Terror in the Skies, Again?

“Note from the E-ditors: You are about to read an account of what happened during a domestic flight

that one of our writers, Annie Jacobsen, took from Detroit to Los

Angeles. The WWS Editorial Team debated long and hard about how to

handle this information and ultimately we decided it was something that

should be shared. What does it have to do with finances? Nothing, and

everything. Here is Annie’s story.” (Women’s Wall Street)

Isn’t it overwhelmingly likely that we would have had a major press

conference with unrestrained crowing from Ashcroft and Ridge if they

had found that the Arab men detained at the end of this flight had been

involved in midair bomb-making? So we can safely say that this piece is

about the writer’s in-flight terror but has nothing to do with

in-flight terrorism; I am confident the men described in the

article were a bunch of Syrian musicians and nothing more. The real

issue is whether the fact that she was supposedly terrorized by her

experience has anything to say objectively about our security. Her

observation that

“(w)hat I experienced during that flight has caused me to question whether the United States of America can realistically uphold

the civil liberties of every individual, even non-citizens, and protect

its citizens from terrorist threats”

strikes me as likely a preconception that shaped her perception of what happened to her that day rather than the conclusion she presents it as. In any case, it is precisely that which a government

interested in the absurd prosecution of a neverending WoT® hopes people

will reach. For this reason, my bet is that no government agency will

ever reply reassuringly to her persistent requests for followup with

the information that the “Middle Eastern men” were innocent of the

suspicions against them.

Right-wing bloggers like Reynolds are linking to this piece admiringly (and Lileks does a typical bleat on the issue), but there are obvious questions about the writer’s

judgment and agenda. In defiance of the likely truth, she makes the

implausible assertion that these suspicious passengers’ carry-on items

were not searched and, furthermore, that it was because of fears of

‘racial profiling’. She draws some outlandish conclusions about

how an interest in preserving civil liberties will inevitably defeat

any efforts at airline security. One frequently-flying weblogger proclaims this a hoax (scroll down to July 15; I couldn’t find a permalink)

simply on the basis of the description of the behavior of the flight

crew. I realized what we were up against, if not before, when she

offered a quotation from Ann Coulter in support of her argument. (Good

for Reynolds; wondering if it is a law enforcement training exercise

rather than a de facto threat

at least betrays some doubt.) Another weblogger who identifies

himself as involved with law enforcement investigations on both

federal and local levels is skeptical of the level of detail Jacobsen puts into her account. As a psychiatrist experienced in the evaluation of traumatic memories, I agree with his assertion that the amount of adrenaline flowing in a terrorized observer usually obliterates their eye for detail, even if they are a trained writer.

Indeed, the WWS editor’s description of ‘long and hard’ editorial deliberations

about ‘how to handle this information’ sounds like code for questioning its veracity, which would not be out of the question. Although she is identified as a writer for WWS, a Google search on the (somewhat common) name

comes up with numerous references to the ‘Terror’ article but nothing

else that I could clearly associate with this particular Annie

Jacobsen, certainly nothing else she has published for WWS before. In

what I find an ironic comment, a link to her ‘last ten articles’ on FrontPagemag.com,

where she is listed in the company of other right-wing poster children

like Coulter and David Horowitz, shows nothing but the ‘Terror’ piece.

Michelle Malkin, a credulous conservative weblogger lauding Jacobsen’s story, is dismayed by the news that the Washington Post

did not deem it fit to print. She did a phone interview with Jacobsen,

who is puzzled by the mainstream media’s ignoring her story. Jacobsen

claims to have received ‘thousands’ of corroborating emails from

airline passengers and flight crews who have had similar experiences on

other flights. To reiterate, this clearly speaks to the danger we are

in, but not the danger from bearded Middle Eastern men (regardless of

whether they do suspicious things like going to the bathroom, reading

the Koran, or eating their fast food onboard); rather the dangers of

insistently implanted irrational memes poisoning credulous people’s

minds with hatred and fear. And the pitiful victims do not realize they

are the dupes of a beleaguered lying administration terrorizing them to

win reelection and further its megalomanic agenda.

The funny thing is that Jacobsen’s argument that we cannot simultaneously

protect civil liberties and prevent terrorist attacks on the US is

probably true. But we cannot prevent such attacks with draconian

restrictions on our civil liberties either. Regardless of whether

airline security is becoming more lax (which though I am not a frequent

traveller I would dispute, although arguably it is becoming somewhat

more reasonable), all the

airline security in the world is not going to prevent some group of

enraged, dedicated and resourceful men from their next attempt at mass

devastation by a different, non-airborne means. And we are of course

making the next attack far more likely by the discord our grandiose and

bigoted international adventurism is sowing in its wake.

Hawking cracks black hole paradox

“After nearly 30 years of arguing that a black hole destroys everything that falls into it, Stephen Hawking says he was wrong. It seems that black holes may after all allow information within them to escape. Hawking will present his latest finding at a conference in Ireland next week.

The about-turn might cost Hawking, a physicist at the University of Cambridge, an encyclopaedia because of a bet he made in 1997. More importantly, it might solve one of the long-standing puzzles in modern physics, known as the black hole information paradox.” (New Scientist )

A fresh definition of inheritance comes into vogue

“Legally, Breck Arnzen and Lani Peterson-Arnzen had covered all the bases when they wrote their will – everything from guardianship to inheritance for their four children.


But two years ago they realized something was missing when a friend told them about the concept of an ethical will – a love letter, many would say – in which people pass down the experiences and values that have infused their lives with meaning.


Within a few months, the couple had created a 20-page ‘living legacy,’ as Ms. Peterson-Arnzen calls it. They plan to update it every five years or so, but its value to the family was immediate. Instead of tucking it away until after they’re gone, they shared it with their children, then 7 to 14 years old.” (Christian Science Monitor)

‘Secret film shows Iraq prisoners sodomised’

“Young male prisoners were filmed being sodomised by

American soldiers at the Abu Ghraib prison near Baghdad, according to

the journalist who first revealed the abuses there.


Seymour

Hersh, who reported on the torture of the prisoners in New Yorker

magazine in May, told an audience in San Francisco that ‘it’s worse’.

But he added that he would reveal the extent of the abuses: ‘I’m not

done reporting on all this,’ he told a meeting of the American Civil

Liberties Union.


He said: ‘The boys were sodomised with

the cameras rolling, and the worst part is the soundtrack, of the boys

shrieking. And this is your government at war.’


He

accused the US administration, and all but accused President George

Bush and Vice-President Dick Cheney of complicity in covering up what

he called ‘war crimes’.” (Independent.UK)

Also: Here is one weblogger’s transcription of Hersh’s remarks.

Related:

Red Cross Suspects U.S. Is Hiding Detainees Worldwide:

“The International Committee of the Red Cross said yesterday it suspects the United States is secretly holding detainees in prisons around the world, since alleged terrorists mentioned by the FBI have not turned up in known detention centers and Washington has failed to provide a complete list of the people it is holding.


“These people are, as far as we can tell, detained in locations that are undisclosed not only to us but also to the rest of the world,” said ICRC spokeswoman Antonella Notari.


Some individuals whose arrests have been reported in the media and whom the FBI announced it has arrested have not been seen in ICRC prison visits, Notari said. Some media reports have said detainees are being held at the British-controlled Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia, where the United States has a military base, but the ICRC has not been notified of prisoners there, she said.


White House spokesman Scott McClellan said yesterday he is looking into the allegation. “We do work closely with the Red Cross on all detainee issues,” he said.” (UN Wire)