barracuda wrote:MacCruiskeen wrote:whether obliged to do so or not, Norway has long been very well-prepared for just such dangerous and unpleasant contingencies without ever yet having had to become a police state..
How prepared were they for the truck bombing of their government offices in their countries capital?
Good question. Maybe you should ask them (whoever you mean, exactly).
I seriously doubt that could happen in Washington DC these days. Why didn't the single, solitary security guard on the island have a sidearm?
Because Norway is not the USA? Because spree killings had not been frequent occurences there, until last week?
Because when the sole security guard went to work on Utöya that morning, Oslo hadn't yet been bombed and there was no particular reason to fear a further murderous attack on the Labour Party or its Youth Wing? Questions, questions.
I can't remember the last time I attended a comparably sized event in the United States without seeing one.
Norway is not the USA.
MacCruiskeen wrote:What does even an average fire brigade do, in any wealthy "first-world" country? It prepares itself routinely for 1) sudden unexpected emergencies, and 2) even the absolute worst outcomes imaginable from such emergencies.
No. Fire brigades train for the
best response to typical situations they encounter, not the
absolute worst. If that was the case, why would any fire ever burn out of control?
You are just being silly. You are conflating "best response" with "worst outcome". In any case, fire brigades do not
typically dawdle, in two dilapidated fire-trucks, to the scene of an inferno in a chemical factory (or on an oil rig), hoping to put it out with a dozen buckets of water. Not even in quaint innocent little old Norway. Instead, they do their very best, with the best & most appropriate vehicles, equipment and manpower available to them, and they do so as quickly as possible.
Of course, it has to be presumed that the fire brigade actually gives a damn, and that none of their commanders are secretly in cahoots with a fascist arsonist. Which is one of the points any serious inquiry will have to address.
At what time would you estimate the helicopter at Rygge would have arrived at Utoya under optimal conditions?
In about 5-10 minutes. (The island is 60 km from Rygge, and they must have been on the very highest alert, for this was more than an hour after the "Al Qaeda"-style bombing of central Oslo and the government buildings of the ruling social-democratic Labour Party. Even the kids on the island had been informed of that bombing minutes after it happened, so presumably the police's crack elite Readiness Troops had been informed very quickly as well, not to mention the Air Force, which has the aircraft, including the seven helicopters.)
MacCruiskeen wrote:The massacre of 68 people on that island was in any case not even "the absolute worst outcome imaginable". Obviously not. For instance, he might have massacred every single one of them. And then he might have set off a mini-nuke. And he might even have had 19 Deathloving Christian Superstudent accomplices simultaneously flying airliners into tall buildings in Oslo, Bergen and Trondheim. Just for instance.
Very true, it would have been much worse had the police not confronted and arrested the shooter, thus ending the slaughter.
... "thus ending the slaughter" about an hour and a half after it started, because instead of taking one or more of at least seven helicopters available to them, they chose to walk 24 miles to the shoreline backwards and then stood amazed at the fact that islands are in fact surrounded by water.
"Ich kann gar nicht so viel fressen, wie ich kotzen möchte." - Max Liebermann,, Berlin, 1933
"Science is the belief in the ignorance of experts." - Richard Feynman, NYC, 1966
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