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Chris Hedges begins: "I arrived in Times Square around 9:30 on the morning of September 11, 2001. A large crowd was transfixed by the huge Jumbotron screens. Billows of smoke could be seen on the screens above us, pouring out of the two World Trade towers. Two planes, I was told by people in the crowd, had plowed into the towers. I walked quickly into the New York Times newsroom at 229 W. 43rd St., grabbed a handful of reporter's notebooks, slipped my NYPD press card, which would let me through police roadblocks, around my neck, and started down the West Side Highway to the World Trade Center."

Ground Zero, Lower Manhattan, New York City, September 11th, 2011. (photo: Damon Winter/NYT)
Ground Zero, Lower Manhattan, New York City, September 11th, 2011. (photo: Damon Winter/NYT)



A Decade After 9/11: We Are What We Loathe

By Chris Hedges, Truthdig

11 September 11

 

arrived in Times Square around 9:30 on the morning of Sept. 11, 2001. A large crowd was transfixed by the huge Jumbotron screens. Billows of smoke could be seen on the screens above us, pouring out of the two World Trade towers. Two planes, I was told by people in the crowd, had plowed into the towers. I walked quickly into the New York Times newsroom at 229 W. 43rd St., grabbed a handful of reporter's notebooks, slipped my NYPD press card, which would let me through police roadblocks, around my neck, and started down the West Side Highway to the World Trade Center. The highway was closed to traffic. I walked through knots of emergency workers, police and firemen. Fire trucks, emergency vehicles, ambulances, police cars and rescue trucks idled on the asphalt.

The south tower went down around 10 a.m. with a guttural roar. Huge rolling gray clouds of noxious smoke, dust, gas, pulverized concrete, gypsum and the grit of human remains enveloped lower Manhattan. The sun was obscured. The north tower collapsed about 30 minutes later. The dust hung like a shroud over Manhattan.

I headed toward the spot where the towers once stood, passing dazed, ashen and speechless groups of police officers and firefighters. I would pull out a notebook to ask questions and no sounds would come out of their mouths. They forlornly shook their heads and warded me away gently with their hands. By the time I arrived at Ground Zero it was a moonscape; whole floors of the towers had collapsed like an accordion. I pulled out pieces of paper from one floor, and a few feet below were papers from 30 floors away. Small bits of human bodies - a foot in a woman's shoe, a bit of a leg, part of a torso - lay scattered amid the wreckage.

Scores of people, perhaps more than 200, pushed through the smoke and heat to jump to their deaths from windows that had broken or they had smashed. Sometimes they did this alone, sometimes in pairs. But it seems they took turns, one body cascading downward followed by another. The last acts of individuality. They fell for about 10 seconds, many flailing or replicating the motion of swimmers, reaching 150 miles an hour. Their clothes and, in a few cases, their improvised parachutes made from drapes or tablecloths shredded. They smashed into the pavement with unnerving, sickening thuds. Thump. Thump. Thump. Those who witnessed it were particularly shaken by the sounds the bodies made on impact.

The images of the "jumpers" proved too gruesome for the TV networks. Even before the towers collapsed, the falling men and women were censored from live broadcasts. Isolated pictures appeared the next day in papers, including The New York Times, and then were banished. The mass suicide, one of the most pivotal and important elements in the narrative of 9/11, was expunged. It remains expunged from public consciousness.

The "jumpers" did not fit into the myth the nation demanded. The fate of the "jumpers" said something so profound, so disturbing, about our own fate, smallness in the universe and fragility that it had to be banned. The "jumpers" illustrated that there are thresholds of suffering that elicit a willing embrace of death. The "jumpers" reminded us that there will come, to all of us, final moments when the only choice will be, at best, how we will choose to die, not how we are going to live. And we can die before we physically expire.

The shock of 9/11, however, demanded images and stories of resilience, redemption, heroism, courage, self-sacrifice and generosity, not collective suicide in the face of overwhelming hopelessness and despair.

Reporters in moments of crisis become clinicians. They collect data, facts, descriptions, basic information, and carry out interviews as swiftly as possible. We make these facts fit into familiar narratives. We do not create facts but we manipulate them. We make facts conform to our perceptions of ourselves as Americans and human beings. We work within the confines of national myth. We make journalism and history a refuge from memory. The pretense that mass murder and suicide can be transformed into a tribute to the victory of the human spirit was the lie we all told to the public that day and have been telling ever since. We make sense of the present only through the lens of the past, as the French philosopher Maurice Halbwachs pointed out, recognizing that "our conceptions of the past are affected by the mental images we employ to solve present problems, so that collective memory is essentially a reconstruction of the past in the light of the present. … Memory needs continuous feeding from collective sources and is sustained by social and moral props."

