For some reason this thread leads me to voice what I suspect are unpopular opinions. My uncomfortable concept of the day? The three terror attacks since March in England killed some 30 people, whereas approximately 160 people in the UK died of falling down stairs over the same 3 month period (more than 5 times greater). Transportation accident fatalities were much higher than that. Illnesses far higher still!
I am not suggesting that accidents and terror attacks are comparable- the emotional impact of people being blown apart by evil murderers verses people hitting their heads on a stair tread is quite different. And I am not dismissing in any way the special suffering of the victims of these dreadful events and of their families- I can’t even begin to imagine how I would feel if I knew any of them personally. But logic, not emotions, not even justifiable emotions, must play the dominant role in defining an effective and appropriate response. Just how much should these events rush us (forgive me because I am speaking broadly, I am not British, although I have a very warm spot in my heart for the British and UK) into lashing out with poorly considered laws that take any from our own freedoms? How much do we wish to turn away from justice and punish innocent people as a result of our horror? How much do we want fear to take away our humanity and willingness to help those in need? Just what type of military actions should we embark on without a clear understanding of what the end game will be and if these actions will actually have a positive effect? Particularly important questions when the terrorists clearly want us to do just these things; they believe it will strength their cause (and history suggests it well might). We don’t seem to be driven to reckless responses by the 160 deaths due to falling down stairs (“Architects who put stairs into houses are to be imprisoned as dangerous killers. All foreign architects will be banned from entering the country and those already here will be targets of our security departments and treated publicly as trash.”). Approximately 30 people died- awful, dreadful, evil! More are likely to do so and we must prevent that as much as possible. But we must not let the emotions from what has and may happen overwhelm us into ignoring the true level of the risk. I know most people here agree, but not everyone else seems to understand that it is crucial to get our emotions under control first, to obtain a sense of perspective and calm, before we rush and do stupid and dangerous things that will hurt us and others far more than help anyone. And we must not blame an entire religion, any religion, for the evil done by some of its members.