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9/11 FATIGUE, OR 9/11 FRUSTRATION?

September 10th, 2007 · 10 Comments · Foreign Policy, Iran, Iraq, Terrorism

I refer you to FREEDOM EDEN and its post, 9/11 TRIBUTE FATIGUE. I believe the article quoted by Freedom Eden is from a Sept. 2, piece written by N.R. Kleinfield of the New York Times.

Again it comes, for the sixth time now — 2,191 days after that awful morning — falling for the first time on a Tuesday, the same day of the week.

Again there will be the public tributes, the tightly scripted memorial events, the reflex news coverage, the souvenir peddlers.

Is all of it necessary, at the same decibel level — still?

Each year, murmuring about Sept. 11 fatigue arises, a weariness of reliving a day that everyone wishes had never happened. It began before the first anniversary of the terrorist attack. By now, though, many people feel that the collective commemorations, publicly staged, are excessive and vacant, even annoying.

“I may sound callous, but doesn’t grieving have a shelf life?” said Charlene Correia, 57, a nursing supervisor from Acushnet, Mass. “We’re very sorry and mournful that people died, but there are living people. Let’s wind it down.”

Some people prefer to see things condensed to perhaps a moment of silence that morning and an end to the rituals like the long recitation of the names of the dead at ground zero.

I don’t agree with the above sentiments. There is history, and then there is our own personal history. The world doesn’t share the grief of someone losing a loved one to disease or accident. There are, though, certain intersections where an historical event becomes part of our own personal history.

There are many to choose from aside from 9/11, and I recall quite vividly the death of John F. Kennedy. I was 10 years old. School was dismissed and I’ll never forget one of my fellow students hopping and skipping down the sidewalk saying, “He got shot in the head; he got shot in the head” over and over while pointing a finger gun at his own skull. Even at that age I was astounded that anyone could feel such joy at the death of another.

I cannot watch anything about November 22, 1963 without a strong sense of despair and frustration. If only this had happened; if only someone had been looking at the buildings instead of the motorcade…and on and on. This feeling I will carry to my grave. It is also frustrating to accept that one man; one loser like Lee Harvey Oswald changed our nation so much.

Frustrating also is to accept that 19 fanatics managed to alter the course of our nation, along with murdering over 3,000 innocent human beings. The use of airliners to inflict such damage will probably never happen again. Osama Bin Laden and his band of losers will constantly seek a new approach, one that will be overlooked by U.S. authorities. Like any terrorist organization, their credo says that we have to be lucky all the time, while they only have to get lucky once.

In our fractured and selfish society, 9/11 was a rare common experience. For those who lost loved ones on that day, I say ring the bell and read the names. The least I can do is respect their grief. Of course, those who died in Afghanistan and Iraq also have grieving families, and they too should be honored and remembered. I only hope that they will not have to wait and fight for recognition of their struggle as did those who fought in Vietnam or those who to this day grieve for the loss of their boys four decades ago.

No, scars heal but slowly for the human heart. One can’t seriously dismiss the healing process. It’s slow….very slow. Be patient with the suffering as you, too, may someday know what it feels like. I hope you never do. But that ‘ole Golden Rule may not be a bad one to apply to any remembrance of 9/11.

Compare 9/11 with Pearl Harbor for a moment. The lives lost are roughly equal. But, unlike Pearl Harbor, 9/11 provided no nation to direct anger towards. True, the Taliban in Afghanistan had it coming, so to speak. Iraq we invaded, yet as brutal as Saddam Hussein was, his dictatorship was as close to being secular as any in the Middle East.

The true supporters of the attack on 9/11 are still out there. They are scattered among differing nation states. They claim to share the same faith, resulting in the idiocy of Bin Laden recommending America become Muslim, or the rank insensitivity of a Saudi prince telling Rudy Giuliani that the attack was due to American support of Israel.

So, convert to Islam; throw the Jews onto the fire, and the world will return to peace. Failing those disgusting goals, terrorism is a convenient tool for nations to take advantage of; it changes the life of the target population. And for those inside certain nations rooting them on (silently, of course) there is the option of claiming outrage over acts that they privately endorse and support.

If I have to strip down to my BVD’s to see the National Archives, or the National Air & Space Museum, or the Smithsonian…then why should not those who, to this day, applaud my having to live like this be allowed the luxury of innocence?

Rather than punish an entire nation, or an entire religion, why not have a policy evolve that would make these financiers and faceless bureaucrats live in fear for their own lives?

I think on 9/11 the names of the murdered should be read while watching the film of the thousands of Palestinians cheering the deaths of those innocents on that day.

Those who supported 9/11 then, and rejoice at this anniversary, should not be allowed to have their cake and eat it, too.

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Cross posted at MICHAEL LINN JONES.COM

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Thanks to our good friend from the Right, William Teach of Pirate’s Cove for linking in – go check out his blogger roundup.

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10 Comments so far ↓

  • The GTL™

    I’m still pissed off, too, Michael…

    I have NOT forgotten…

  • mark

    Michael: I am sorry to read that people want to
    gloss over this horror and forget it, because
    the folks that started this war will not forget it ever.
    The attacks agains us began in the 1970′s with the Palestinian terrorists-the fashionistas refer to them as “fighters” blowing up a few airliners, killing people in airports, blowing up night clubs, etc, and has never stopped. The psychotic scum hiding behind religion have vowed to fight us to the death-
    ours, not theirs- and have been killing us for 30 years and the stupid among us don’t believe them.

    We will be fighting then for many yeasrs to come.

    Mark

  • Pirate’s Cove » >>Americans Never Quit » Remembering 9/11

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  • Dr BLT

    Here’s what I’d like to ask my fellow Americans on this important day in history.

    What Does 9/11 Mean 2U?
    Dr BLT copyright 2007 Smash Records
    http://www.drblt.net/music/WhatDoesNine11.mp3

    Dr BLT
    Blog n roll songwriter

  • Chuck

    MLJ

    Nice post buddy. Keep ‘em coming.

  • Victor

    For everyone’s info we at Bookyards have put together a comprehensive list of 9/11 links and resources on its blog at http://bookyards.blogspot.com/2007/09/911-resources-and-links-complete-list.html

  • F&B

    Excellent post Mike. Ten in 1963, man, you’re old ;-)

    I would like to think that your comment “In our fractured and selfish society, 9/11 was a rare common experience” is overly harsh. I agree that it was a rare common experience, but maybe it just shows that we are all part of one big family. We fight with each other and argue about nearly everything, but like a family, when something big happens we all pull together and take care of business.

  • Michael Linn Jones

    Thanks all, for the kind comments.

    F&B: I did not mean to be harsh with the term “fractured.” Modern technology allows us to experience things separately, rather than together. I should have made that clearer, but I did not mean in a political sense, but rather just recognizing the fact that individuals can now experience things unheard of in my (yes..long ago!) younger days.

  • roy

    well said.

    love+light to you+yours

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