Incoming LATBR editor David L. Ulin (to whom we've just shipped off our 3MI questions) pens this commentary for the L.A. Times about this week's power outage:
On the radio, a newscaster raised the possibility of terrorism, noting the Sept. 11 anniversary as well as the weekend's vague threats against L.A. I'd dismissed those threats as grandstanding, but that breathless voice stirred a sense of menace inside me, stripping away the hooky-playing pleasure of the moment and replacing it with low-grade anxiety.
I don't generally worry about terrorism; I believe the risk is overstated, manipulated for political ends. All you need do is look at New Orleans to understand that we have more to fear from nature — not to mention our leaders' inefficiency and lack of empathy — than from any outside agency. Yet terror is a psychological mechanism, one that overtakes rationality. Despite my better instincts, my delight in the disruption of a routine workday fell prey to thoughts of chaos, uncertainty and alarm.
the scribe has not spent a lot of time after 9/11 worrying about terrorists, having always viewed that nefarious day as a unique opportunity for the (r)epublican party and the military-industrial complex to replace the bogeyman of international communism with something new to justify outrageous expenditures of money on weapons and related materiel (love that word). After Katrina, however, the scribe must needs admit that what has him shaking in bed at night is not any particular "cause" (terror, natural disaster) but the "effect." The effect, my good friends, is this idea of an urban disaster where electricity is cut and suddenly the whole thing disintegrates because you can't drive, can't make a phone call, can't go to Ralphs, can't store your food, can't...can't. Clearly, except in very closely knit and civic communities, of which we here in L.A. are not a part, people become animals and systems break down and what with a desert to the east, a couple of roads out north, and a foreboding megalopolis to the south, there's really now way out.
Posted by: the highway scribe | September 16, 2005 at 09:31 AM