Why the Islamic State Is the Minor Leagues of Terror
Putting Threats into Perspective for 2016
By Tom Engelhardt
It’s time to panic!
As 2015 ended, this country was certifiably terror-stricken. It had the Islamic State (IS) on the brain. Hoax terror threats or terror imbroglios shut down school systems from Los Angeles to New Hampshire, Indiana to a rural county in Virginia. The Dallas Symphony Orchestra, citing terror attacks in Paris and San Bernardino, cancelled
a prospective tour of Europe thanks to terror fears, issuing a
statement that “orchestra management believes there is an elevated risk
to the safety of musicians and their families, guest artists, DSO
personnel, and travelling patrons.” By year's end, the Justice
Department had charged an ”unprecedented” 60 people with terrorism-related crimes (often linked to social media exchanges).
While just north of the border Canada’s new government and its citizens were embracing
the first of 25,000 Syrian refugees in an atmosphere of near
celebration, citizens and government officials in the lower 48 were squabbling
and panicking about the few who had made it here. (“Sid Miller, the
Texas agriculture commissioner, compared Syrian refugees to
rattlesnakes, posting on Facebook images of snakes and refugees and
asking, ‘Can you tell me which of these rattlers won’t bite you?’”)
In the two presidential debates
that ended the year, focusing in whole or part on “national security,”
the only global subject worthy of discussion was -- you guessed it --
the Islamic State and secondarily immigration and related issues. Media
panelists didn’t ask a single question in either debate about China or
Russia (other than on the IS-related issue of who might shoot down
Russian planes over Syria) or about the relative success of the French
right-wing, anti-Islamist National Front Party and its presidential
candidate, Marine Le Pen (even though her American analog, Donald Trump,
was on stage in one debate and a significant subject of the other). And
that just begins a long list of national security issues that no one
felt it worth bringing up, including the fact that in Paris 195
countries had agreed on a potentially path-breaking climate change deal.
As the Dallas Symphony Orchestra signaled, “Paris” now means only one
thing in this country: the bloody terror attack on the Eagles of Death
Metal concert at the Bataclan theater and related assaults. In fact, if
you were following the “news” here as 2015 ended, you might be forgiven
for thinking that we Americans lived in a land beset by, and under siege
from, Islamic terror and the Islamic State. The latest polls indicate
that striking numbers of Americans now view the threat of terrorism as the country’s number one danger, see it as a (if not the) critical issue facing us, believe that it and national security should be the government’s top priorities, and are convinced that the terrorists are at present “winning.”
You would never know that, if you left out what might be called self-inflicted pain like death by vehicle (more than 33,000 deaths annually), suicide by gun (more than 21,000 annually) or total gun deaths (30,000 annually), and fatal drug overdoses (more than 47,000
annually), this is undoubtedly one of the safest countries on the
planet. Over these years, the American dead from Islamic terror outfits
or the “lone wolves” they inspire have added up to the most modest
of figures, even if you include that single great day of horror,
September 11, 2001. Include deaths from non-Islamic right-wing acts of
terror (including, for instance, Dylann Roof’s murders in a black church in Charleston), a slightly more impressive figure in recent years, and you still have next to nothing. Even if you add in relatively commonplace mass shootings,
from school campuses to malls to workplaces, that are not defined as
“terror,” and accept the broadest possible definition of such shootings
(a minimum of four killed or injured),
you would still have the sort of danger that couldn’t be more modest
compared to death by vehicle, suicide, or drugs -- phenomena that obsess
few Americans.
Click here to read more of this dispatch.
http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/176086/tomgram%3A_engelhardt%2C_the_fate_of_our_earth/#more
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