Actually my post
does address your point. We are assessing relative risk between two methods by which our safety is endangered:
1. Foreign Terrorist Coming into the US and killing us
2. American with a gun killing us
In #1 we take extreme measures and are willing to give up civil liberties to secure against it. In #2 we are unwilling to make significant changes to our civil liberties to defend against it.
But we know from the past several decades that we are
far more likely to be killed by another American getting a gun than a foreign terrorist coming into the US.
This is not to say
either means of dying is "better" than another but the numbers show that we take the threat of terrorism sufficiently high that we are willing to give up privacy, suspend our values in so many ways just to defend against it.
[qutoe]
History has showed us, with Al Qaeda, the faultiness of such an approach.
From 2001-2014 Al Qaeda has, on US soil killed 2% of the people killed by firearms here in the US.
153,144 vs 3,046. The risk assessment is the same whether it's pre-9/11 or post 9/11.
The bigger question might be: has our willingness to give up more personal liberty actually kept the numbers low on terrorism? If it has then similar willingness should work on reducing gun violence. But we don't make that trade-off with respect to guns.
And it is arguable that terror in the US has actually been kept under control by our willingness to give up on our values.
Well, yes and no. Obviously we can carry MANY worries simultaneously. But the fact of the matter is that we have two versions of risk
which we do not act similarly in terms of our responses.
That's the point. Terrorism is horrible and I'm glad to take serious steps to protect ourselves from it...within reason. Meanwhile we see that
we are not necessarily acting rationally with regards to how we deal with risk.
We have elevated one low-probability risk to a level where we take disproportionate action on while effectively ignoring another that is far more likely.
I am afraid that in this case we will actually end up doing more harm to the Syrian refugees by turning our backs than we will increase our personal security.
We kind of help ISIS out when we do that. I think we run the possibility of hurting others in an attempt to protect ourselves with limited returns on the investment in our own security but guaranteed added pain for the refugees.[/QUOTE]
Again, a lot of issues raised not germane to my point. I'm not addressing whether we should surrender liberty, or privacy.
The issue isn't assessing relative risks between methods for the sake of assessing those risks.
My only point, right now, is a risk assessment scrutinizing mere numbers and comparing those numbers is a lousy risk assessment. I am also stating there is nothing wrong in the U.S. focusing upon the threat of terrorism.
Now the propriety of how we specifically respond to this threat, such as sacrificing liberty and privacy, is a separate dialogue. I can say, however, I'm not convinced a comparative risk assessment is dispositive in answering the question whether liberties and privacy should be sacrificed or perhaps minimally infringed upon.
As I said previously, we shouldn't have to wait until planes crash into buildings, buildings fall, and thousands die to be proactive and I institute measures to prevent s terrorist attack. I disagree with your assessment "we" are not necessarily acting rationally to the risk. I'm not in that "we" as I'm not convinced we've acted irrationally to the risk. Maybe some specific instances of irrational reaction can be shown but generally, I am not so inclined to think at this moment the reaction and measures taken to the risk are irrational.
And I question whether gun deaths and gun violence compared to the risk of a terrorist attack and deaths by a terrorist attack is a proper comparison.
Terrorist attacks are by their very nature different from an accidental shooting, different from a homicide committed with a firearm. Both are heinous acts, but an act of terrorism is done with such magnitude, scope, extent, number of targets, in such a fantastic manner, for lack of s better word, as to place people in fear with the purpose of collectively scaring society and induce society and government to change its behavior. This quite simply is different from an accidental shooting, an accidental death by firearm, or s homicide by firearm.