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HE RANT: HOME OF THE NOT-SO-BRAVE AND LAND OF THE NOT-SO-FREE
Captiol Hill Blue ^ | 12 FEB 03 | Doug Thompson

Posted on 02/12/2003 8:34:37 AM PST by dts32041

  John Harlan hit five hardware stores near his home in Alexandria, Virginia, this week, looking for duct tape.

"None," he said. "None nowhere."

Connie Masten couldn't find bottled water at her neighborhood grocery store and drove to two others before finding just four gallon jugs left on the shelf.  She bought all four.

"I'm scared," she admits. "Real scared."

Harlen and Masten responded this week to government warnings that Osama bin Laden's thugs will strike again, probably by the end of the week, in an attack that may include chemical weapons or possibly even a "dirty" bomb that will spread radioactivity or toxic chemicals.

Americans, Uncle Sam said, should stock up on food and water, buy duct tape to seal up windows and vents and, if necessary, hide in their homes like frightened children.

In other words, those of us who live and work in the most powerful nation on earth should cower in our homes and live in fear of a bunch of unwashed fanatics who hide in caves and misquote Allah to justify hate and murder.

The frenzy that left grocery store shelves bare and hardware stores scrambling to stock duct tape, flashlights and batteries probably gives bin Laden and his minions a lot of reasons to smile.

In the 17 months following September 11, 2001, fear and paranoia over what bin Laden might do next has decimated the U.S. economy, turned the home of the brave and land of the free into a police state and disrupted American life.

The Pentagon deployed surface-to-air missles on hills around Washington this week. Electronic sniffers to warn of nuclear or chemical weapons have been in place for weeks.

Carl Levinson traveled to San Francisco on business recently. He took a couple of extra days to see the city and drove his rental car across the Golden Gate Bridge, stopping on the other side to get out of his car and take a picture of the bridge.  Two California Highway Patrol cars screeched to a halt and officers emerged with guns drawn, demanding Levinson drop his camera and keep his hands in plain sight.

Levinson didn't see the new signs announcing that photography is now prohibited on or near the bridge, a new precuation that a CHP spokesman said was implemented because of "concerns over terrorism." After the police checked him out, they released him but kept the film from his camera.

Sallie McNaughton tried to take a picture of her sister at Washington's Union Station earlier this week when a security officer approached, demanded ID, and asked her what she thought she was doing.

"I told him we were visiting Washington and wanted a picture to remember the visit," McNaughton said. "He told me to go buy a postcard."

Drive the three-quarter-mile stretch of Virginia State Route 110 that passes the northeast side of the Pentagon and you will pass six Virginia State Police cars with lights flashing and two Humvees with machine guns manned by serious looking MPs from Fort Bragg. Don't try to stop and take a picture. You will be arrested and your camera and film confiscated, even if you try to take a photo from the public road.

I've been photographing Washington's monuments wihout a problem for the past 23 years. Last week, while shooting new photos of the Washington Monument, two National Park Police Officers demanded identification and ran a check on my driver's license before allowing me to continue.

As Washington heads into a new tourist season, hotel bookings are down 35 percent. Planes flying into Washington's three airports arrive with half the seats empty.

In Florida, NASCAR's premier race, the Daytona 500, usually sells out six months in advance. Good seats are still available for this Sunday's running of the event, including prime spots right above the start-finish line. Need a hotel room for the weekend in Daytona? Still lots of good rooms available.

"There is a fine line between vigilance and overreaction," says retired FBI agent and terrorism expert Johnathan Belk. "Don't bother looking for the line. We crossed it a long time ago."

Belk says a terrorist considers himself successful if he or she disrupts the lives and normal routines of their enemy.

"Take a look around you," Belk says. "Examine what happens. Is your life normal? Are your days routine? Probably not. Terrorism is based on instilling fear and terror into everyday lives. Right now, who do you think is winning this war on terror?"

.© Copyright 2003 by Capitol Hill Blue


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: ducttape; sheeple; terrorists; wimps
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After living in Germany for 12 years during the height of the Red Army Faction rampage, and other neat little peoples targeting of US Military.

