George Rebane
Until we understand and address the role of the swamp, swatting individual mosquitoes will not reduce our suffering.
On 11 September 2001 we as a country vowed that we would never forget what happened on that day which took the lives of almost 3,000 innocent Americans. Since then, we have built a magnificent Ground Zero monument and museum, and in somber ceremonies called out the names of our murdered country men and women. But the tragedy more often than not has been observed as an act of God, similar to our remembrance of the devastation of Katrina.
During these observances someone will utter a brief reference to the โterroristsโ who flew those passenger airliners into buildings and into a field in Pennsylvania. At best these faceless terrorists are also glossed over as having no further identity, ideology, and purpose than did Katrina. We focus all our attention on the killed and their grieving survivors.
But many more than 3,000 Americans die every day, and no national memorials are held for them. No one asks any longer what made these 9/11 deaths special, and why that date, as another one in our history, will live in infamy. When we were still a proud country and suffered a great blow on 7 December 1941, we didnโt memorialize our fallen as some inevitable victims of a natural disaster. We made it clear that everyone down to our kindergarteners knew that it was Imperial Japan, with leaders like Tojo and Yamamoto, that had perpetrated and carried out that dastardly attack. And even though Japan is no longer a warmongering empire, we still remember who attacked us on that day of infamy, and how we as a country responded to that outrage.
This is not the case with 9/11 that we now briefly identify as having been caused by some band of vanilla terrorists of indifferent provenance. Today during these hallowed observances we cannot even mention that it was fundamentalist Islam that motivated, assembled, trained, and set loose the self-sacrificing killers. And that fundamental Islam has not deviated a whit from its greater goal to subvert the globe to its merciless credo, proving its unflagging zeal by continuing to send an unending stream of Islamist terrorists to maim and murder in the west.
In response, our progressive and woke leadership cringes at even the thought of identifying the terroristsโ creed. We even take down Old Glory from classroom walls if a Muslim student expresses โdiscomfortโ with that flag for which so many have sacrificed. We continue mumbling that Islam is still a โreligion of peaceโ, ignoring the wholesale global support by Muslims of anti-western terror as an acceptable tool to bring about their new world order. And in response, we have turned on ourselves by quietly accepting the leftists in our government who have fabricated the lie that white supremacists make up the greatest terror threat America faces.
There is no doubt that twenty years on, we as a nation have forgotten what really happened on 9/11.
[update] RL Crabb, our celebrated cartoonist who is also on the editorial board of The Union, is a local leading intellectual light in the cadre of our calcified cohort of collectivists. His cartoon in todayโs 11sep21 issue of the newspaper (below) underlines the point that I am making in the above commentary. As a collectivist, for him 9/11 was just another tragedy of lives lost to an event perpetrated by some inscrutable terrorists of indifferent origin who no longer deserve recognition, let alone mention. Most students of geo-politics and Islamic affairs find nothing inscrutable about the 9/11 terrorists and are anything but indifferent as to their origin. Fundamentalist Islam is the geo-political plague of our times and as such has been endemic for decades. And so it will continue to be as long as our progressive thought leaders, who are also masters of our media, deem this scourge as just another act of nature to be dealt only with a general trepidation and ill-directed preparations which must neither address nor insult its source. These leftists wish us to focus only on those whom they designate as โrightwing domestic terroristsโ, their paramount threat to our republic.
A fruitful read on the entire matter of global Islamism is โThe War on Terror Shifts to โBrainistanโโ by Tawfik Hamid, an American physician who in his younger years was himself an indoctrinated jihadist ready to martyr himself attacking the west. He presents the case that โThe West needs a better system for identifying radical Islamists and cutting out the religious underpinnings of jihad.โ Ignoring the ideological origins of 9/11 is not part of such a better system. More such sentiments are presented today in essays such as ‘Purposeful Forgetfulness’ by Pedro Gonzales, associate editor of Chronicles, who argues that “Americans have been encouraged to forget about 9/11 and to focus on the enemy within.”



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