Living and working in the DC area, even on the wages of an
intern, one does actually experience a trickle-down economic
profit. The streets are clean, the metro is reasonably efficient,
the parks are well-watered, the museums are free, the buildings are
beautiful, the pubs are plentiful, and the place is crowded with
bright minds. Overall there is a culture of self-improvement, which
if it can slip into narcissism, can also slip into virtue.
Then, occasionally, one bumps into the hidden cost of this
modern urban paradise, this bloated imperial city forever sucking
the life, liberty, and wealth out of its colonies. This morning the
following picture appeared in my newsfeed:

Photo used with permission, taken by Julie Borowski, who had
this to say about it:
Police and TSA agents were inspecting bags on the DC metro on my
way home today. It’s all security theater. Our 4th amendment rights
are being violated. No probable cause? Oh well! The government has
to search your private property before you’re allowed to get on the
train.
I’ve not encountered the metro police myself yet. Until today
the only thing I’d seen was in the train station in Wilmington,
Delaware, where there were several TVs looping a video showing
disturbingly invasive sniffer dogs and police checks, with a big
advert telling you that they were looking out for your safety.
The random bag searches on WMATA, focused on explosives, but
embracing drug searches, started in December 2010.
The proximate rationale for the security measure was the failed
bomb plot of one Farooque Ahmed. But it turns out Mr. Ahmed’s plot
was
conjured by the FBI, who designed a sting operation and
encouraged him the whole way, after learning that he was planning
to travel to Afghanistan or Pakistan to fight US forces there. To
catch him, FBI agents posed as al-Qaeda operatives and redirected
his efforts towards a metro bombing, asking him for help gathering
information on possible Metro station targets. The eventual
charges successfully brought against Mr. Ahmed were attempting
to provide materials to a foreign terrorist organization, and
collecting information to assist in planning an attack, for which
he got 23 years.
This 2010 post from greatergreaterwashington.org, published at
the time of the beginning of the random bag searches, makes all the
right arguments about the foolishness, inconvenience, wastefulness,
rights-infringment, and ineffectiveness of these searches.
So here we have the worst kind of government waste and
invasiveness offered as a solution to a threat invented by
government agents, a threat paraded as an example of successful
government counter-intelligence.
The centralized defense to terrorism has two parts:
1) monitoring intelligence and following up on good leads, and 2)
containing the damage of an attack, so that normal public life can
continue. Counter-intelligence needs to be as adaptable as the
threat it faces. The WMATA security measures, and so many
DHS-sponsored measures like them, are a Maginot line, providing a
veneer of security that may make some of us feel more comfortable,
but are easily penetrated by a cunningly-devised blitz. When that
happens, morale collapses.
The best defense against terrorism is patriotism. True
patriotism, which is wildly variable and adaptable to circumstance
and locality while preserving the historical and intellectual
inheritances of the nation, is the cultivation of strong local
communities that support their members. We ought to build
communities where the love of family, of the land, and of our
culture overcomes the fiery hatreds that leap up in the souls of
men and incite them to destroy their neighbors.
The same patriotism is the source of courage in an actual
terrorist attack. A reserve militia of men and women who are
accustomed to looking out for one-another, rather than depending on
the expertise of government agents, have many times saved the day
against an attack which evaded the military barricades.
The same patriotism accepts loss of life in a just war. Because
it regards honor and duty and virtue as better possessions than
mere existence, it has a measured contempt for death, and is
unwilling to forsake all its inherited blessings in return for a
slightly reduced risk of injury.
C Bowen | 10.18.12 @ 4:22PM
Bravo, Mr. Taylor! That is how one makes an entrance.