Natural
Disaster
Clay January

26
December 2003:
More than 26,000 people are killed when an earthquake destroys the historic
city of Bam in southern Iran.
26 January 2001:
An earthquake measuring 7.9 on the Richter scale devastates much of Gujarat
state in north-western India, killing nearly 20,000 people and making more
than a million homeless.
17 August 1999:
An earthquake measuring 7.4 on the Richter scale rocks the Turkish cities of
Izmit and Istanbul, leaving more than 17,000 dead and many more injured.
30 September 1993:
10,000 villagers are killed in western and southern India.
21 June 1990:
40,000 people die in a tremor in the northern Iranian province of Gilan.
7 December 1988:
An earthquake measuring 6.9 on the Richter scale devastates north-west Armenia,
killing 25,000 people.
19 September 1985:
Mexico City: 10,000 dead.
28 July 1976:
The Chinese city of Tangshan is reduced to rubble in a quake that claims at
least 250,000 lives.
And now we come to hurricanes:
Just the ten deadliest hurricanes of the last century killed more than 14,000
people in our country.
Then we have plagues and epidemics. Black Death, Smallpox, Measles, Influenza
and AIDS have claimed hundreds of millions of lives.
So, the events of 9/11, while tragic and spectacular, were no more than a bee
sting when compared to other natural disasters. I call 9/11 a natural disaster
because it was a predictable result of the forces at play in our world's political
weather. There were preliminary tremors (previous Trade Tower bombing, USS
Kohl, embassy bombings, etc) and there will be aftershocks. This is what happens
when the tectonic plates of religion and culture and economics strain against
one another
.
The thing about natural disasters is that you can predict that they will happen
but you can't quite predict when or where. You can have Hurricane Osama on
your radar screen but you can't tell until the last moment whether he will
make landfall in Miami or Hilton Head or if he will dance up the coast to Boston.
But you don't make the people in Kansas and Colorado board up their windows
in anticipation.
The dust hadn't settled from the collapse of the Trade Towers before the neo-cons
in Washington were planning how to seize upon the event to advance their agenda.
Now, two imperial wars and a head blow to our civil rights later, (The Patriot
Act) we see how efficiently the current junta has been at capitalizing on the
disaster.
When the jets hit the Trade Towers, the execs at Bushco were wringing their
hands because they had just stolen the election and the economy was going down
the toilet. I have a picture in my mind of Cheney and Ashcroft slapping high
fives in the conference room (at a secure, undisclosed location) when the news
broke, because they knew that this was their blank check. They could now do
anything they wanted under the banner of national security. And they have.
The "War on Terror' makes about as much sense as declaring a war on earthquakes,
plagues, and hurricanes. I'm sure those would be popular and honorable wars.
But to relinquish our rights and freedoms, our money and the lives of our young
people because we fear disaster is a pitiful way to live. And to allow commercial
rapists to sodomize the world economy under the banner of fighting terrorism
is an attitude worthy of sheep.
The seeds of the 9/11 events were sown during the Reagan, Bush I and Clinton
administrations. American support for Israel and the occupations of Arab land
(Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Lebanon) were the soil in which the current wave of
terrorism sprouted. One can only imagine what seeds of terror are germinating
now as a result of the Iraqi invasion.
In the last half century more people have been killed by tornadoes than were
killed on 9/11 and the aftermaths look much the same--rubble and bodies and
dust. Perhaps we should declare War on the Weather. Tornadoes hit swiftly and
without warning, like terrorists. They take innocent lives. You never know
when and where they will strike. But any savvy midwesterner knows that you
don't let your life be ruled by the possibility of tornadoes. You don't stop
breathing when there is a cloud in the sky.
If an earthquake had tumbled the Trade Towers, we would have mourned the victims
but probably wouldn't have called them heroes. We don't call the millions of
AIDS victims heroes, or those eaten by tornadoes. We certainly don't use hurricanes
as an excuse to go to war. President Bush remarked about terrorists shortly
after he stole office, "I'm tired of swatting flies." He prefers
stirring up a hornet's nest.
It is a political virtue to be able to turn disaster into capital and Bushco
has performed admirably in this pursuit. The problem lies in the fact that
the neo-cons are thinking 'Pax-Americana.' They are locked in Roman times.
There is no peace in America's imperial world. There is a seething that will
inevitably find it's voice in terrorism. It is as natural as a tornado or an
earthquake.
The Poet's Eye sees that Osama's gang made a lucky strike on 9/11. But it wasn't
half as lucky for them as it was for their adversaries. Show me a natural disaster,
and I'll show you money to be made.