Great Paranoid Minds Think Alike
In an
article on TechCentralStation, Ralph Kinney Bennett offers, among other things, architectural advice to thwart truck bombs.
On September 11, 2001, I worked in an office building shared by a United States government office, so I considered the changes in architecture, including setbacks and remote loading docks, that would offer greater safety for workers. However, I also expected a fundamental shift in everyday life following that day, and it's not happened yet, fortunately.
As long as we remain relatively safe and the danger remains fairly low, underlying infrastructure won't change, including architecture and law enforcement. Those poor dozens, or hundreds, of people who perish in the isolated attacks are expendable to keep prices low.
Of course, for all the paranoiac I portray, I still live in a suburb of a major city. Were I a committed paranoid, wherein my paranoia where schizophrenic instead of mere neurotic in nature, I would live in Wyoming or Montana with a bunch of guns and dogs instead of a mad-money IT job and a
hot wife. Werd.