Nothing has changed.

Still a target and I can still die crossing the street tomorrow.

We have become a country of wimps and paranoid idiots.

1 posted on 02/12/2003 8:34:37 AM PST by dts32041
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To: dts32041
We have become a country of wimps and paranoid idiots.

Actually, I doubt we have, but the media will go to the minority of whiners and wimps, make a big profile of them to make it seem they represent American attitudes, and ignore the people who are just going about their normal routines.

2 posted on 02/12/2003 8:36:27 AM PST by dirtboy
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To: dts32041
Yes, we Americans have become a disgusting bunch of cowards. (Come to think of it, I think that is TERRIFYING [grin].)
3 posted on 02/12/2003 8:38:13 AM PST by the_doc
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To: dts32041
All of us do not follow with this gubmint policy.
4 posted on 02/12/2003 8:38:42 AM PST by exnavy
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To: dts32041
We have become a country of wimps and paranoid idiots.

This bears repeating in bold.

5 posted on 02/12/2003 8:42:02 AM PST by ShadowDancer
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To: dts32041
We have become a country of wimps and paranoid idiots.

Preach it, brother.

6 posted on 02/12/2003 8:47:40 AM PST by A2J (From my cold, dead hands...)
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To: dts32041
John Harlan hit five hardware stores near his home in Alexandria, Virginia, this week, looking for duct tape.

No red-blooded American is normally caught dead without an ample supply of duct tape, so this guy is probably some liberal weenie anyway.

7 posted on 02/12/2003 8:56:03 AM PST by dirtboy
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To: dirtboy
Maybe it's something in the water in these areas. I haven't seen any signs of reaction to terrorist threats, much less overreaction, here in west central MO .
8 posted on 02/12/2003 9:02:32 AM PST by kaylar
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To: dts32041

In other words, those of us who live and work in the most powerful nation on earth should cower in our homes and live in fear of a bunch of unwashed fanatics who hide in caves and misquote Allah to justify hate and murder.

The frenzy that left grocery store shelves bare and hardware stores scrambling to stock duct tape, flashlights and batteries probably gives bin Laden and his minions a lot of reasons to smile.

We have become a country of wimps and paranoid idiots.

And seeing people crowd grocery stores before a hurricane or winter storm is a sign of weakness, too, isn't it?

To say that preparedness and avoidance are signs of "wimpiness" is macho imbecility, just like those idiots on the other thread writing that THEIR survival kit only icludes a gun and 10,000 rounds of ammo.

9 posted on 02/12/2003 9:04:59 AM PST by Chemist_Geek ("Drill, R&D, and conserve" should be our watchwords! Energy independence for America!)
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To: dts32041
Well, I'll admit to having plastic sheeting over the windows. But then, I do THAT every fall: it helps to cut the heating bill.

What really amuses me about all this scurrying about is this: If Osama or suchlike deploy CBR over here, it will be in a spot with maximum impact. i.e. downtown Manhattan or Wall Street. On or near the Mall in DC. That sort of thing. They don't have the delivery systems to blanket the suburbs with nerve gas or biowar agents. . . .
10 posted on 02/12/2003 9:11:17 AM PST by Salgak (don't mind me: the orbital mind control lasers are making me write this. . .)
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To: dts32041
"There is a fine line between vigilance and overreaction," says retired FBI agent and terrorism expert Johnathan Belk. "Don't bother looking for the line. We crossed it a long time ago."

We sure did.
Airline searches that turn up an alligator clip that looks, on x-rays, like it might be a teeny weeny pair of scissors no larger than the end joint of my pinky finger.
Don't stop to take pictures of our mighty bridges, our tourist attractions, our mighty dams with lakes of water behind them. You could be a terrorist planning an attack and just getting advance information.
And after living in the Philippines during the period when Marcos was ousted, I agree. Still a target and I can still die tomorrow crossing the street.