I returned that night to the newsroom hacking from the fumes released by the burning asbestos, jet fuel, lead, mercury, cellulose and construction debris. I sat at my computer, my thin paper mask still hanging from my neck, trying to write and catch my breath. All who had been at the site that day were noticeable in the newsroom because they were struggling for air. Most of us were convulsed by shock and grief.

There would soon, however, be another reaction. Those of us who were close to the epicenters of the 9/11 attacks would primarily grieve and mourn. Those who had some distance would indulge in the growing nationalist cant and calls for blood that would soon triumph over reason and sanity. Nationalism was a disease I knew intimately as a war correspondent. It is anti-thought. It is primarily about self-exaltation. The flip side of nationalism is always racism, the dehumanization of the enemy and all who appear to question the cause. The plague of nationalism began almost immediately. My son, who was 11, asked me what the difference was between cars flying small American flags and cars flying large American flags.

"The people with the really big flags are the really big assholes," I told him.

The dead in the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and a field in Pennsylvania were used to sanctify the state's lust for war. To question the rush to war became to dishonor our martyrs. Those of us who knew that the attacks were rooted in the long night of humiliation and suffering inflicted by Israel on the Palestinians, the imposition of our military bases in the Middle East and in the brutal Arab dictatorships that we funded and supported became apostates. We became defenders of the indefensible. We were apologists, as Christopher Hitchens shouted at me on a stage in Berkeley, "for suicide bombers."

Because few cared to examine our activities in the Muslim world, the attacks became certified as incomprehensible by the state and its lap dogs, the press. Those who carried out the attacks were branded as rising out of a culture and religion that was at best primitive and probably evil. The Quran - although it forbids suicide as well as the murder of women and children - was painted as a manual for fanaticism and terror. The attackers embodied the titanic clash of civilizations, the cosmic battle under way between good and evil, the forces of light and darkness. Images of the planes crashing into the towers and heroic rescuers emerging from the rubble were played and replayed. We were deluged with painful stories of the survivors and victims. The deaths and falling towers became iconographic. The ceremonies of remembrance were skillfully hijacked by the purveyors of war and hatred. They became vehicles to justify doing to others what had been done to us. And as innocents died here, soon other innocents began to die in the Muslim world. A life for a life. Murder for murder. Death for death. Terror for terror.

What was played out in the weeks after the attacks was the old, familiar battle between force and human imagination, between the crude instruments of violence and the capacity for empathy and understanding. Human imagination lost. Coldblooded reason, which does not speak the language of the imagination, won. We began to speak and think in the empty, mindless nationalist clichés about terror that the state handed to us. We became what we abhorred. The deaths were used to justify pre-emptive war, invasion, Shock and Awe, prolonged occupation, targeted assassinations, torture, offshore penal colonies, gunning down families at checkpoints, massive aerial bombardments, drone attacks, missile strikes and the killing of dozens and soon hundreds and then thousands and later tens of thousands and finally hundreds of thousands of innocent people. We produced piles of corpses in Afghanistan, Iraq and Pakistan, and extended the reach of our killing machine to Yemen and Somalia. And by beatifying our dead, by cementing into the national psyche fear and the imperative of permanent war, and by stoking our collective humiliation, the state carried out crimes, atrocities and killings that dwarfed anything carried out against us on 9/11. The best that force can do is impose order. It can never elicit harmony. And force was justified, and is still justified, by the first dead. Ten years later these dead haunt us like Banquo's ghost.

"It is the first death which infects everyone with the feelings of being threatened," wrote Elias Canetti. "It is impossible to overrate the part played by the first dead man in the kindling of wars. Rulers who want to unleash war know very well that they must procure or invent a first victim. It needs not be anyone of particular importance, and can even be someone quite unknown. Nothing matters except his death; and it must be believed that the enemy is responsible for this. Every possible cause of his death is suppressed except one: his membership of the group to which one belongs oneself."

We were unable to accept the reality of this anonymous slaughter. We were unable because it exposed the awful truth that we live in a morally neutral universe where human life, including our life, can be snuffed out in senseless and random violence. It showed us that there is no protection, not from God, fate, luck, omens or the state.

