When a hoax teaches the oldest lesson: Courage first



On Thursday, August 21, at 4:30 p.m., my wife, my youngest daughter, and I stood in the soft light of an overcast day at Villanova University’s welcome Mass. She had earned the right to call herself a freshman. The class of 2029 also carries a distinction: the first freshman class to attend the alma mater of a pope.

Pride did not fully prepare us for what came next.

Everything is an education. Courage, the first of the virtues, does not mean reckless bravado. I learned something about it.

At 4:34 p.m., phones around us buzzed with a NOVA Alert:

ACTIVE SHOOTER Incident Warning
ACTIVE SHOOTER on VU campus. Move to secure location.
Lock/Barricade doors. More info to follow.

My daughter showed my wife the text. As they puzzled over it, the crowd shifted. Chairs toppled with a sound like rain. I briefly imagined a cloudburst pushing people indoors.

The murmur swelled into a surge. People dove to the ground. I had not yet seen the alert. Gunfire? I heard none. A vehicle attack? Lightning? A tornado? A wild animal?

Ancient Greeks saw their gods and the gods of their enemies amid the terror of battlefields. In that instant, the mind supplied its own agents of terror in the convulsing crowd at Villanova.

“Dad, run!” my daughter shouted. She and my wife had already bolted. I jogged after them, but the walkways churned like rapids and they disappeared in the current. I moved into the open at Connelly Plaza to search. Moments later, my daughter called from inside the Connelly Center, urging me to stop standing outside and get to cover. I geolocated my wife’s phone; it registered inside Dougherty Hall.

A heavily armed officer and several others strode past, asking for the library. I pointed as best I could. Someone inside Dougherty waved me in with insistence.

Inside, I found my wife’s purse and phone. Some thoughtful person had picked it up and brought it in. She soon called from a stranger’s phone to say she had reached the Ithan parking garage a little further off. I took up a post with four or five other dads at the glass entrance to Dougherty and waited for the all-clear. It came an hour and a half later.

Everything is an education. Courage, the first of the virtues, does not mean reckless bravado. I learned something about it that afternoon.

Panic spreads faster than any bullet. Faces around me looked as if they had witnessed a threat firsthand. The truth is that most had only read the alert and then seen fear and panic in other people’s faces. That fear became the source of multiplying bad information.

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Tune our hearts to brave music,” St. Augustine prayed. Villanova’s staff did exactly that. They acted with calm and helped people reach safety. Even so, the hoaxer exposed vulnerabilities. If you have not witnessed immediate danger, move safely and deliberately to a secure place. Don’t fuel the stampede.

Augustine may have also said, “Hope has two beautiful daughters: anger and courage; anger at the way things are, and courage to see that they do not remain as they are.” The hoaxing continued that weekend — one call to the University of South Carolina, another to Villanova. The intent is obvious: inflict physical and psychological harm by weaponizing the consensus response — run and shelter in place.

The threat, paradoxically, comes from hijacking the security system by crying wolf. The remedy must make that hijacking harder, verify and communicate information faster, and reduce harm when the system gets abused. That requires careful thinking about methods and messages — and about courage.

Courage steadies the hands that send the alerts, guides parents and students to act with discipline, and keeps us from trampling one another in a fog of rumor. I watched it in real time from Dougherty Hall. It will be needed again.

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What a post-Roe America would really look like

Are you ready to overturn Roe v. Wade, folks?

Yes, Trump has finally, formally announced his pick to replace Justice Kennedy on the Supreme Court, and we are now just one ruling away from complete enslavement of the female sex. This will be accomplished by the overturning of Roe v. Wade, which will in turn criminalize abortion throughout all 50 states, U.S. federal territories, and a handful of Canadian border towns.

At least, that’s what the pro-Roe propaganda from the abortion lobby sounds like. The reality is much tamer.

There seems to be this flawed understanding that all abortions everywhere will become 100 percent illegal without exception the moment that the 1973 ruling is ever overturned. This grossly misunderstands both the ruling itself and the originalist and pro-life objections to it.

Let’s just conduct a little thought experiment and look at what a post-Roe world would look like.

It’s almost impossible to imagine the kind of case that would generate a reversal of the precedent or what other sorts of extra jurisprudential “goodies” might end up crammed into such a ruling, so we’ll just assume that a case comes up through the appeals process and gets to SCOTUS, and the new majority rules 5-4 against the Roe precedent and does nothing more or less.

This would not make abortion illegal anywhere. Instead, this would give the states back their Tenth Amendment power to create abortion laws as they see fit – those that match the will of their own particular electorates.

Roe placed a prohibition on how much states themselves could regulate abortion by manufacturing a new constitutional “right” to end a pregnancy. Were the precedent itself to instantly disappear the moment Brett Kavanaugh’s swearing-in ceremony ended, the legality of abortion at the federal level would not change, but the issue would instead return primarily to the states.

So should this ever happen, folks on both sides of the debate will have to to engage with each other and the undecided. They will have to hold rallies, knock on doors, talk to their representatives, and try to persuade people of their opinions.

This would mean that all these women currently shouting their abortions and holding “bleed-ins” for taxpayer-funded feminine products would actually have to walk up to their fellow citizens (some of whom might even be wearing one of those deeply triggering MAGA hats or holding one of those women-oppressing rosaries) and try to change their minds about state-level abortion laws. The horror!

There will still be deep blue states that will probably take pride in their status as sanctuary jurisdictions for killing the unborn and might even put together some taxpayer-funded welcome packages for abortion-minded women just to throw up a child-killing middle finger. Who knows, Michelle Wolf might take that ghoulish new act of hers on the road. It’s all so very predictable at this point.

This is called living in a republic with people who don’t agree with you. It takes persistence and maturity. One wonders if, deep down, that’s what a lot of these folks are really afraid of.

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