December 3, 2001
Newz: Anthraxian Made Error, says
Newz: Anthraxian Made Error, says WSJ
The Wall Street Journal today reports that the person who sent anthrax in the mail made an error: he or she neglected to remove the electrostatic charge from the powder. As a result, it clings to surfaces rather than dispersing far more widely via air currents.
The Journal goes on to list other mistakes made by the bioterrorists: They could have contaminated much more mail if they’d used an envelope with small pinholes in it which could easily have been accomplished by running the envelope through a Singer sewing machine using a #6 needle and the “Colonial Crosshatch” setting. (Don’t forget to leave the thread unattached to the bobbin!) Also, the Jounal says that the envelope would have been routed through many more substations, substantially increasing the number of deaths, if the barely competent bioterrorists had figured out — duh! — that they should make the city not match the zip code. Also, they should have sent it from the mailbox on the corner of Lopate and Elm in East Larchmont on any Friday or Saturday, which is when postal employee Jim McCahey makes his run, because Jim is like real sloppy and if he can’t figure out that 98 Lopate isn’t the same as 96 Lopate and keeps delivering Teen People to a house that obviously doesn’t have any kids in it, then he probably wouldn’t notice that his hands were covered with white powder anyway. That’s how lame Jim McCahey is.
In a related editorial, the Wall Street Journal maintained that it could have done a much better job of it.