We have still not woken up to whom we have become, to the fatal erosion of domestic and international law and the senseless waste of lives, resources and trillions of dollars to wage wars that ultimately we can never win. We do not see that our own faces have become as contorted as the faces of the demented hijackers who seized the three commercial jetliners a decade ago. We do not grasp that Osama bin Laden's twisted vision of a world of indiscriminate violence and terror has triumphed. The attacks turned us into monsters, grotesque ghouls, sadists and killers who drop bombs on village children and waterboard those we kidnap, strip of their rights and hold for years without due process. We acted before we were able to think. And it is the satanic lust of violence that has us locked in its grip.

As Wordsworth wrote:

Action is transitory - a step, a blow,
The motion of a muscle - this way or that -
'Tis done; and in the after-vacancy
We wonder at ourselves like men betrayed:
Suffering is permanent, obscure and dark,
And has the nature of infinity.

We could have gone another route. We could have built on the profound sympathy and empathy that swept through the world following the attacks. The revulsion over the crimes that took place 10 years ago, including in the Muslim world, where I was working in the weeks and months after 9/11, was nearly universal. The attacks, if we had turned them over to intelligence agencies and diplomats, might have opened possibilities not of war and death but ultimately reconciliation and communication, of redressing the wrongs that we commit in the Middle East and that are committed by Israel with our blessing. It was a moment we squandered. Our brutality and triumphalism, the byproducts of nationalism and our infantile pride, revived the jihadist movement. We became the radical Islamist movement's most effective recruiting tool. We descended to its barbarity. We became terrorists too. The sad legacy of 9/11 is that the assholes, on each side, won.

 

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+77 # kimg 2011-09-11 10:10
most excellent thing i have read on 9/11 on this 10th anniversary...especially this reminder: "We could have gone another route. We could have built on the profound sympathy and empathy that swept through the world following the attacks." Thank you for this.
 
 
+37 # Gordon K 2011-09-11 10:14
Another poignant, sad piece from Mr. Hedges. But the "blowback" theory is a tired canard. In actuality, history is filled with examples of countries going to war over self-inflicted wounds. (Germany's Operation Himmler is one such case.) To a lot of us, including groups of firefighters, pilots, and architects and engineers, the evidence for 9/11 being an example of this ultimate manipulation of patriotism is quite compelling.

The official 9/11 narrative is a poorly woven tapestry. Pulling on almost any loose thread can unravel the whole ugly thing. Here's one: 9/11 videos of Shanksville Pennsylvania show only a smoldering crater, and essentially no Flight 93 plane wreckage. The local coroner at the scene explained that nearly everything was vaporized, including most of the bodies. But a phone call to any mortuary will reveal that bodies do not vaporize, even in a crematorium where combustion is optimized. The long bones of a body must be put through "final processing"--a euphemism for mechanical grinding. So the bodies in Shanksville could not have vaporized, and the coroner lied. If that part of the official narrative is false, then it's worth considering the possibility that other crucial aspects are also false.
 
 
+1 # hmalissa 2011-09-11 13:07
Gordon, I respectfully ask: just what did happen to the Flight 93 aircraft as well as all the bodies if they were not vaporized? I honestly don't know. Thanks.
MMH
 
 
+3 # Gordon K 2011-09-11 16:16
[quote name="hmalissa"]Gordon, I respectfully ask: just what did happen to the Flight 93 aircraft as well as all the bodies if they were not vaporized? I honestly don't know. Thanks.
Here's a Pittsburgh Post Gazette report:
http://www.post-gazette.com/headlines/20010913somersetp3.asp
"Finding the flight data recorder had been the focus of investigators as they widened their search area today following the discoveries of more debris, including what appeared to be human remains, miles from the point of impact at a reclaimed coal mine. Residents and workers at businesses outside Shanksville, Somerset County, reported discovering clothing, books, papers and what appeared to be human remains. Some residents said they collected bags-full of items to be turned over to investigators. Others reported what appeared to be crash debris floating in Indian Lake, nearly six miles from the immediate crash scene."

So, no human remains were found at the purported crash site, but debris and body parts were found six miles away. The logical inference is that the plane came apart while still airborne. That would mean either that a bomb was detonated on board, or the plane was shot down. Consider that on 9/11/01 the FAA ordered the air traffic control tower at Pittsburgh Internat'l Airport evacuated, minutes before Flight 93 went down. (Pittsburgh Tribune-Review 9/8/02)
 
 
0 # Billy Bob 2011-09-14 12:19
WOW.
 
