NEW YORK, Oct. 20 More than a month after the attacks the battle
continues. As U.S. bombs rained down on Taliban military targets, anthrax
arrived in the mail. NBC News and The New York Times are among the latest
targets. As police closed down sections of Times Square and doctors examined
NBC employees for traces of infection, debate grows over how best to boost
our security.
Beyond biological assault, human bombs and nuclear attack remain among
the weapons aimed against us. Unlike previous conflicts, this battlefield
includes the mall down the street and the coffee shop at the corner. In
that way, we are all in the army now. The question then is how we choose
to fight? Will we win awards for valor and bravery or become cowards,
or even war criminals?
More than just defend what we own and whom we love, will we fight for
what we believe? Military soldiers give their life for their country.
As a civilian soldier, are you ready to die for your liberty?
Since the attacks, we hear we are not safe. But how safe do we want to
be? Sitting in a crowded restaurant this week it was easy to see that
none of us are safe. A human bomb could walk in at any moment and easily
blow us all to bits in the most ghastly way.
We could secure that restaurant. We could require patrons to pass through
metal detectors, show ID, or maybe even subject themselves to searches
before sitting down for a lasagna or a latte. Civilian soldiers who wanted
to eat in comparative safety could gather at any restaurant adopting equivalent
measures. Insurance companies protecting their bottom lines might deny
coverage to restaurants failing to adopt new safety restrictions. We might
even excuse overly zealous restaurant security guards who denied access
to an Arab, or used physical force against an Arab enraged by his denied
access.
Where will you eat? What will you excuse? Where will you take your mother
when she visits? Where will you forbid your children from visiting? Will
you sit at the safe lunch table, or sit at one where a nail bomber or
anthrax duster can walk in and finish you off?
We can improve our safety. We can screen all mail, require security checks
at the entrance of Grande Central Station, at movie complexes, at shopping
malls, and anywhere else large groups gather. We can do that and more.
We will be safer. But how safe do we want to be?
Land of the free. Home of the brave. Easy words in easy times, but are
they words to live by now? One by one, well decide that as this
battle unfolds, day by day.
We are all in the army now. The question then is how we choose to fight?
Will we win awards for valor and bravery or become cowards, or even war
criminals? Soldiers give their life for their country. Are you ready to
die for your liberty?
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