"What would you do if you were stuck in one place and every day was exactly the same, and nothing that you did mattered," asks Bill Murray, playing weatherman Phil Connors in "Groundhog Day," one of the funniest films of all time.
That's exactly what it feels like today. Not in Punxsutawney, Pa., but in Washington, D.C., where every day is Groundhog Day and Republicans, several of whom actually resemble furry little mammals, begin every day by accusing President Obama of being "soft on terror."
After all, they point out, he wanted to put Khalid Sheikh Mohammed on trial in New York City, of all places. On his watch, the FBI treated Underwear Bomber Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab like a civilian criminal and read him his Miranda rights. And, even though he's been in office over a year, Obama has yet to utter the phrase that stirs fear in the heart of every terrorist: "Bring 'em back, dead or alive."
What total nonsense. Even a groundhog would laugh out loud at the arguments made against holding KSM's trial in New York. They complain it would cause traffic congestion? New York's a perpetual traffic jam. It'll make NYC a terrorist target? As if it's not already. The people of New York have already suffered enough? Oh, stop whining. Yes, but they also want revenge!
As Mayor Bloomberg himself declared before he caved in to the New York real estate lobby, it's only fitting that the trial of KSM should be held in lower Manhattan, just blocks from Ground Zero, where most New Yorkers would like to see him hang. New York's federal courthouse, in fact, was where the trial of Sheikh Omar Abdel-Rahman and nine others accused of the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center was held, as well as numerous terrorist trials since.
And that set the precedent for what followed. For eight years under George Bush and Dick Cheney, the policy of the U.S. government was to bring terrorist suspects to trial in federal civilian court, many of them in New York City. Since September 11, according to NYU's Center on Law and Security, charges were thus filed against 828 persons - with an 89 percent conviction rate. They included two high-profile, top security trials: shoe bomber Richard Reid, in Boston; and al-Qaeda operative Zacarias Moussaoui, in Alexandria, Va. Both of whom are now serving consecutive life sentences in Colorado's Supermax federal prison.