Safe Versus Sorry
Security is now at the heart of what our society cares about and thinks about, sometimes obsessively, whether or not it wants to.
By Lew McCreary
February 01, 2004 — CSO — Security is now at the heart of what our society cares about and thinks about, sometimes obsessively, whether or not it wants to. In the same way dotcom entrepreneurs found themselves at the center of cultural preoccupations and myth-making several years ago, security now claims preeminence. Where this will lead is interesting to speculate on. Maybe, as time goes by, familiarity will breed, well, familiarity. Orange will again become the word no other word rhymes with rather than the penultimate beacon of national anxiety. And, despite persistent threats, we will eventually recover our fat, happy forward stride.
Where we are now, though, is far from fat or happy. Our nation
The quintessentially American attitudes of "Live and let live" and "Just do it" are taking a backseat to something a little less familiar: "Better safe than sorry."
On the government side, 22 once-autonomous agencies are being recombined into the Department of Homeland Security behemoth. And DHS is implementing broad security initiatives (US Visit, the program to fingerprint and photograph arriving foreigners, is only the latest) with counterterror benefits as debatable as their Constitutional implications.
A similar attitude adjustment is occurring in businesses. The new emphasis on compliance, safety and right behavior may have the effect, at least in the near term, of retarding the pursuit of promising but risky opportunities
Opinion about these developments is mercurial. On the one hand, security now has the potency to trump other important values. On the other, a durable minority of citizens is in a state of persistent fretfulness over what it sees as the civil liberties equivalent of "bombing the village to save the village." In a survey of CSO readers last year, one-third of the respondents expressed the fear that the United States would "become a police state." For the moment, however, the clear majority gives the benefit of the doubt to any well-meaning attempt to provide greater civic safety. And if that should also bring about some degree of reduced liberty? Too bad, but so be it.
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