 
+17 # teineitalia 2011-09-11 14:41
"the evidence for 9/11 being an example of this ultimate manipulation of patriotism is quite compelling."

well said, Gordon K.

I truly believe that this was a self-inflicted wound and the perpetrators are violent ideologues who have no idea - nor do they care - that they have unleashed the Furies upon the world.

They have set us on a path so horrific and destructive that I, for one am ashamed that they did so in my name, with my tax money, and without my consent. I weep still for those who lost their lives on 9/11, and I weep for the tens of thousands of innocents who have been slaughtered since that time by the "greatest army in the world."

When will we ever learn?
 
 
+16 # BishopAndrew 2011-09-11 10:31
On this horrific day we learned anew the horrors of hate and fanaticism whether of the state or religion or ideology. We learned anew that no one and no nation is immune from violence that we so often ignore or even encourage. We wept and weep still as do the innocents around the world. An acquaintance of mine in the UK told me that his father during world war II was a fireman and that every morning his Mum made sure that his Dad and the children had a good breakfast, or as good a one as she could provide in war torn Britain,and his Dad would always hug them tightly before he left for his watch, kiss them and tell them he loved them. One morning my friend asked his mother why and she sighed a deep sigh and said "o love he knows he might not come home today". My friend lived in Coventry and his dad did not come home one day. 9-11 is as old as human kind and one cannot help but wonder how many people have not nor will come home becuase of it. Thousands of Americans died that day as did many other nationalities. Death did not care what nation, or colour, or politics, or gender, or orientation, or age or religion or lack thereof death does not discriminate only we do that. In my faith I believe in the and our Resurrection but such belief is no cause for resignation to the finality of war.
 
 
+56 # Barkingcarpet 2011-09-11 10:46
Thank you. We missed an opportunity to build a more "humane" world after 9/11, and to deal with our lack of real justice or fairness worldwide.

"Homeland Insecurity" is a lie and a waste, and the only real security comes through building trust, building community, and acting with honor towards others.

Patriotism is standing up for truth, and justice, and liberty, for ALL. Nationalism is a knee jerk of loons on a mindless bandwagon for revenge, blood, and scapegoats.
Ultimately, it is us. We are all at fault, through our apathy, through our fear, through our greed, and through our turning a blind eye. Let someone else fix it, I'm too busy, and hey, has anyone seen the remote?

There have been people and leaders throughout the ages who have suggested taking care of each other, love your neighbor, be self sufficient, ignore race, colour, beliefs, etc, and that we are all in this madhouse of a world together.
We seem to have crucified, strung up, and shot many of these folks.......

When will we stop professing, and begin to embody love, for all beings?

When will we be so fed up with War, that we will finally invest in peace, and peaceful resolution of conflicts and grievances?

We are the aggressors and oppressors folks. Shame on all of us
We are capable of so much more
 
 
+7 # X Dane 2011-09-11 13:29
Barkingcarpet. I totally agree with you. To your question"When will we be so fed up with war, that we finally invest in peace.....
Sadly I can't see it happening soon for too many are making so much money on weapons and war, and they have no intention of giving up the money.
I would wenture that our biggest export is war material.
 
 
+6 # Capn Canard 2011-09-11 16:34
Damn, ten years ago I tried to convince anyone who would listen that we shouldn't use the events of 9/11 as a reason to go to war. Of course no one listened. Water under the bridge ...
 
 
+38 # giraffe 2011-09-11 10:50
My sentiments exactly. I was against Bush from the beginning (when the Supremes put him in office) and also when he wanted to start a war (or 2) -- but even those around me who did not approve of Bush - said "it is time to come together and support Bush" -- I cringed. These were some very very political LEFTISTS.

Why was everyone suddenly expected to stand behind Bush? I never knew then and today I don't know how this "military complex" continues to dictate what is the demise of our country: Money, priorities, agendas that do not comport with democracy - etc.

Example: President Obama has offered a plan for Congress to help us UP and yet Cantor has published an article (with his picture) - stating "we'll pass the parts we want ONLY" ==

If the GOP goes hand in hand with this minority of TP -- we'll go down before we can elect the whole bunch out in 2012.
VOTE in 2012-- or we will have the same results as 2010 when Dems stayed home.
 
