I think the question is whether or not what the government is calling "credible evidence" is credible enough to bother the general public with.
From the point of view of the feds, if they get people they know are insiders in Al Qaeda talking about stuff that is going down, that is about as credible as they can get without enough evidence to stop something. So they call this credible evidence. But I am saying that that is not credible enough to try to make the US public get more scared than it is.
For instance from the statistics [link|http://alcoholism.about.com/library/ncrash01.htm|here] there are probably (order of magnitude) going to be around 42,000 traffic fatalities this year in the USA. Assuming that they are evenly distributed, in the last 2 months that comes to about 7,000.
So based on the last 2 months, credible evidence says that the average American has more to worry about from cars on the road than from terrorism. This despite the last 2 months being the most successful 2 month period for terrorists in history! But which is keeping people awake and sweating at night?
In short, unless the government has credible enough evidence to move large numbers of people, or good reason to believe that making people hypervigilant will improve their odds of catching someone, I think they should cut back. What I want to see them do is make the same comparisons that I am making, encourage people to live their lives, acknowledge the risk, point out precautions that they should take against terrorists, and try to reach a calm status quo.
Because the fact is that this is going to go on for a good time to come. We need to treat this like we do car accidents. We all have a few habits (eg look both ways, wear a seatbelt, don't be stupid in a car) but we don't get unduly panicked over every small thing to do with car accidents. And I think that is how the general public should deal with terrorism as well.
OTOH freaking everyone out is great for people who want to conduct a power grab...
Cheers,
Ben
PS Please note that I am living in one of the top targets for terrorist attack. NYC. I walk by the UN. I work by St. Patrick's Cathedral. I live in the Bellevue-Tisch hospital complex. My bank is in the Empire St Building. If the average American is supposed to become hyper-vigilant, what should I do? Run in circles, scream and shout?