JOSEPH N. BELL -- The Bell Curve
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Monday evening, I was halfway through what I hoped would be a funny
column about the domestic problems caused by the confluence of the
baseball and football seasons. Now, on Tuesday morning, I’m wondering how
long it will be before I can write funny again.
My mind is numbed by six hours of watching the devastation in New York
and Washington, D.C. -- and wondering where else it may happen. And it is
impossible to put from my head the memory of another morning, long before
television, when I huddled around a radio with my college friends and
listened to descriptions of the carnage at Pearl Harbor. On both of those
mornings the United States was attacked. But there the similarity stops.
In 1941, we knew the identity of the enemy. We knew where he was and
how we had to respond. And we marshaled the heart and soul and sinew of a
nation to do that. And did.
Now, the enemy is amorphous. If we can give him a name, it would be
hatred. Hatred of such magnitude that it would murder thousands of
innocent men, women and children, not only without compunction but with
satisfaction. Hatred so consuming that the perpetrators willingly give up
their own lives to take the lives of those they hate.
Our first reaction -- once we’re past the bewilderment that human
beings can do this to one another -- has to be rage. And from that place,
the people who attacked us today can compound the damage they have
already done. If we act impulsively, out of rage and with insufficient
evidence, they will have won again. Our response must be both strong and
credible.
And as we shape that response, we must not forget that the first enemy
is hatred, wherever it is found. One of the most deadly previous acts of
terrorism in our history grew out of the hatred of an American for his
own government. Similar hatred -- against people of other races, color,
religion and lifestyle -- has become a reckless commodity inside as well
as outside our country. It breeds its own brand of destruction, and we
must not allow it to influence our response.
Things will not be the same in this country after today. An open
society will become less open. People who considered themselves
invulnerable will no longer enjoy that feeling. For a while, at least,
every time we board a commercial aircraft, we’ll be remembering what
happened on this day.
If there is an upside, it would have to be that such an attack leads
us directly to our greatest strength: unity against a common enemy. We’ve
proved before what this can accomplish. We will prove it again.
And there’s another upside: that the terrorists who planned this
attack may have finally overstepped. That all the nations of the world
may now be ready to put aside differences to isolate these terrorists and
deal with them.
If they don’t, we will. We’ve paid far too enormous a price today to
do anything less.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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