There are a lot of people who want you to be scared and obsessed with public safety right now. I’d like to suggest that it’s in your best interest — and the best interest of everyone around you — to turn your television off and quit obsessively following the aftermath of the Boston Marathon bombing.
If you live in Boston or if you have family there or if you somehow have such a personal tie, I understand that you want to keep up with it more than the rest of us. That’s understandable. It’s a local story for you, and it affects you in a personal way. But for the rest of us — the vast majority — it’s worse than a waste of time. It’s creating exactly what terrorists want. (I’m calling the perpetrator of the bombing a terrorist on the assumption that creating terror was his intent. I’m not implying anything about who it might have been or what the person’s cause might be. Because I don’t know.)
Terrorists want you to be scared. Pure and simple. They want you to be looking over your shoulder and wondering when something bad might happen again. They want you to wonder whether it might be in your city next time. They want you to eventually feel that you’re willing to do anything to convince them to leave you alone.

For good or bad, we default back to what feels most familiar to us
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Meeting with dead man left me pondering choices of life, death
Two sets of rules: One for the public and a very different set for police
Where are Obama’s tears when he’s the one killing innocent children?
Young New Yorkers say they’re fleeing the city — Why? High taxes, low opportunities
Now that his threat is truly gone, I realize my father hated himself
Narcissists teach their victims they aren’t allowed to have needs