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Michael Sigman

Michael Sigman

Posted: April 3, 2010 03:04 PM

"To know is nothing at all; to imagine is everything."
-- Albert Einstein

The elites who could have prevented 9/11 and the financial meltdown have excused themselves on the grounds that these defining catastrophes were "unimaginable." Since it would have been impossible for anyone to conceive of these events, let alone take action, the rationalization goes, no one need be held accountable.

After National Security Adviser and soon-to-be Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said, "No one could have imagined [terrorists] taking a plane, slamming it into the Pentagon... into the World Trade Center, using planes as a missile," the bipartisan 9/11 Commission revealed that U.S. officials had in fact been warned that Al Qaeda could "seek to hijack a commercial jet and slam it into a U.S. landmark." (Years before, the Tom Clancy best-seller "Debt of Honor" depicted a terrorist flying a Boeing 747 into the Capitol.) The Commission soft-pedaled the Administration's negligence, concluding that "the most important failure [concerning the 9/11 attacks] was one of imagination."

Michael Lewis, in his fascinating new book The Big Short , tells the tales of several non-lock-steppers -- armed with nothing more than computers and open minds -- who made fortunes betting on what they deduced was the inevitable subprime financial disaster. Ben Hockett, one of the winners, observes that the lemmings who ran the financial system "believed that the collapse of the subprime mortgage market was unlikely precisely because it would be such a catastrophe. Nothing so terrible could ever actually happen." Standard and Poor, whose phony Triple-A ratings of worthless financial instruments were a key catalyst for the meltdown, were apparently so sure the market couldn't go south that the mathematical models they built to game various scenarios didn't even allow computers to accept negative numbers, even hypothetical, imagined ones!

Yesterday, on Good Friday, conservative commentator Peggy Noonan trotted out the "unimaginable" explanation with regard to the Catholic Church's growing worldwide sex abuse scandal. After portraying Pope Benedict XVI as a hero rather than a responsible party, she wrote that for

Benedict's predecessor, John Paul the Great, about whom I wrote an admiring book... the scandals would have been unimaginable -- literally not imaginable. He had come of age in an era and place (Poland in the 1930s, '40s and '50s) of heroic priests. They were great men; they suffered. He had seen how the Nazis and later the communists had attempted to undermine the church and tear people away from it, sometimes through slander... John Paul, his mind, psyche and soul having been forged in that world, might well have seen the church's recent accusers as spreaders of slander. Because priests don't act like that, it's not imaginable.

On the same day, Reverend Raniero Cantalamessa, the powerful preacher of the papal household, ratcheted up the Church-as-victim talking point, comparing the media's coverage of the unfolding scandal to the historical persecution of Jews.

Of course, stories of widespread sex abuse by priests have been reported, in depth, for decades. Does Noonan really mean that John Paul didn't want to imagine a truth that was, tragically, staring him in the face?

I'm sure there are plenty of unimaginable things in the universe, though it's impossible for me to imagine what they are. But flying a plane into a building, the crash of a financial system and sex abuse by priests, we can safely say, aren't among them. Not only were these events imaginable, they were imagined and anticipated by ordinary people with far less information than the exalted elites who could have taken action.

Isn't it precisely the job of political, financial and religious leaders to imagine disasters and then prepare for them? (Plausible ones, that is, as opposed to, say, anti-asteroid Republican Congressman Dana Rohrabacher's crusade for funds to combat "objects coming from space that could cause colossal loss of lives on our planet.") And if their imaginations fail them, and us, shouldn't they be held accountable -- morally and, when appropriate, criminally?

 

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09:44 PM on 04/04/2010
People who run things are supposed to think about what is wrong, what could be wrong, what can go wrong. They are supposed to respond to problems, prepare for problems and take proactive actions when possible. This is Management 101.

People like Condoleeza Rice, Peggy Noonan know Management 101. So their excuses are not credible.
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fiibias
good fame but by virtue
07:51 PM on 04/11/2010
Right, Walker but step by step...in fact those people confirm their conduct in that moment valid as got down it.
photo
intotheabyss
Imperialism is a form of insanity.
05:28 PM on 04/03/2010
The ruling class is made up of a bunch of infantile sociopaths. They never take responsibility for anything. They believe they are entitled and above the normal laws of humanity. They will never be prosecuted for their crimes until we make their lives as miserable as they appear to want to make ours. Until the majority of people find their backs against the wall, I'm not holding my breath for anything to change.
04:33 PM on 04/04/2010
2 b a wavering atheist: It's beyond the human ken to make life any worse for the USA's power elite, aka ruling class & establishment, for these creatures than they have done with their own hands & minds. Christians of many stripes say that. They also one may be afflicted with hubris, into..., to make a wish like you made in your comment. Christians feel that only their god has the power to carry out your uncharitable wish; they also feel that their diety doesn't do such things. Cool it, today is Easter. This day is essential to Christianity. Jesus is said to have died so that we might be forgiven for our sins.Chrsitians feel that their god's laws are above human law. Christians insist that their god judges all humans at death & decides who is to be rewarded or punished. The Christer's god, not humans, is the ultimate judge of everybody. Neither you nor I have the power to make a life more miserable. Only an afflicted individiual has the power to do that to him/herself. Cool it, into....; we humans are out of this venture.
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OhgReaTone
Ohg Rea Tone writes for thefiresidepost.com
04:54 PM on 04/03/2010
Bad things happen. Monday morning quarterbacking is easy. Being responsible before hand takes real courage. But when we fail we should own up. The only way that we can prevent future catastrophe is to admit our faults, our shortcomings that led to the last catastrophe. The last phase of professional project management is to examine the process and look for methods of improving on the next project. We can never be better if we never admit our faults. ..........

http://thefiresidepost.com/2010/04/03/the-church-social-justice-and-hiding-a-scandal/