Hicks: Terror won’t bring down a determined nation

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Along with the sadness and anger that accompanies the Boston bomb explosions should come the realization that this could well be our lot for decades to come. We should expect and prepare for the worst.

With the exception of 9/11, we Americans have been spared much of the bombing terror that has been a part of life in most of the world through the past half century.

In London, during the first seven years of the 1990s, the Irish Republican Army managed to detonate one bomb roughly every three months, while dozens more were defused. At least three were more deadly than the Boston attack; all were designed to be.

For a resilient and committed nation, these bombings appear to have little residual economic effect. This should be unsurprising because even well-orchestrated military bombing campaigns take considerable time to slow economic activity. German military production actually peaked more than two years after the start of our heavy bombing campaign of World War II.

There is little evidence that terror bombings elsewhere have had much lasting effect beyond the immediate though painful loss of life and property.

Moreover, these sorts of terror campaigns rarely have commendable results for antagonists, no matter the merit of their cause. For example, the success of the African National Congress was conditioned on its moral stance, not its bombings. The more than 10,000 IRA bombings have done nothing to thwart the wishes of actual voters in Northern Ireland.

Still, the terror bombing in Boston was clearly designed to scare us. Targeting sporting events, malls and the like is intended to make us alter our daily lives. In places very much under the cloud of war, such as Iraq, this may prevent a legitimate government from forming and taking control.

Our enemies cannot believe that will happen here. Instead, what they want is for us to take extreme and costly steps to stop these attacks.

From our fellow citizens we will hear calls to change our ways. Some will say we should spend so much on security that no one ever dies from a terror attack. Others will say we should carefully watch foreigners in our midst, while others will say we should withdraw from the world and worry only about ourselves.

We should listen respectfully and dismiss these options. The enemy that bombed us in Boston hates us not for what we do, but for what we are. We mustn’t change ourselves for the bad guys.•

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Hicks is director of the Center for Business and Economic Research at Ball State University. His column appears weekly. He can be reached at cber@bsu.edu.

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