Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Wednesday Night Blog #6


Wednesday Night Blog #6

September 10, 2014

By

Tom DiCaprio

 

 

 

     I am going to begin this blog by getting the obvious out of the way.  Tomorrow is the thirteenth anniversary of the September 11, 2001 attacks.  Yes, the world changed forever as a result of the attacks that resulted in the War on Terror.  Until then such an attack would only occur in a novel that authors such as Tom Clancy would write.  He wrote about a hijacked plane that was used as a missile that would crash into a building in his 1994 novel Debt of Honor.  Since then countless authors, myself included would write about the next catastrophic terrorist attack.  Hopefully such an attack will never occur, however with the rise of ISIS we cannot afford to put down our guard especially now.  That alone would be a grave mistake.  ISIS is the biggest threat facing the United States along with al-Qaeda when it comes to terrorism.  Despite this, Fareed Zakaria brought up something the other day in which Osama bin Laden said before his death that he ordered al-Qaeda members to create fake terror groups that were actually al-Qaeda itself in order to throw off the United States and our allies.  Oliver North mentioned in a Facebook post that I read where he mentioned various terrorist groups and their leaders fighting the U.S. and our allies whether it be together or separately.  Well all I have to say is that we cannot rule out the possibility that they are in fact working together as one al-Qaeda unit, but are pretending to be separate terrorist groups in order to throw us off and then they would come together and the War on Terror proceeds to take a disasterous turn for the worse since they played us like a game of chess (yes a Fugees lyric reworded and paraphrased in the process). 

     As for 9/11, it began the road that would result in my transition from an aspiring mystery novelist who dreamed of writing a spy novel but didn’t think I could do it to a three time published spy/political thriller novelist.  After Wolf Blitzer discussed a scenario of a dirty bomb attack at a presidential inaugural in January 2005, I began to believe that I could actually write a Tom Clancy-esque spy novel after all.  The rest is now history. 

     A week ago tonight I read a Facebook post by a friend of mine which said that a Rochester, NY police officer was shot.  Little did I know how monumental the story would become in the Rochester, New York area where I live.  The next morning I was listening to the radio when it was announced that the officer who was shot was the first Rochester Police Department officer to be killed while on duty since 1959 and that the suspect who killed the officer was shot as well as an innocent bystander.  That alone is very sad, but it was what happened next that would give this an even greater meaning.  The officer had left behind a wife and two children.  The suspect in the shooting had been recently paroled and for the second time in as many weeks that a slip up in the parole check in system resulted in a very violent crime.  The first crime as a result in the incompetence of the parole system was the rape of a teenage girl.  If the Rochester community was already outraged as it was, then more communities especially nearby East Rochester, New York (where I live) became further outraged when the name of the officer was released.  A friend of mine mentioned on Facebook that her cousin was the officer who was killed without releasing his name.  The moment I read on Facebook that the officer who was killed was Daryl Pierson, it hit home for me.  I knew Daryl and his family.  His mom and my mom were very close friends when they were co-workers at Wegmans Food Markets.  I had been among a group of friends who attended a gathering at Daryl’s home a couple of years earlier.  He was working that evening.  Why do these kind of tragedies happen to good people.  Daryl had returned to work a day earlier after being on medical leave for eight months and his son’s first day of kindergarten took place on the day that he was killed.  Thousands of people attended the wake as well as the funeral.  I had never been to a police or military wake and I hope that such a tragedy never grips Rochester, New York or its surrounding communities.  I gained a greater appreciation of law enforcement and what they have to endure on a daily basis.  I was even more amazed by how the Rochester area came together.  This gives community a whole new meaning. 

     With that I will be closing this blog until next week.  Until then take care.

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