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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: gao seng who wrote (199984)11/5/2001 9:47:03 AM
From: Tom Clarke  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
He does seem to be on a roll. He's had a couple of major ones lately...



To: gao seng who wrote (199984)11/5/2001 10:26:27 AM
From: Thomas A Watson  Respond to of 769670
 
Osama bin Luddite

Tragedy purges the mind of trivia. Perhaps the horror of a new Black
September can rescue our culture from its thrall of humorless TV
Conditry. From gossip about the moral codes of mayors and actors.
From the search for the combination to the loony bin of politicians
and economists who believe in the lockbox for Social Security.
Instead, we can focus on what is truly important: the glass ceiling
facing millionairettes at Morgan Stanley. Having survived the
vaporization of its 24-floor former World Trade Center offices, the
Wall Street power now faces a second wave from the gender cops.

Purged too of trivia, perhaps some of the deeper minds of Silicon
Valley can let go of their obsession with the threat possibly posed
by computers to human dignity and supremacy, and get back to
work. Computers pose no threat to humans beyond Microsoft's blue
screen of death and fatal-error messages. Indeed, information tools
alone can save us from the depredations of desperate
technophobes—the Bin Luddites, for whom a mud-brick New
Jerusalem ("Afghanistan, Land of Nothing," The New York Times
headlined one dispatch) apparently harkens relief from the
tribulations of freedom and wealth. The Bin Luddites could no more
build a 767—much less a World Trade Center, or even a
flashlight—than they can feed (never mind, free) the oppressed
masses whose interests they claim to advance. But armed with
hijacked technologies and apocalyptic grudges, they pose a
devastating menace to all civilization.

The chief thing terrorists have going for them is the lack of usable
information about them. The U.S. commands the world's supreme
information technology. Neural networks—already used to scan
mortgage applications and currency market turbulence—integrate
huge amounts of sparse data and recognize crucial patterns (or
countenances). New analog optical processors sort through troves
of information in real time. Bin Laden's bands left bit trails through
the airlines, car rental companies and federal agencies. He put an
infomercial video on the Net. Tom Clancy provided his plan of
attack. But there was no effective integration.

We cannot win by imitating our adversaries. In a rivalry focused on
secrecy and control, demonic cliques will always outperform
democratic bureaucracies. Freedom and openness are our chief
enduring assets. As Edward Teller points out, the U.S. nuclear and
missile programs, shrouded in secrecy, could not even keep their
edge against the Soviet Union's Sputnik and hydrogen bombs. But
the U.S. triumphed through entrepreneurial industries, whose
innovations—and the wealth they generate—are the real foundation of
our security. Washington now needs to summon those and the
distributed resources of insurance firms, financial institutions,
security consultancies and commercial data farms -- together with
the factious teams of government intelligence—to address fiendish
threats to open society. Without stifling it in the process.

We should stop using the word "cowards" to describe people who
board a 757, ruthlessly kill the pilots, take the controls and fly the
plane into the side of an office tower. They are brave and evil. Nor
should we pay attention to the pretense of their having some
legitimate historic grievance over the loss of territory. Bin Luddites
do not care about history or territory. They resent the Israeli
demonstration that even a semi-capitalist garrison state can grow
flowers and sell them all over Europe, build semiconductors in
Herzlia, practice democracy under fire and supply a third of Silicon
Valley's key communications technologies.

Such envy of creative capitalists provoked all the horrors of the
Twentieth century, from the Holocaust, the liquidation of Russia's
Kulaks and the expulsion of white colonists from Africa, to the
massacres of Ibos in Nigeria, Indians in Uganda and the Chinese in
Indonesia. Despots always promise development, but their first acts
are invariably to kill or banish as many of the actual developers as
they can. The Israelis are desperate to help the Palestinians out of
poverty; their own leaders prefer instead that they die as suicide
bombers.

In the light of the burning Trade towers, Democrats and liberals and
European tut-tutters should consider that opposition to missile
defense is tantamount to advocating the destruction of Israel.
Without anti-missile technology, Israel is simply not defensible. It is
hard to believe that Democrats are too stupid to see this. Israel has
become as crucial to U.S. defense as we are to Israel's. Israeli
outposts in Silicon Valley contribute indispensably to all the leading
technologies that uphold the U.S. economy. Unlike many American
technologists—wringing their hands over the threat of global
warming, "gray goo" and humanoid robotics—Israelis are
unembarrassed to work on the weapons that will save us all.

What the enemies of Israel—and America—really hate and fear is human
creativity. Flourishing only under capitalism, creativity is our key
endowment, in the image of our creator. Without the miracle of mind,
expressed in the art and enterprise of a free society, human beings
become mere meat. Without the word that breathes spirit into
creation, nature is brutal, deadly and Darwinian. Soulless butchers
rule, and rush to bury civilization under the rubble. Human creativity
reflects divine creation. And this arouses the unending abomination
of nihilists everywhere. That is the real evil in the Luddite urge—the
annihilation of the sapient creativity that lifts humans beyond the
beasts and the Bin Ladens.
spectator.org
tom watson tosiwmee