Thursday, March 20, 2014

The Boston Bombings: Past, Present and Future

I still remember clearly where I was and what I was doing the day of the Boston Bombings, because I had been complaining all day about having to work on Patriots Day, especially since it was such a beautiful, sunny day. I was taking a late lunch-break by browsing through my Facebook page when I saw that somebody had posted that two bombs had gone off at the Boston Marathon's finish line.  Thinking it was a sick joke, I immediately pulled up MSNBC where I was able to confirm the sad and tragic truth.  I immediately knocked on the exam room door and waited for my boss to step out to give him the news. The whole office rushed to the front desk computer and started to look up news feeds to get more information.  More patients started to trickle in for their appointments, one of them even just having come from his home in Copley, and they all had our same reaction: fear and shock. I think we all instinctively were brought back to 9-11 as the initial fear took over us.  I even called my roommate frantically asking her to come pick me up from work in Newton, because I refused to take public transportation home too afraid and sure that the MBTA would also at some point that day be targeted; I was convinced this was not the end of the attacks and surely there would be more.


Looking back, I learned a lot about myself just from my initial reactions of that day.  I learned how fear can easily control us as individuals and make us go against every bit of logic, morals, and values we have.  Taking a look back to a year ago, I am also upset at myself for being so okay when martial law was declared in the pursuit of the Tsarnaev brothers; in hindsight, after reading The Role of Federal Military Forces in Domestic Law Enforcement Title (found with this link : http://usacac.army.mil/cac2/call/docs/10-16/ch_11.asp ), it is clear that this decision by our government officials rode on a thin, dangerous line of what our constitution considers to be  just caus to call in the United States Military to solve domestic issues.  None of us spoke up or even dared to question these decisions, just as we set back and allowed the NSA to violate our civil rights, liberties, and freedoms following 9-11.  Months following the Boston Bombings, I was haunted by my inability to stand up and exercise my rights as an American; rights that people all over the world die and kill for every day while I am afforded the luxury of those same very rights being a birthright. One injustice or crack in the system threatens us all, and at the time of the attacks we all allowed our fears and prejudices to shadow that valuable fact.

How quickly we forget lessons we were supposed to learn in WWII when one crazed, fanatical man who's own insecurities led him to obsessed racism of a whole race of people, and then, through fear, was able to incite the masses to try to eliminate that same group of people off the face of the earth.  One man, who could not accept responsibility for his own failures as a young man, was able to take fear and prejudice and turn it into a hatred and racism that became so radical, extreme, and evil that it allowed a whole country of people to stand back and let more than 7 million people be killed just because of their religious association and declare war that ended up turning the whole world upside down. Yes, Adolf Hitler is the man I am talking about, and yes, he was able to incite World War II by one thing and one thing only: generating fear amongst the masses over an exaggerated threat.  Terrorism at its best.  In Germany the terrorism was not from an outside source, however; it was as terrorism by the people on its own people. The German people became victims of their own fear and despair by not being able to step out from under the cloak of the unknown created by it's misguided leaders to look out and see that, in fact, the Boogie Man was not lurking around the corner; their fear overshadowed the fact that the only danger was conforming and not standing up for what was right  This too goes for America following the Boston Marathon Bombings.

The Boston Bombings have exposed the fact that we, as a county and people, have come to this dangerous fork in the road; the impasse where we must decide if we are going to give into our fears and forget everything our forefathers painstakingly mapped out for this country that Spring day in 1787 during the Philadelphia Convention, or be true Americans by exercising those rights that started on the same day we were celebrating the day of the bombings: Patriots Day.  Patriots Day isn't just a day for us to get a day off of work to veg out and watch the Boston Marathon on television.  It's a day celebrating the Battles of Lexington and Concord. It's not called "The shot heard around the world" for no reason at all.  On April 19, 1775 American colonists gave their lives to begin a battle that would result in a country with a foundation so inspiring, beautiful, and strong, that over 300 years later, people from all over the world would still be continuing to give their lives for just a shot at being a part of that very same country and her ideals .  How dare we jeopardize it all out of fear.




Fear is not a new concept to this country; and fear is not an enemy we haven't time after time conquered as a unified nation. Why start now? We must all learn from this situation along with lessons from the past and stop doing the terrorists' missions for them.  Yes, there is a danger of acts like these happening again, but the acts we should be the most fearful of are the ones we and our government commit against ourselves and the constitution  in the names of "protection' and "safety." We can't allow ourselves to profile one another; we must stay  tolerant towards one another's religious and civil liberties; in fact, it is our DUTY to protect not just our rights but our fellow Americans' rights as well.  How? By using the very tool our forefathers made sure we would have when they wrote that 4 paged document in 1787: our voice.  The minute we stop speaking up out of intimidation, the terrorists and radicals have won.


Our issues are not Islam, Al-Qaeda, or even terrorism; our issue is one another.  We must be careful of who we label our enemies and the power we give up by quickly jumping to conclusions and refusing to look at our own actions as a nation as possible breeding grounds for the very hate that these extremists and ,in the case of the Boston Bombers, criminals are cultivating.  We are the catalyst, and until we accept this fact and work to rectify it, we will continue on the same tragic, torturous path.  The Boston Bombings were not attacks by Islamic radical groups on America and its citizens and residents like on 9-11.  They were acts by two young, confused men, who had no direction or positive figure to turn to.  They were immigrants who came to this country and became citizens with the hopes of experiencing the American Dream only to find out that their adopted land did not consider them a part of that very dream.



Through our ignorance and inability as a country to generally accept and embrace things that are different from us, we took two non-radical citizens and treated them like enemies creating a hate so strong and desperate that they felt the only way to ratify that hate was to kill. Is it a excuse or free get out of jail card for the  younger brother who will now stand trial for these actions? No, but I think it is a valuable lesson we should all take heed to. We must realize that as we speak, there are hundreds more just like the Tsarnaev brothers teetering on the edge of either becoming positive members of our communities or giving into radicalism out of desperation and anger. Are we going to learn from our mistakes of the past caused by our own ignorance and prejudices and make these individuals our friends or enemies? Are we once again going to be that nation that was such a beacon of light and freedom for the world that millions gave up their lives just for chance at being a part of it; just to have those "inalienable rights" that we now are so willing to throw away in the name of fear and ignorance? I hope not.  I hope that we all take a moment to allow the Boston Bombings to allow us to heal, grow, and open our eyes to the world around us, and the next time we get the chance, we do just as is written on the statue of liberty: "Give me your tired your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breath free.  The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.  Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed, to me: I lift my lamp beside the golden door."



1 comment:

  1. Fallon,

    Excellent writing. Very well-written piece here. You bring up so many good points, they are hard to list.

    You wrote above and beyond in your reflection: musing on culture, fear, philosophy, and history of the Revolutionary War. WWII even makes a cameo.

    Very thought provoking writing. You have a great, authoritative tone to your writing and the facts to back it up.

    Well done.


    GR: 100

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