This morning I heard Kate Adie in the radio, doing a newspaper review and commenting on the current situation regarding terrorism in the UK. She spoke a lot of sense, words that resonated with my own feelings.
Firstly, she observed that most people of all races, religions, nationalities and occupations are decent. Extreme ideology is not restricted to any one demographic sub-group, and suspicion of middle eastern doctors in general is unfounded.
Secondly she spoke about the shortness of memory that colours British society, recalling how in the 1970's she - along with other journalists - was on 'bomb watch' in London. Certainly I recall two bomb scares leading to evacuation when I was in the first year of secondary school (in Northampton, 1974), numerous bomb scares and bombs when I was a student in London, not least when foreign nationals used to kills each other with car bombs in the west end, or when an explosive device was found outside McDonalds in Oxford Street. Tube station closures due to bomb scares were common place and you just got on with it. Anyone remember the Harrod's bomb in 1983? In 1993 there was the Warrington bomb, did we go into panic mode? No, we got on with life. Further, the father of one of the victims got involved in the peace process, turning tragedy into opportunity; this does not diminish the tragedy or injustice of a life cut short, it just speaks of a different response to it.
I feel for the people in Paisley - I have driven through it countless times going from Glasgow airport to East Kilbride on business trips - and I do have an idea of what it is like to have terror on your doorstep, but, as a nation, let's not get paranoid or forget that, as Kate Adie observes, most people are decent, law-abiding citizens who just want to get on with life.