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"...Let me tell a personal story that illustrates the situation. I was in Bethlehem one Sunday afternoon, touring with a business friend, on the way up to Jerusalem for dinner with other friends. We stopped for tea, as it was time to drink something, in an Arab coffee shop not far from the main square. As we sat in the relative dark of the shop’s front room, I was making some comment about Bethlehem being a good example of side-by-side coexistence of Israelis and Arabs, and I asked my Israeli friend if he didn’t think, eventually, some similar accommodations could be made across the whole of Israel. He smiled and shook his head, and said, as our Arab waiter came to check our coffee, “Ask him.” nodding at our Arab waiter. So I put the question to him.
The old wrinkled man looked at me directly, cocked his head, and pointed out the door, towards a couple of olive trees across the street.
“Scarab shit,” he said, in thickly accented English “is what makes olive trees grow.”
“Please?” I said, thinking I’d missed something in the accent. My friend exchanged some quick words in Arabic, and repeated the old man’s comment to me in English, along with an explanation of what a scarab beetle was. They are pretty common around there, kind of like Japanese beetles are around Atlanta. Then, the old man nodded and continued.
“For thousands of years, people have come here, and killed one another. Scarab beetles turn the blood and the corpses into scarab shit. All around us, olive trees are growing, thanks to all the scarab shit.” he said slowly, and there wasn’t a hint of a twinkle in his old black eyes. “There are no olive trees in the desert, only because there is no scarab shit.”
I don’t know about that.
But I take his point. I wouldn’t bet on “peace” in the Middle East in our lifetime, unless one side or the other wipes out life in the region, including scarab beetles and olives trees, in some kind of WMD attack. Otherwise, it’s either just a slow devolution back into desert, or lots more olive trees. The beetles don’t much care I imagine, being willing to follow the trail of dead meat wherever it leads.
I know what’s happened in Bethlehem since I last stopped there for coffee, and it is a ghost town, even at Christmas….
First step towards returning to being a desert, I guess."
They rightly condemned the police overreaction
She said officials determined it was not explosive, and was similar to the package found Wednesday morning beneath Interstate 93 at the Sullivan Square T station on the Orange Line. Mieth described the object at the T station as "a sophisticated electronic device."
Earlier Wednesday, the state police bomb squad was called and detonated the package in Sullivan Square just before 10 a.m. Officials said it contained an electronic circuit board with some components that were "consistent with an improvised explosive device," but they said it had no explosives. They determined that the device was not dangerous, but destroyed it as a precaution.
An IED typically consists of an explosive charge (potentially assisted by a "booster" charge), a detonator, and an initiation system, which is a mechanism that initiates the electrical charge that sets off the device. IEDs are extremely diverse in design, and may contain many types of initiators, detonators, and explosive loads...IEDs are triggered by various methods, including remote control, infra-red or magnetic triggers, pressure-sensitive bars or trip wires.
What was the right way for Britain to deal with IRA bombs in London? One choice would have been to send the RAF to bomb the source of their finances, places like Boston.