Sunday, August 20, 2006

Signposts towards a Self-Organized Criticality

There has been a mutiny onboard Flight 613. From UK's Daily Mail:
British holidaymakers staged an unprecedented mutiny - refusing to allow their flight to take off until two men they feared were terrorists were forcibly removed.

The extraordinary scenes happened after some of the 150 passengers on a Malaga-Manchester flight overheard two men of Asian appearance apparently talking Arabic.

Passengers told cabin crew they feared for their safety and demanded police action. Some stormed off the Monarch Airlines Airbus A320 minutes before it was due to leave the Costa del Sol at 3am. Others waiting for Flight ZB 613 in the departure lounge refused to board it.

Mrs Schofield, 38, said: "The plane was not yet full and it became apparent that people were refusing to board. In the gate waiting area, people had been talking about these two, who looked really suspicious with their heavy clothing, scruffy, rough, appearance and long hair.

"Some of the older children, who had seen the terror alert on television, were starting to mutter things like, 'Those two look like they're bombers.'

"Then a family stood up and walked off the aircraft. They were joined by others, about eight in all. We learned later that six or seven people had refused to get on the plane.

"There was no fuss or panic. People just calmly and quietly got off the plane. There were no racist taunts or any remarks directed at the men.

"It was an eerie scene, very quiet. The children were starting to ask what was going on. We tried to play it down."

In the spirit of the Mutiny of Flight 613, this is an excerpt from the book Complexity and Network Centric Warfare:
The intricate interrelationships of elements within a complex system give rise to multiple chains of dependencies. Change happens in the context of this intricate intertwining at all scales. We become aware of change only when a different pattern becomes discernible. But before change at a macro level can be seen, it is taking place at many micro levels simultaneously. Hence, microcomponent interaction and change leads to macrosystem evolution.

I think we must admit that when race-sensitive, progressive, enlightened, PC pasteurized British families start politely getting up to leave their very expensive plane seats simply because they see Arabs speaking in Arabic, a different pattern has become discernible.

As Victor David Hanson writes:
As the cliché goes: the Middle East needs to wake up and disown Islamic fascism. Otherwise, insidiously the entire world is turning against it, as radical Islam proves to be every bit as frightening an ideology as German Nazism or Soviet Communism — whether this is ascertained from the use of human shields, tribal lynchings and beheadings, Joseph Goebbles-like propaganda, Holocaust-denial, racist rants, or primordial hatred of Jews.

Three years ago no one was talking about profiling at airports. Now the British are exploring how best to do it. Indeed, one of the stranger developments in recent memory is now taking place the world over: Young, Middle-Eastern, Muslim men are eyed and studied by passengers at every airport — even as governments still lecture about the evils of the very profiling that their own millions are doing daily. Muslims can thank al Qaeda, Hamas, Hezbollah, and an entire culture that won’t condemn terrorism for such ostracism, which only increases with each suicide bomber, human shield, hijacking, kidnapping, and macabre reference to genocide and Jew-killing.

In an amorphous war of self-induced Western restraint, like the present one, truth and moral clarity are as important as military force. This past month, the world of the fascist jihadist and those who tolerate him was once again on display for civilization to fathom. Even the most timid and prone to appeasement in the West are beginning to see that it is becoming a question of “the Islamists or us.”

In this eleventh hour, that is a sort of progress after all.

The individual Western mind is hardening against the threat posed by Radical Islam.
At many micro-levels of Western society, socio-ideological apperceptions and postures are changing simultaneously. Such 'insidious' movement will, sooner or later, cross a threshold, a critical point after which all these disparate adaptations will combine for transcendant effect. If the Islamists continue their grotesque agenda, it is only a matter of time before the system of Western society exhibits signs of macro-evolution in its response to Islam.

Our survival strategies are changing. Flight 613 is a harbinger of what's to come.

6 Comments:

Blogger lewy14 said...

"Progress of a sort"? Not necessarily.

Tactics vs. Strategy.

I'm sure that among those who deplaned in an agitated state, there are those for whom this incident simply reinforces their pre-existing conclusions:

- That miltiant Islamists are dangerous, and so...

- we must give them whatever they want,

- and hurry up about it please,

- because they are justified and we in the West are wrong.

I'm sure some of these people hate themselves for behaving the way they did, and they know who to blame: Bush, Blair, Israel, et al.

6:39 PM  
Blogger luc said...

I was going to say sarcastically, of course, that everything is the fault of the joooos and Bush. lewy14 beat me to it; if 14 in the name is the age of lewy it is still to high an age to excuse the stupidity of the comment it posted!!
It is very sad but for individuals like lewy14 there is no hope of a cure, they just need to be recycled

12:28 AM  
Blogger lewy14 said...

I was going to say sarcastically, of course, that everything is the fault of the joooos and Bush.

Perhaps it is my writing - but my post is quite consonent with your own views, I believe.

When I said "I'm sure some of these people hate themselves for behaving the way they did, and they know who to blame: Bush, Blair, Israel, et al.", I didn't feel the need to add that I thought those people were foolish.

The transmission of sarcasm is an uncertain thing. Which is why I make a habit of ascertaining the true intent of someone's words before unloading the whole clip on them.

Would that you would do the same, luc.

2:11 AM  
Blogger Starling said...

lewy14 is definitely not 14 years old.
Nice post Aristides. I saw this story on BBC this morning and wondered if it is a harbinger of things to come. The passengers who deplaned and refused to fly were interviewed and there was a noticeable lack of malice and fear in them. They seemed to have thought about the situation, weighed the risks, and acted as they thought appropriate.

4:23 PM  
Blogger luc said...

lewy14:
I am sorry for misunderstanding your post.
On reading again, however, I understand that the people who deplaned hate themselves for deplaning and they blame Bush, etc for having deplaned because that is the only behavior described in the post. Their pre-existing conclusions do not qualify in my opinion as behavior.
Be that as it may, I will apologize again “unloading” but I confess it felt good at the time :)
Regards,

11:10 PM  
Blogger lewy14 said...

luc, no worries. 8)

After reading starling david hunter's assessment of the passengers' demeanor, I'm thinking (hoping) that I was wrong to cynically assume that some of these passengers "hate themselves for behaving the way they did" and blame the war on terror instead of the terrorists.

Maybe Aristides is correct and we are headed towards a "Self-Organized Criticality". Although that outcome is not without hazards either.

11:30 PM  

Post a Comment

<< Home