英语资讯
News

英语文摘:Report: terrorism takes backseat to economy in U.S.

Source:  Onion  2008-09-12   English BBS   Favorite  
LOS ANGELES, Sept. 11 (Xinhua) -- More Americans have shifted their focus of attention from terrorism to economy seven years after the "9.11" terror attack, a newspaper report said on Thursday.

    While terrorism was identified by nearly half of Americans after the Sept. 11 attacks as the nation's leading problem, the issue has been gradually slipping ever since, resurging only slightly after each new attack overseas or a fresh terror alert at home before fading again, the San Francisco Chronicle said.

    "The longer the period of time since the event and the current time, in the absence of any continuing provoking activity, one sees a decline," Larry Beutler, director of the National Center on Disaster Psychology and Terrorism in Palo Alto, near San Francisco, was quoted as saying. "In other words, people quit worrying."

    Yet it's unlikely the current presidential candidates will stop presenting terrorism as a pressing danger, said John Mueller, professor of political science at Ohio State University and author of the book "Overblown: How Politicians and the Terrorism Industry Inflate National Security Threats, and Why We Believe Them."

On the seventh anniversary of the attack on the World Trade Center, family members of victims pay their respects at the site of the former twin towers in New York September 11, 2008.

    Failure to display a tough stance against terrorism by any politician can be a career-ender if an attack should actually happen during a campaign, Mueller said in remarks published by the paper.

    But taking a firm stand on the issue carries little political risk, he added.

    Just 2 percent of Americans identified terrorism as their nation's top problem in a Gallup survey in early August, the lowest level since the 2001 attacks.

    And in new poll results released Wednesday, just 38 percent of respondents said they were at least somewhat worried that they or their families would become victims of terrorism, a nine-point drop since the question was asked last year and the lowest level since mid-2005.

    "The majority of Americans are now not fearful of terrorist attack," said Frank Newport, Gallup's editor in chief. "Americans do not report to us that terrorism is the top issue for them in this election. It is the economy."


将本页收藏到:
上一篇:英语文摘:U.S. defense chief sees Iraq war in "endgame"
下一篇:英语文摘:Putin: Russia has no imperial ambitions over former Soviet republics
最新更新
论坛精彩内容
网站地图 - 学习交流 - 恒星英语论坛 - 关于我们 - 广告服务 - 帮助中心 - 联系我们
Copyright ©2006-2007 www.Hxen.com All Rights Reserved