Bush to try to talk up support for a war in Iran.

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9/11 freaked out the privileged white guys
Posted by: hagwind on Aug 28, 2007 6:12 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The rest of us have been dealing with terrorism most of our lives, whether we call it that or not. As soon as a girlchild realizes that she can be raped, she's living with the threat of terrorism. As soon as a child of color realizes that s/he can be busted or beaten or dissed or discriminated against because of his/her color, that child is living with the threat of terrorism. The overwhelming majority of us are not paralyzed by these threats. We learn to take whatever precautions we think are necessary, and to go about our lives. We continue to go about our lives even when horrible things happen to our friends, and sometimes to us.

What happened on 9/11 is that it finally dawned on some privileged white U.S. men that they were vulnerable too. Oh wow. Remember the "gays in the military" debate early in the first Clinton administration? Same damn thing. What were these privileged white guys afraid of? That they might get hit on by other guys! IOW, that other guys might treat them the way they routinely treated women. Turnabout isn't fair play in their book.

What's depressing about the aftermath of 9/11 is that so many of us who know better -- women and people of color, poor and working people of every color and both sexes -- got sucked into the privileged white guys' panic. Let's not let it happen again. We know what we know, no matter what the mainstream media tell us.

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Wrong use of statistic
Posted by: ben24 on Aug 29, 2007 2:35 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I guess 1% of 300M is 3M? - Yes, if you are willing to include infants and elderly or senile people! May be it makes sense to exclude those and only leave capable people of age 15 - 35 (majority of terrorists). And if you are willing to though national origin into the mix - the number would be even smaller.

The author's article either needs to do more research before posting his half baked "analysis" and not assume that taking basic course in statistic grants one capacity to analyze true scientist's research.

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it's worse then that.
Posted by: Axiom69 on Aug 30, 2007 9:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Back when organized crime was the hot topic of the day this country passed a bunch of Racketeering Laws aimed at people like Al Capone. Through the years over zealous prosecutors have stretched these laws to include just about everything. An example: two local police officers where I live were charged with racketeering for taking drugs from low level dealers and trading it to informants in order to catch the "bigger Fish". They made no profit off these transactions. These two cops were the two most decorated on the force. They are both in prison for "Racketeering". The point is this: Just as these two cops were no Al Capone, how long before some prosecutor makes the leap and charges some gang members with "domestic terrorism"? How long before any crime can be stretched into the terrorism definition? How long before YOU are locked up for being a "terrorist" with no access to a lawyer and no due process? Think it can't happen here? It already has.

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» Left something out Posted by: Axiom69
» RE: Left something out Posted by: hagwind