 
+11 # giraffe 2011-09-11 11:06
Here is the URL from Eric Cantor - who is bought and paid for by the TP -- and who has and will profit from money going to the TOP and the expense of the mid/poor and democracy

http://www.care2.com/causes/cantor-we-only-have-to-pass-the-parts-we-like.html
 
 
+24 # Umbel 2011-09-11 11:07
Thank you Chris for having the courage to voice this important, but likely unpopular, sentiment. I acknowledge your courage and support your position.
 
 
+26 # X Dane 2011-09-11 11:07
Bush would have put Chriss Hedges in prison for this article, and thrown away the key.......for the truth is something that cannot be tolerated.
All the people asking "Why do they hate us?" simply do not want to know the truth,... to understand, what so many of our leaders have done...silently condoned by the press, who Hedges correctly call lap dogs. Far too few (of the press) spoke out against war, while the majority was EXITED. I was especially disgusted with Wolf Blitzer, who almost salivated at the thought of the coming war with Iraq. He had eeriry drums playing at the start of his broad casts. I can't stand him and rarely watch CNN. never him.
I am glad that there still are honest journalists like Chris Hedges
 
 
+23 # Mohanraj 2011-09-11 11:07
I hear in tnis article a voice, clear and loud, of reason and sanity.
V.M.Mohanraj
 
 
+4 # shagar 2011-09-11 15:45
i have just today finished Hedges' "Death of the Liberal Class". if you want a more profound view of Hedges position, i highly recommend it. Sadly , he shows clearly that 9-11 is just the final flash, or perhaps the tip of the western iceberg. it should be required reading for any sane mind, adrift in this imperial morass, still struggling to reconcile the perversities of that horrible day 10 years ago. But it is the horror of self recognition, the horror of Pogo, the horror of Kurtz. Thank you Chris Hedges for your defiant perspective, keep up the good work.
 
 
+45 # jstick 2011-09-11 11:42
"It was a moment we squandered."
The same word used by the Rev. William Sloane Coffin, former chaplain of Yale University and Vietnam War protester. Two years later he said,
"The President, after all, did not have to declare war. He could have called the terrorists mass murderers, their deeds crimes against humanity. He could have said to the American people and the world, 'We will respond, but not in kind. We will not seek to avenge the death of innocent Americans by the death of innocent victims elsewhere, lest we become what we abhor. We refuse to ratchet up the cycle of violence that brings only ever more death, destruction and deprivation. What we will do is build coalitions with other nations. We will share intelligence, freeze assets and engage in forceful extraditions of terrorists if internationally sanctioned. I promise to do all in my power to see justice done, but by the force of law only, never by the law of force.'"
Rev. Coffin was one of the true Christians of the 20th century.
 
 
+11 # Nel 2011-09-11 11:43
Amen...
 
 
+12 # Carolita 2011-09-11 11:58
Bravo. A voice of reason and peace. Thank you.
 
 
-42 # rjgarfunkel 2011-09-11 11:59
I had read Mr. Hedges before, and I have been a vocal and political opponent of the GOP and people like Nixon, Reagan and the two Bushes for decades. I spent many years as a Democrat District Leader and have worked in many campaigns fighting for justice and equal opportunity. Whether Hedges is right, or wrong, on the direction our foreign policy has gone, I take strong exception to his typical slur against Israel. He, of course, has had well known anti-Israel views that border on anti-Semitism and I could care less what his roots are. To Hedges Israel doesn't have the right of self-defense, and must be the cause of all the problems of the Middle East. Jordan has been a "Palestinian State" since it was Trans-Jordan.

Richard J. Garfunkel
Host of the Advocates
WVOX AM
 
 
+14 # X Dane 2011-09-11 14:04
rgarfunkel.
Honesty from you would be refreshing too.
building in the occupied palestinian land is not self-defence. it is stealing the Palestinian land, and that is what is making Israel disliked.
 
 
-20 # rjgarfunkel 2011-09-11 12:05
Part II

They had many opportunities to annex the West Bank from 1947 through 1967. The Arab World and its constant turmoil, revolutions, violence, jihads, and religious bigotry can buy opinion in the UN, but it will never convince freedom loving people that their cause is just. Blaming the world's ills on the Jews or their homeland, which over 1 million Arabs, Christians and others reside in peace and freedom, is the work that the Nazis raised to an art form. Long after Hedges is dust, the Jewish people and Israel will exist, and his memory and his insipid writings will be long forgotten along with his fellow-travelers.

