RUSH: Now, I can’t let this “Was 9/11 really that bad?” column from the Los Angeles Times yesterday go. I want to pick this up because, folks, I’ve known this was coming. The Democrats have been trying to make the case in an implied or even a subliminal way for two to three years now. We live in a pre-9/11 country today; we don’t need to be in Afghanistan, we don’t need to be in Iraq, we don’t have any really enemies out there. This is just Bush and his insanity or whatever they want to say that it is. “Even if one counts our dead in Iraq and Afghanistan as casualties of the war against terrorism, which brings us to about 6,500, we should remember that roughly the same number of Americans die every two months in automobile accidents,” as I so frequently point out. But isn’t it interesting here to see that this guy and the LA Times and the rest of the Drive-By Media hammering daily every casualty number from Iraq into our heads to show how bad we are losing the war, now it fits their political agenda to tell us it isn’t so bad after all. All of a sudden now the 3,000 deaths in Iraq of the soldiers, according to this guy, no big deal, 3,000 dead on 9/11, no big deal, nothing compared to what the Soviets lost in World War II.
Why do leftists compare everything to the Soviet Union? “Of course, the 9/11 attacks also conjured up the possibility of far deadlier attacks to come. But then, we were hardly ignorant of these threats before, as a glance at just about any thriller from the 1990s will testify. And despite the even more nightmarish fantasies of the post-9/11 era (e.g. the TV show ’24’s’ nuclear attack on Los Angeles), Islamist terrorists have not come close to deploying weapons other than knives, guns and conventional explosives.” Uh, where to start? “Conjured up the possibility of far deadlier attacks to come, but then we were hardly ignorant of these threats before?” Actually, some of us were ignorant because the previous administration was doing diddly-squat about it. The previous administration wasn’t trying very hard at all. It’s like Mrs. Clinton in Iowa over the weekend claiming that it’s irresponsible we haven’t gotten bin Laden and she’s going to take care of that when she’s president. She’s in the White House with her husband for eight years, they had five chances to get bin Laden, and they punted on every one of them. It’s like she was never in Washington; like her husband was never president of the United States; like he never said any of the same things about Iraq and Saddam Hussein that she herself said along with practically every other American politician in 2002.
This business of “24” providing these nightmarish fantasies, “Islamist terrorists have not come close to deploying weapons other than knives, guns, and conventional explosives?” What were the three airplanes? An airplane, like the way they used it, is not conventional. It is not a conventional weapon. Stop and think what they did. Box cutters, fake driver’s license, expired visas and all of this, and our own airplanes, taught to fly them in our own country. And we have no threat? They don’t have the ability to get a — what do you think the Iranians are doing? What do you think the Iranians and the Russians working together, not to mention the Chinese, are working on? So anyway, he asked, “So why has there been such an overreaction? Unfortunately, the commentators who detect one have generally explained it in a tired, predictably ideological way: calling the United States a uniquely paranoid aggressor that always overreacts to provocation. In a recent book, for instance, political scientist John Mueller evaluated the threat that terrorists pose to the United States and convincingly concluded that it has been, to quote his title,” “Overblown.” But he undercut his own argument by adding that the United States has overreacted to every threat in its recent history, including even Pearl Harbor (rather than trying to defeat Japan, he argued, we should have tried containment!). Seeing international conflict in apocalyptic terms “viewing every threat as existential is hardly a uniquely American habit.”
At any rate, we need to overcome this long habit of thinking every threat is aimed at our existence and remind ourselves that not every enemy is, in fact, a threat to our existence. You have to always keep in mind, folks, yeah, they may say they want to wipe us out, but can they? And until they can, we don’t need to really worry. We’re manufacturing all this fear and going through all of these procedures, security measures and so forth, and it’s totally unnecessary because we have overreacted here in the United States about this threat. It doesn’t matter what the imams and what the sheiks, what they’re saying out there, doesn’t matter what they’re promising to do, doesn’t matter what they’re training their young boys to do, none of that matters. What matters is, we haven’t taken nearly as many casualties as the Soviets did, and we’ve only lost 6500, come on, we’re way, way, way overreacting. Need to lose a lot more before we react properly.
Well, works for me. If that’s all it takes to feel good about the future, we’re overreacting, there is no threat. The threat is being manufactured. It’s existential. Yeah, they say they want to do this, but they can’t really, they can’t wipe us out, so why worry about it? Whew. That’s going to make this year even — I was prepared to be all hunkered down and buttoned up and very serious about this year, but now I can be carefree and hunky-dory, and I can listen to the Democrats with a new perspective. Meaningless resolutions will mean everything. What really matters is nothing more than paranoia on our part, and emptiness, vacuity, and that’s what will count for reality. That is what the left is attempting to get you to buy.