Hullabaloo in Times Square
I often walk through Times Square where the Incompetent Bomber parked his 1993 Nissan Pathfinder last Saturday with the alarm clocks wired to the M88 firecrackers in the canister between the five-gallon gasoline containers and the three propane tanks, the bags of nonexplosive fertilizer, and so I take a personal interest in the case.
I’m fond of Times Square, which is an out-of-body experience offered for free to the general public, the colossal flash and razzmatazz of 10-story LED hi-def imagery rolling and bouncing among the JumboTrons and billboards in the glass canyons above the statue of Father Duffy by the TKTS booth. It is pure hullabaloo, millions in advertising canceling itself out by sheer overload, and one block away is beautiful Bryant Park and the serene reading rooms of the New York Public Library, where, for all you know, the scholarly gentleman across the table from you may be studying the art of explosives. It’s a free country.
Saturday night, at the time the Nissan was discovered and cops started to evacuate the area, I was at a show on 43rd Street two blocks away, unaware of any threat, and I maintained unawareness for the next several hours, catching a taxi on Sixth Avenue and proceeding to a Chinese restaurant on 65th and packing away some giant prawns and fried wonton in the company of others. We ate freely and jabbered about all sorts of things, and nobody came running up to ask if we’d heard about the car bomb. People in Williston, North Dakota, probably got the news before I did. This often happens in the Communications Capital of America: Large events transpire two blocks away and you sit happily ingesting your Seven Joys of Tofu and reminiscing about your childhood in Anoka, Minnesota. That’s what I love about the city, that feeling of being utterly out of touch, as if you were in the Australian outback.
Bomb experts did not agree on the deadliness of the device. One retired New York bomb guy said it came within a “millisecond” of creating a fireball 30 feet high that could’ve killed hundreds of people and “caused horrific lung damage and fried the hair and faces of anyone within a 50-yard radius.” He was the guy the tabloid Daily News decided to quote. The Times quoted another bomb guy who referred to the device dismissively as “a Rube Goldberg contraption” – “It’s the ‘swing-the-arm-with-the-shoe-that-hits-the-ball-and-knocks-over-a-stick-that-knocks-something-off-a-shelf,’ and it is all supposed to work.” He did not offer a scenario of tourists with fried faces stumbling down 45th Street, clutching their scorched lungs. The bomber, he said, thought he’d invented the atomic bomb but was somewhat short on ability. The Daily News guy recalled a car bomb years ago that blew the hood of the car 21 stories into the air, suggesting that this might’ve been of that magnitude. The Times guy was slightly amused by the perp as being ambitious but certainly no Ted Kaczynski. A knowledge-impaired terrorist.
Both bomb guys agreed on the fact that the bomb had not detonated.
By early Tuesday morning, the cops had put the collar on a Pakistani gentleman at JFK, and now, as I write, hundreds of detectives and agents of the Joint Terrorism Task Force have set out to gather too much information about him.
The Times reports that New York City operates 82 surveillance video cameras between 34th and 51st streets and Sixth and Eighth avenues, and I hope the city fathers aren’t mesmerized by Cheneyesque visions of fireballs and fried faces and persuaded to station 82 officers to observe those monitors in eight-hour shifts, a mind-numbing occupation.
We have more than enough security people in this country now. Highly trained TSA operatives with headsets for instant communication stand by the scanners in airports in Boise and Santa Barbara and remind you to put your computer in a separate bin and remove your shoes. You walk around any downtown and see all the beefy guys in fictitious uniforms whose job it is to stay awake and scowl. This is not the same country I grew up in, but never mind.
Next Saturday I will be back in Times Square, and I plan to walk around and enjoy the crowds and the lights. I’ll walk across 45th Street past the Nissan’s parking spot to the Eighth Avenue subway and take it uptown. Call me irresponsible, but I may stop and think of the millions of dollars spent on self-erasing advertising cascading mindlessly overhead. God bless America and now let’s go eat.
(c) 2010 by Garrison Keillor. All rights reserved. Distributed by Tribune Media Services, Inc.
