>From http://www.davidbrin.com/privacyarticles.html  :

Carrying this theme forward is another (and more carefully written) Futurist
essay pointing out that citizens themselves were the most effective elements
of our civilization's defense on 9/11. The only actions that actually saved
lives and thwarted terrorism on that awful day were taken amid rapid, ad hoc
decisions made by private individuals, reacting with both resiliency and
initiative -- our finest traits. Could this point to a trend for the 21st
Century, reversing what we've seen throughout the 20th... the ever-growing
dependency on professionals to protect and guide and watch over us?



http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/2945900.stm

Two flight attendants are being treated in hospital after being attacked by
a man with a sharpened wooden implement on board a domestic flight in
Australia.
Australian Transport Minister John Anderson said that the man, in his 40s,
had headed towards the cockpit and threatened to crash the plane.

Mr Anderson said that although the incident appeared to be have been
premeditated, "there's no evidence it was an act of terrorism".

The incident took place on board Qantas Flight 1737, shortly after it left
Melbourne at about 1450 local time (0450 GMT).

Geoff Dixon, chief executive of Qantas, said that the man was armed with
two, small wooden stakes around 15 cm (5.9 inches) long.

Federal police said the man had been taken into custody.

The plane, which was bound for Launceston in Tasmania, returned immediately
to Melbourne after the incident.

Mr Dixon said one passenger also suffered a minor injury. There were reports
that some passengers helped to restrain the man.

One of the passengers who helped, Keith Charlton, told Sky News that after
the incident, "naturally, there was a lot of discussion going on and people
were in varying stages of disbelief, but calm really remained throughout the
aircraft."

"There were one or two people who were extremely angry about it," he added.

Mr Anderson said he understood that there were no air marshals on board this
particular flight. Mr Dixon confirmed that the cockpit door was locked.

Serious condition

The injured flight attendants - a man in his late 30s and a woman in her
20s - are said to be in a serious but stable condition. The woman suffered
cuts to the face, and her male colleague was cut on the back of the head.

A BBC correspondent says security on Australian flights has been
substantially tightened in the wake of the 2001 attacks on the World Trade
Center.

There are now extensive screenings at domestic departure gates, and all
sharp implements are prohibited.

Mr Anderson pointed out that the man's weapon could not have been picked up
by metal detectors, and that he understood that he had the implement on his
person.

He said the oversight was a "lesson about unforeseen tools being used".

The transport minister said a full inquiry would ensue. "We'll leave no
stone unturned, plainly we don't want to see a repeat of this," he said.




xponent

The More Things Change, The Song Remains The Same Maru

rob



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