an excellent post on september 11, 2001

Practically Harmless: On a final observance

Here’s the best part…

Since the attacks, Americans have become more jingoistic. We’ve lashed out at well-meaning allies. We’ve alienated just about every other country in the entire world with our foreign policy. In the co-opted name of the victims of the attacks, we’ve sent the men and women who’ve vowed to keep us safe to invade another, un-9/11-adjacent country without provocation. We’re embroiled in a war seemingly without end. We’ve renamed “French fries” “Freedom fries” and then changed the name back. We’ve held up the families of 9/11 victims as justification for war, and then we’ve chastised them when they protested such exploitation or grieved in a government-nonapproved fashion. We’ve attacked Arabs for possibly being Muslims, and we’ve attacked Sikhs for looking like Arabs. We’ve decried the abuses of women in Arab countries, and then we’ve spat on women on our own city streets for daring to wear the hijab. We’ve convinced ourselves that the Iraqi people are innocent and worthy of our help and simultaneously ungrateful wretches who deserve anything that comes to them. We’ve made it okay, even admirable, to be xenophobic and hateful. We’ve normalized racial profiling. We’ve criminalized dissent. We’ve submitted to unconstitutional government invasions of our privacy. We’ve consented to torture. We’ve reduced the American flag to an item of apparel and the attacks of September 11 to a smoking-tower logo and “We’ll Never Forget” suitable for t-shirt, bumper sticker, snow globe, or Commemorative Coin Forged From Genuine Ground Zero Salvaged Steel. Between American casualties in Iraq and lives lost in the attacks themselves, we’re nearly 7,000 fewer than we were six years and a day ago.

But those changes aren’t because of 9/11. Correlation vs. causation; those changes happened after the September 11 attacks, but not because of them. Those changes happened because someone - lots of someones - saw an opportunity to turn a tragedy into a campaign.

The 9/11 hijackers were Saudis, but we’re not at war with Saudi Arabia. The attacks were coordinated by Osama bin Laden, but we’re no closer to capturing him than we’ve ever been. Our airport security is and has been weak as water, but the best efforts made for our safety involve putting our travel-sized shampoo bottles in Ziploc bags. The terrorist cells that constantly threaten our safety are holed up on the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan, but our troops are too bogged down in Iraq and our global diplomacy cred is so shot that we can’t get into other countries to punish those responsible for the attacks. We’re told that the terrorists hate us for our freedoms, and all the while the government is systematically stripping those freedoms away unquestioned. We’ve given complete control of our lives to a man who takes vacations during natural disasters and hasn’t mastered the pronunciation of “nuclear” yet and has fed us one untruth after another to justify his war, because he looks convincing in a cowboy hat, and because anyone preaching reason and moderation is far too removed from the “boot in the ass” misguided-revenge-seekers who appeal to the lesser angels of our nature.

But 9/11 didn’t do any of that. We did that. We just used 9/11 as an excuse.

You know what would be awesome? If 9/11 really did change everything. If we took that feeling of global unity - “We are all Americans” - that immediately followed the attacks and ran with it. If, instead of alienating our allies and neighbors by lashing our randomly, we worked together to rout out the true causes of global terrorism. If we made it a priority to understand other cultures instead of demonizing them. If we reached out to grieving families instead of using them for our own purposes. If we stepped outside of our own personal bubbles and looked to happiness other than our own. If we reacted with compassion instead of fear. If, instead of playing directly from the terrorists’ script and letting our lives turn into a reactionary chaos of fear and mistrust and hatred, we resolved to make our country, and our place in the world, stronger, safer, more welcoming, more understanding, more open. If we realized that life is precious and can be gone in an instant, and that the only way to honor that is to live life, with others, rather than cowering in fear.

Meanwhile, let’s not forget the other September 11…by which I mean the one in 1973…a September 11 this country had a hand in… Chile’s democratically-elected government is overthrown in a military coup after serious instability. President Salvador Allende commits suicide during the coup in the presidential palace, and General Augusto Pinochet heads a U.S.-backed military junta that will govern Chile for the next 16 years. (via Wikipedia)

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