Read more by Garrison Keillor
- When the Tough Should Get Going – October 27th, 2009





epppie
May 5th, 2010 at 8:11 am
I'd rather live my life and accept risk than live in a prison created by my own fear, or what is worth, the relentless, maddening hive-like fear of others. Isn't it funny how we live in a society founded on the idea that each individual takes their chances and if their lives don't go well, TOUGH LUCK LOSER!!, but we can't face even an iota of 'security' risk without whining to Mummy and Daddy for more chains to keep us safe.
epppie
May 5th, 2010 at 8:11 am
I'd rather live my life and accept risk than live in a prison created by my own fear, or what is worth, the relentless, maddening hive-like fear of others. Isn't it funny how we live in a society founded on the idea that each individual takes their chances and if their lives don't go well, TOUGH LUCK LOSER!!, but we can't face even an iota of 'security' risk without whining to Mummy and Daddy for more chains to keep us safe.
Bob
May 5th, 2010 at 10:44 am
Mr. Keillor is a gift to this country as I take great joy in everything he does–especially when I don't agree with him. It is because he thinks freely and shows respect for those who do the same.
He is right to point out that this is not the same country we grew up in and sadly our various systems are not going to allow us to go back. That is because thinkers like Keillor do not want power, but they yearn for freedom. That is going to keep the same pack of reprobates in control until the burn up everything we have.
epppie
May 5th, 2010 at 8:11 am
I'd rather live my life and accept risk than live in a prison created by my own fear, or what is worth, the relentless, maddening hive-like fear of others. Isn't it funny how we live in a society founded on the idea that each individual takes their chances and if their lives don't go well, TOUGH LUCK LOSER!!, but we can't face even an iota of 'security' risk without whining to Mummy and Daddy for more chains to keep us safe.
Rob
May 5th, 2010 at 3:52 pm
There is almost no security in this country. Almost anyone anywhere could step out of their home or business or car or at the beach ect with an assault rifle and kill dozens of people if they wanted to and their conscience would allow them to. Recently a man in Seattle entered a restaurant and easily (physically not morally) shot dead four armed police officers. This was proved yet again in Times Square for security did not detect and protect people before the bomb went off the bomb would have gone off if the bomb mker was competent. Personally I know there is almost no security in this country because my cousin was attacked and killed in Georgia, his mother said "the parking lot was full of police officers". Also a dear friend of the family was shot four times in the face and killed while walking her dog in New Hampshire. My brothers boss, a lawyer was robbed at gunpoint, the robber sticking the gun in his belly and the next man he robbed he shot. My brothers secretary was mugged in downtown Tampa. My father was threatned by a man with a knife in downtown Tampa.
Bob
May 5th, 2010 at 10:44 am
Mr. Keillor is a gift to this country as I take great joy in everything he does–especially when I don't agree with him. It is because he thinks freely and shows respect for those who do the same.
He is right to point out that this is not the same country we grew up in and sadly our various systems are not going to allow us to go back. That is because thinkers like Keillor do not want power, but they yearn for freedom. That is going to keep the same pack of reprobates in control until the burn up everything we have.
Juno Junoveldt
May 5th, 2010 at 9:08 pm
If as a country you practise violence against others, then as a country you will also suffer it. Just a variation of 'If you live by the sword, you will die by the sword'.
Juno Junoveldt
May 5th, 2010 at 9:08 pm
If as a country you practise violence against others, then as a country you will also suffer it. Just a variation of 'If you live by the sword, you will die by the sword'.
Rob
May 5th, 2010 at 3:52 pm
There is almost no security in this country. Almost anyone anywhere could step out of their home or business or car or at the beach ect with an assault rifle and kill dozens of people if they wanted to and their conscience would allow them to. Recently a man in Seattle entered a restaurant and easily (physically not morally) shot dead four armed police officers. This was proved yet again in Times Square for security did not detect and protect people before the bomb went off the bomb would have gone off if the bomb mker was competent. Personally I know there is almost no security in this country because my cousin was attacked and killed in Georgia, his mother said "the parking lot was full of police officers". Also a dear friend of the family was shot four times in the face and killed while walking her dog in New Hampshire. My brothers boss, a lawyer was robbed at gunpoint, the robber sticking the gun in his belly and the next man he robbed he shot. My brothers secretary was mugged in downtown Tampa. My father was threatned by a man with a knife in downtown Tampa.
Juno Junoveldt
May 5th, 2010 at 9:08 pm
If as a country you practise violence against others, then as a country you will also suffer it. Just a variation of 'If you live by the sword, you will die by the sword'.
Juno Junoveldt
May 5th, 2010 at 9:08 pm
If as a country you practise violence against others, then as a country you will also suffer it. Just a variation of 'If you live by the sword, you will die by the sword'.