I'm preparing a talk on "lessons learned" from the high-profile
natural disasters over the past 18 months, and staking out a (possibly
predictable) contrarian position that there have been no lessons
learned as a result of these events.  That is, for all the horrible
consequences of these events and all the unevenness and
ineffectualness of the responses, nothing unforeseen really happened.
The vulnerabilities we worried about, the response pitfalls that kept
us up at night, were the ones that manifested over the course of these
disasters.

I remember a New Yorker cartoon from the late 1980s or possible early
1990s that evokes this sentiment, and I wanted to try to find it.  So
far I've not turned it up, and I was wondering if anyone has a
suggesting of how to locate it.

It shows a couple of men looking calmly out on a scene in which alien
spacecraft are utterly destroying a city with cartoon-style ray-gun
weaponry.  The caption has one man saying "Of course the market had
already discounted all this" or something like that.

Thanks for any tips.

Marc

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