Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/09/12
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Yesterday was an awful and tragic day for all. The need to vent and voice dismay, even on a photographic site, is understandable. I wish the discussion could always stay on topic, but sometimes it can't. I condemn what I define to be terrorist activity. I believe yesterday involved multiple terrorist acts and that retribution is warranted. But that's only my view, shared by most Americans. Unfortunately, it's not the terrorists' views and therein lies the problem. What if we put ourselves in the shoes of the terrorists? What if they believe that our country and its beliefs are evil; that our country engages in terrorism (according to their definition of the term) when, for example, it uses its military power to subject others to its will; that our country is raping the environment; etc.? What if the terrorists consider their acts against our country to be part of a holy calling and what if striking back at us (their perceived villains) involves the highest calling, entitling them to enter Heaven? I don't agree with such beliefs, but unfortunately I believe that some of the terrorists (my definition) are convinced they are pursuing the very highest calling and that yesterday's crimes against our country were anti-terrorist heroics (from their point of view). The world depends on the glasses one uses to view it. That's why I believe the problem is one of the most difficult our country will ever have to face. For better or for worse, the world's playing field has been leveled. The traditional definition of power has forever changed. Being a mighty military power is no longer enough because individuals can now counter that with conduct that is exceedingly difficult to control in a free society. I don't have solutions, but I do understand how others can perceive our country as evil. To change the subject dramatically, what about yesterday's eerie, haunting, emotionally charged photographic images? As I watched television, I suffered the strangest of experiences. I witnessed incredible lighting and powerful subject matter, again and again. For example, the views of the Manhattan skyline in incredible, smoky light were unforgettable, haunting and incredibly powerful because they were so emotionally and tragically charged. What an odd feeling to be witnessing such awful waste, destruction, and misery, while simultaneously seeing one unforgettable image after the other. Did any of you experience the same strange photographic experience?