A
Alty
Guest
I agree to an extent in as much as I don't know anyone who plans to change their behaviour or move out of the city in response to the terror threat. But nobody at your work even mentioned Saturday's events? Are you all robots??I'm in London and don't feel unsafe. I could have quite easily been in London Bridge on Saturday - a couple of mates who'd invited me for a drink and got evacuated round there. You just get on with it tbh.
I worry more about my mates getting killed cycling than by terrorists.
Whatever terror is meant to achieve*, it's not a successful way to engender mass fear among a populace. People are very good at rationalising and coping with shitty situations - making awful the new normal. That's why people tolerate paying £800 pcm for a room in a cramped, damp-ridden flat-share in Zone 3**.
I reckon shitty housing situations is a bigger source of anguish and uncertainty for my pals than terrorism. Access to proper healthcare, especially mental health care next. Then, idk, those six weeks when they ran a reduced service on the Piccadilly Line. Terrorism is so far down the list that if you can worry about it, you're probably doing alright.
I'm not being flippant - no-one even mentioned Saturday's events in work today. Not even mythologising Londoners or blitz spirit or whatever - I just don't think any of us have the luxury of sitting around being terrorised when our rent is due this week.
* Tried to address "the purpose of terrorism" here.
** perhaps more valid to think about the cities around the world that experience far more frequent and deadly terror than London - and still civil society goes on cos it has to.