I published a version of this post.
One of
my favorite clichés is “woven in the fabric of society”. English teachers warn
against using tired old truisms; come up with something new, they say. Most of
the time these warnings are taken by authors as good advice, but remember a
cliché is what it is because it makes a point so well it deserves repeating. That
is how I feel about the one I just quoted but with the caveat added, we should
never be content; we should keep looking for ways to express deeper meaning.
These
thoughts came to mind while I was listening to the endless news reports about
the Boston Bombers exposing all the senseless killing and raw emotions
associated with the incident. In the background verbiage, various reported were
referencing many peripheral things deeply “woven” into our society. For
example, I heard several times that the National Rifle Association had
prevented, by lobbying congress, from putting tracers in gun powered that would
allow tracking the source of explosive. Also, I saw video clips of an America
born terrorist trying to recruit other terrorists, and that the United States
guns were easily available around the world and that our country was “awash in
guns,which were his exact words. During the crisis, I could imagine assault
rifle owners in Boston going to the closet or gun cabinet. What could these
untrained disorganized people do with these guns? If they looked out the
window, the streets filled with a well-organized militia trained to protect
them. It clearly was a Norman Schwarzkopf’s “overwhelming force” response, made famous in desert
storm made in spite of the fact that the people of Boston had overwhelming evidence
it was two people, shortly reduce to only one that they were after.
“Overwhelming
force’ has become the American way. We see it on every TV show where swat teams
invade houses of drug dealers, etc. Many people own a weapon designed to kill
people because they are free to do so, even though they do not know how to or
want to use those weapons; it is the American way. An armed person, already
protected by well-armed forces in excessive numbers, has become the American
way.
American
people complain about privacy but are grateful for store camera surveillance of
the streets when the Tsarnaev brothers planted their bombs. They
cursed the NRA for preventing tracers in gunpowder, which prevented easy
tracing of the explosives. The point is that all of these things are
intricately “woven in the fabric of our society” but the cliché misses the
point. A fabric can be all one color, can be dark and unappealing but it also
can be alive and vibrant; it can be static or dynamic; it can be organized or
it can be chaotic. It is beautiful of the fabric because of the pattern, which
is enchanting because it is always changing.
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