Then,
on TV screens an industry of terrorism “experts,” lawyers and politicians
resumes billions-of-word explanations for the inexplicable, to create an
illusion of making sense out of what defies sense, the inner darkness that now
has the technological means to hold society hostage to its expression.
After
the Newtown shootings, all eyes were on the victims and their grieving families,
but the Marathon massacre has given the media what it truly craves—-explosions,
smoke, crowd panic, surveillance pictures, urban lockdown, carjacking, a deadly
cop shootout and finally a bloody prime-time TV climax to resolve their fears.
Now
that imminent terror has subsided, obsessive rehash of the week’s details,
speculation about the legal process to come and apparently rational dissection
of what all the irrationality means will go on ad nauseum to distract Americans from what government can truly do
to make life safer and fairer.
Already,
Lindsey Graham and the political vampires are out to demand that the justice
system re-brand two naturalized citizens as “enemy combatants” and skip all the
civilized niceties as they themselves hold Washington hostage on gun control,
immigration reform and undoing the damage of the sequester to air-traffic control
and other public safety measures.
The
lethal insanity of two murderous young brothers will continue to distract us
from that of hundreds of politicians who have been elected and are being paid
to do everything they can to keep us safe and secure.
In my
ninetieth year, I recall what happened in 1933, shortly before FDR was sworn
into office. As the President-elect was being driven through Miami, a
feeble-minded immigrant named Giuseppe Zangara stood on a wobbly folding chair
and fired five shots at the open car. The Mayor of Chicago, riding on the
running board, was killed.
In
those days, we were shielded from news by the sparse details of radio bulletins
and the delay of reading about it in the next day’s newspaper.
Zangara
was arrested, tried and executed two months later. By then, FDR had been
inaugurated and had launched his legislative push to repair the damage of the
Depression.
We
are so much better-informed today.
The voice of calm and reason!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much and keep up the much needed work!