Terrorism in DC?

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yeah, yeah, I know about the crusades. I also know that we had slaves, even if I don't believe in slavery. I, my mind that is, was wondering and wandering about the present situation in the world. ( If we go back far enough we can blame it all on Eve)

Ive read that former Popes were illiterate, witches were burned at stakes and Jews have been persecuted it seems always . there have been a lot of bad in mankind, but as we go forward, I would like to think we also go upward, If you get my drift...:confused:

RAM
 
required reading

required reading

Some of you may find the following article rather interesting.
Perhaps the media should be held partly responsible for the fear sweeping the U.S. these days.
I only wish I had purchased stock in the duct tape industry.

Monker

Hysteria runs riot; networks fuel the fear
By Jennifer Harper
THE WASHINGTON TIMES


Where is our citizen war footing? Top Stories
? Air strategy for war 'timid'
? North Korea cited for 'noncompliance'
? Fed chief tempers stimulus criticism
? 'Supersnoop' scheme blocked pending review
? Arabs ignore bin Laden war call
? She's mastered women's tour, now on the men's


Sixty years ago, enterprising and patriotic Americans saved tinfoil and bacon grease to help defeat Hitler during World War II, heeding the old Office of War Information motto, "Use it up. Wear it out. Make it last."
Some pockets of panic in California did develop immediately after the Pearl Harbor attack of December 7, 1941. However, when Japanese balloon bombs drifted near the West Coast or Nazi U-boats were spotted off New Jersey, Americans learned how to extinguish an incendiary bomb or spot the silhouettes of enemy submarines.
They were not making a run on the local supplies of bottled water and duct tape in a hysteria somewhere between snowstorm panic and the last shopping day before Christmas.
But then, the good folks on the home front were not pummeled by a 24-hour media with time to fill.
"Are you ready?" asked ABC News yesterday, trotting out a "Good Morning America" home-improvement editor to demonstrate how to turn a laundry room into a fallout shelter with duct tape and plastic dropcloths.
"Duct tape sales rise amid terror fears," noted CNN.
MSNBC offered mixed messages, saying that "jittery Americans were stocking up for disaster" while offering an online poll that said 71 percent of the respondents were "doing nothing" to ready themselves for terrorist attacks.
Some were already weary of the fear-mongering.
"I'm not afraid of these jerks," said one Westwood One Radio Network host yesterday. His listeners concurred, many saying they would not join the race to hoard duct tape.
Others used the stuff to shore up their agendas.
"Washington is urging people to prepare for chemical attack by purchasing duct tape, while it fails to provide fire departments with funds for protective suits or bioterror detectors," a New York Times editorial said yesterday.
Though the Federal Emergency Management Agency revamped its "Are You Ready?" citizen-preparedness guide after the September 11 attacks, the media pounced upon the same information rereleased Friday as "breaking news."
TV reports were immediately emblazoned with orange "high alert" banners and rife with talk about poison gas, microbes and imminent threats. Even pet owners were advised to pack an emergency kit for their dogs, complete with "bottled water and food supply."
Syracuse University broadcast analyst Robert Thompson says news organizations have slipped into the instant "bunker mentality" they adopt during bad weather.
"Americans are subjected to split-screen broadcasts which show the terrorist alert symbol on one side and weather and fashion on the other," Mr. Thompson said yesterday. "What do they focus on? Many buy into fearful hype."
Indeed, some news coverage has centered on consumer panic and the sudden appearance of "homeland security" sections in local hardware stores.
"The trouble is, if we connect the dots between some of the really serious news events ? the possible dissolution of NATO or divisiveness within the United Nations ? then that gets scary," Mr. Thompson said.
"We have reached a new era which requires us to go on living life knowing the 'big event' may be just around the corner," he said. "That's what people do in other countries."
News coverage in dire national moments is still a work in progress, however.
"There is a massive difference between a crisis and a catastrophe, and in the case of a bioterror attack, the effect of media coverage on public perception could be the deciding factor between the two," notes Barbara Cochran, president of the Radio Television News Directors Association.
The group issued its own practical guidelines on bioterrorism, terrorism and war coverage two months ago, urging members to "present the facts as clearly, objectively and dispassionately as possible."
Charles Figley, a Florida State University trauma psychologist who has studied media disaster coverage for two decades, faults federal offices for issuing guidelines open to interpretation by both the media and the public.
"Ideally, you want the vast majority of people to be on alert, but not dramatically alter their daily routines," Mr. Figley said yesterday. "People should already have an emergency plan in place anyway for bad weather, industrial accidents or the like."
Changing disaster scenarios requires flexibility, he said.
"We learned there's no magic bullet, no one way to modulate public information to prompt people to do the right thing, at the right time," Mr. Figley said. "But if unsubstantiated warnings go out, people don't pay attention after a while."
 
