critically ill patients. Have a nice day.
 Terrorists Don't  Want to Kill You; One of the dirty little secrets of terrorism is that a  terrorists main objective isn't to kill people, but to scare them. This often  gets overlooked when the media jumps on any event that might be a terrorist act.  The 1996 explosion of Flight 800 off the coast of New York was a classic  example. This wasn't even a terrorist act, it just looked like one. MSNBC hauled  me in right away as a terrorism expert and my first comment was that the crash  was probably the result of mechanical failure (the explosion was too large for  any bomb a terrorist was likely to use.) This was not well received. The media  thrives on bad news and mechanical failure doesn't make the cut. But I was  called back on camera a few days later when pundits were speculating that a  ground to air missile had done the deed. I pointed out that the aircraft was too  high for a portable missile to reach it. And a larger missile would have been  much more difficult to hide. That was the end of my career as a terrorism expert  on MSNBC. It turned out that Flight 800 did go down because of an electrical  problem in a nearly empty fuel tank. And no missiles were involved. But this  aspect of the story got much less attention. 
Even without terrorists involved, Flight 800 turned out to  be a terrorist act. Airport security was tightened once more and media ran  terrorism stories for months. Millions of airline passengers were terrorized.  The U.S. Postal Service even got involved, making it illegal to put a package  weighing more than a pound in a mailbox. Instead, you had to take it to a post  office, where crack anti-terrorism experts behind the counter would determine if  you were mailing a bomb to someone. That rule is still in effect, even after  everyone concluded that there was no terrorists involved with flight 800's  demise. 
Keep in mind that  your chances of getting killed in an act of airborne terrorism are less than  fatal events like; lightning strike, tornadoes or hurricanes. You have more to  fear from driving to the airport than from terrorist activity.
So why are we terrorized?
Blame it on technology, for these  days bad news travels farther and faster. For thousands of years, terror was a  local thing. In fact, most terrorist acts today are strictly local. We sometimes  hear of terror attacks in far off places like Sri Lanka, Kashmir, Chechnya and  Indonesia and don't give it another thought. But let an airliner get attacked  anywhere and the media jumps all over it. Air travel and mass media have changed  terrorism over the last half century. Even though flying is safer than any other  form of transportation, it scare people. And media loves stuff that scares us.  If terrorists want to be media stars, they can do it. 
The procedure is simple.
First, you organize a peaceful  lobbying organization for your cause. This outfit is also used to collect money  for the worthy cause the terrorists are killing people in the name of. Most  terror organizations are backed by a peaceful group that supplies money for the  terrorists and press releases for the media. Now here's the catch. Terrorism is  dangerous to the terrorists as well, especially international terrorism. It's  not easy to pull off. And if Americans are involved, you will probably be caught  and punished. Blowing up airliners is particularly inflammatory. It's dangerous  to be associated with successful terrorists. So terrorist front organizations  rarely say anyone they are associated with committed a particular attack. But  plenty is said about how whoever did it was forced to do so by whatever  injustice the terrorists were spreading terror in the name of. And the point is  made. People are terrorized and organizations that use terrorism get attention  without getting blame and retribution.
International terrorists are nothing without the media.  Local terrorists can, and often do, terrorize quite successfully using just word  of mouth. Many nations control their media quite effectively. While all news of  terrorist activities cannot be suppressed, a forceful government can keep down  the constant repetition the media is fond of when they have a terrorism  story.
The media makes all the  difference. Don't believe it? Well, then consider people killed by lightening  each year. World wide, over five thousand people get zapped fatally, and many  more are injured by these bolts out of the blue. For sheer terror, you can't  beat lightning. But the media doesn't cover lightning strikes the way they cover  terrorism. The rationale being that you can't do anything about lightning, while  you can deal with terrorism. Lightning is mindless, terrorism seeks specific  targets. Actually, you can do a lot to avoid lightning and many fatal zappings  are quietly avoided each year. As for terrorism, the most dangerous  international terrorists just want to kill Americans. Not very selective, at  least lightning only shows up when the weather conditions are right. You can do  something about terrorism, you can't do much about terror as long as news  organizations are looking for hot headlines. 
But this brings us back to the original point. Terrorists  don't want to kill you, they just want to terrorize you. If terrorists really  put all their efforts into killing people, they would soon disappear as an  organization. It's dangerous being an active terrorist. It's much less  dangerous, and far more effective, to be a terrorist who mainly issues press  releases. 
So relax, press  releases tend to be annoying, not fatal. And seek shelter if you find yourself