11 posted on 02/12/2003 9:13:21 AM PST by Just another Joe
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To: Chemist_Geek
Includes, that is, rather than icludes.
12 posted on 02/12/2003 9:13:23 AM PST by Chemist_Geek ("Drill, R&D, and conserve" should be our watchwords! Energy independence for America!)
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To: dts32041
I haven't noticed any difference in the way my co-workers act or my neighbors. Of course I work in a small town and live in the suburbs of a very very very small town. Our preparations have included making sure the dogs get let out at regular intervals and the horses are fed on time and the manure picked up....Oh, wait a minute, that's what we do all the time.

PS. We live about 25 miles north of Ft Bragg.

13 posted on 02/12/2003 9:16:59 AM PST by bibarnes
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To: dirtboy
No red-blooded American is normally caught dead without an ample supply of duct tape

Duct tape.-for things that are moving but shouldn't be.
WD-40-for things that aren't moving but should be. -Tom

14 posted on 02/12/2003 9:22:20 AM PST by Capt. Tom
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To: dts32041
Don't know about everyone else, but as a rational homeowner, pretty much everything on the panic list is close at hand all the time.

Who gives a rat's elbow how liberals and other losers behave?
Not me.

: )

15 posted on 02/12/2003 9:24:14 AM PST by Publius6961
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To: dirtboy
Shhh, Keep this article under the radar until the wife gets the plastic and tape so I can use it next summer at the cabin and save my
money.
16 posted on 02/12/2003 9:26:42 AM PST by justrepublican (Remember your youth?)
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To: dts32041
Carl Levinson traveled to San Francisco on business recently. He took a couple of extra days to see the city and drove his rental car across the Golden Gate Bridge, stopping on the other side to get out of his car and take a picture of the bridge. Two California Highway Patrol cars screeched to a halt and officers emerged with guns drawn, demanding Levinson drop his camera and keep his hands in plain sight.

I doubt this happened. First, you can see everything worth seeing in a single afternoon – it doesn’t take a couple of extra days. Second, it just happens that I gave a quickie-tour of San Francisco to relatives recently too. We drove across the bridge, parked their rented mini-van and took pictures within 40 feet of a CHP officer and he never batted an eye. He didn’t bother us or anyone in the other 50+ cars parked there.

In Florida, NASCAR's premier race, the Daytona 500, usually sells out six months in advance. Good seats are still available for this Sunday's running of the event, including prime spots right above the start-finish line.

BFD. If he hasn’t noticed, a lot of people are out of work right now. Those tickets can cost $150+ each.

I went to Sears Point a few years ago to see a NASCAR race there. I was given the tickets and included in the package was a bus ride to the event, a tent that served free brunch and beer, a “spare” car that you could look in and get your picture taken standing next to, pre-race talk by the driver that the company sponsored, pre-race pit road tour, and pretty good seating. I was told that the package was probably worth around $500.

I enjoyed it. It was an interesting thing to do ONCE. You do not see me lining up to buy tickets to the next race there – and it’s not because I’m worried about a terrorist attack or because I can’t afford it. You take someone that loves NASCAR but has worries about being laid off and I bet he isn’t going to blow hundreds of bucks on a race he can see on TV for free.

I could nit-pick the rest of it too, but I'm not.

17 posted on 02/12/2003 9:33:05 AM PST by thatsnotnice
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To: dirtboy
Dirtboy, just imagine what Barney Frank uses duct tape for!
Ted Kennedy uses it to tie up young women in the back seat of his car. DASShole uses duct tape to hold his panties up!Clinton use it to bind his rape victims to the bed. Hillary uses duct tape to remove unwanted hair from her face and ankles. Kerry uses duct tape to prevent his face from stretching any further.
18 posted on 02/12/2003 9:33:58 AM PST by Doc Savage
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To: thatsnotnice

Good comments. Whenever I pass that CHP vehicle at the North end, the officer is reading the paper or has his head back on the headrest.
19 posted on 02/12/2003 9:42:01 AM PST by whinecountry
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To: thatsnotnice
We drove across the bridge, parked their rented mini-van and took pictures within 40 feet of a CHP officer and he never batted an eye. He didn’t bother us or anyone in the other 50+ cars parked there.

Ah but was the alert level at mauve? ;^)

20 posted on 02/12/2003 12:14:37 PM PST by Just another Joe
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