required reading 2

required reading 2

The following is excerpted from

http://www.connect.net/ron/exist.html

and may fit in with what many of you have had to say regarding this issue.

Kierkegaard held that it is spiritually crucial to recognize that one experiences not only a fear of specific objects but also a feeling of general apprehension, which he called dread. He interpreted it as God's way of calling each individual to make a commitment to a personally valid way of life.
 
grammar 101

grammar 101

Excerpted.....? What the hell kinda word is that?!
 
Hi Nancy, I think I need a brainchecker. I came up with that word all by myself.
 
Excerpted is a real word (apparently)

Excerpted is a real word (apparently)

From dictionary.com:

tr.v. ex·cerpt·ed, ex·cerpt·ing, ex·cerpts (k-sûrpt)
To select or use (a passage or segment from a longer work).
To select or use material from (a longer work).
 
strange reaction ?

strange reaction ?

Nancy - I looked at the Govt preparedness site, and it did nothing for me at all. This may be strange behavior for a control freak, but I can get more uptight looking at the valve selection thread, or wondering when all the equipment in an ICU room was last serviced. Chris
 
excerpted

excerpted

Thanks Johnny, but it still doesn't sound right.

By-the-way, I was just reading news concerning the Democratic Party. Here's another thing that sounds kinda funny.......

"Ladies and gentlemen, the next President of the United States..........Al Sharpton!
 
If we're not supposed to panic, and if duct tape and plastic won't help, whatever are we supposed to do with all that duct tape? And tomorrow's Valentine's Day besides.
 
If you think about it...

If you think about it...

There is a similarity between heart failure and terrorist attacks.......

Be prepared..... not paranoid.

If they make you paranoid, they win.
 
Run on duct tape!

Run on duct tape!

An investigative reporter for the Washington Post has just unearthed the highly classified info that explains the duct tape problem. Secretary Rumsfeld has stock in 3M!
 
being prepared

being prepared

I live in north central IL and there are nuclear plants to the west and to the east of us. About 30 minutes away. I used to be a worrier. I worried about everything. My husband told me to "pick" my worries and don't worry about stuff that is out of your control. This is something that is out of my control. Concerned? Yes. Am I losing any sleep? No way. There is no way I am going to let that kind of evil do that to me. I am confident in my country, my president and my fellow citizens and servicemen. We will win this!!!
 
Just couldn't help but post this, the devil made me do it.

Duct tape has been classified as the best wart remover ever, even better than Wart-Off and others like it. No fooling. Put a little patch on the wart the same size as the wart leave it on for a couple of weeks, and the wart will come off with the tape.
 
Students used duct tape at my college.... mostly the frat bros.
Use your imagination. In high school there was one poor guy that was taped to his locker. I think Nancy's wort remover idea is the best yet. Does that work?
 
Duct tape is definitely a guy thing. Our govt consists mainly of males and they think everybody ought to have some, and that is why we are advised to go buy duct tape.
 
Duct tape

Duct tape

On our motorhome trip last week, John came inside and said, one of the hinges on an outside compartment came off. Where's the duct tape. Would you believe, we were out. Spent an hour looking for a hardware store to buy some.:p :p :p :p Bonnie
 

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