Richard J. Garfunkel
Host of the Advocates
WVOX AM
 
 
+8 # shagar 2011-09-11 17:44
there are myriad reasons for disliking Israeli politics and politicians, and i have many israeli friends who agree with them. Why do you suppose that is rjgar? are they just self hating deluded jews, or is there perhaps a whole world of politics that you refuse to acknowledge save that which supports or furthers zionist interests. I believe Israel and my israeli friends have a right to exist and live in peace in the middle east, but why do you make that so difficult with your hateful rhetoric? Is there no other history that counts besides the "sanctioned " israeli history. Do you really imagine you are helping your brothers by enraging your other brothers with your spite. Grow a heart, or a pair of eyes. Time is not on your side. Who will be your champion when wall street caves in the republic? You missed the point of the article Garfunk. Take off your bloodstained glasses and have a look at the world the rest of us live in, not the world you wish it was. There is room for you too, is there any room for us in yours?
 
 
-12 # rjgarfunkel 2011-09-11 18:38
There are a myriad of reasons to dislike any country's policy. For example I dislike what you have to say. I ate dinner at Lansky's on Columbus Avenue with two liberal Israeli cousins who are in NYC last night. They aren't in love with Natanyahu, but they also know their enemies and friends. The way you express "Zionism" reminds me of the UN's attempt to smear it as racist or even as fascist. Hateful rhetoric? Keep on bending over backwards and see where that will get you. Bloodstained glasses? Whose, the thousands of Jews killed by the Fedeyeen? By the way, whose land? When was it Arab land? As I recall it was Turkish land for 400 years and almost all the land the Jews owned before 1947 was bought from Turks and Egyptian absentee landlords. I like how you connect Wall Street to the Jews and Israel. The world you live in? Is that the Jew-hating world? So the Jews and I are from the little strip of land on the Med., is closing out the whole world? By Get a life.

RJ Garfunkel
 
 
+26 # jimking 2011-09-11 12:07
We have been treating the symptoms of the 9/11 attacks for ten years - all we have accomplished is to become the most hated country in the world. When will we face the real reasons for these attacks - our greed, over zealous nationalism, and failure to recognize the rest of our world as equals. A good start would be to bring our armed troops home. Then we must begin to dismantle our armed Empire. With our 1000 armed bases around the world, we are no ones friend.
 
 
+20 # Doc Mary 2011-09-11 12:13
One simple corrective - the suicides had parents, siblings, spouses, children. Maybe it was best not to splatter the front pages of America's papers with these images. My son's sister-in-law will be permanently traumatized by seeing it in real life.

When I was a girl, we had a sister town in Europe that had been devastate by war and its aftermath, and we sent letters and gifts - eventually tokens. I always wished we had done that in Afghanistan instead of what we did. I know, naive. But small things matter.

I have noticed that the further away you were, the more blood lust it seemed to release. Closer, and killing was the last thing you wanted to think about.

Just how many people have died in Iraq and Afghnistan from our clumsy violent response? How do their survivors feel about us? Just as Vietnam spending left nothing for the War in Poverty, so they want to make the poor, the sick, the young, the elderly, pay for this war, both by sending our loved ones to die or be messed up - but don't dare ask for any sacrifices from the wealthy.

And last, here we are now, using drones. Remember Star Wars? Who used the drones? In our own popular cultural, would we still be the heroes?

The horror, the horror.
 
 
+12 # SteveH 2011-09-11 13:30
Quoting
"I have noticed that the further away you were, the more blood lust it seemed to release.

"...they want to make the poor, the sick, the young, the elderly, pay for this war, both by sending our loved ones to die or be messed up..."


@Doc Mary, to your first comment, I live in a community on the other side of our nation and many of us marched against war but it didn't matter, the military industrial congressional complex ignored our marches and calls for peace.

To your second, I'm a Vietnam vet ('68 -'69). While there I eventually filed for CO status because it became clear to me that war, especially that one, was immoral and that I had raised my hand to fight for my country because I was young, patriotic, ignorant and misled by lies. Still, in a very real sense, no one sent me off to war - I volunteered. No one sends our children off today. They, too, volunteer because they don't have all the information and they have often been indoctrinated that war is glorious - until they experience it.

War will end when soldiers say "No." Until then there will be leaders who seek glory using the eager, youthful lives of those who hear and believe the lies those leaders say.

Buffy St Marie's song "The Universal Soldier" says it much better.

In peace...
 
 
+1 # Billy Bob 2011-09-13 14:55
Doc & Steve, I just wanted to say what a pleasure it was to read both of your comments, Thanks for the insight.
 
 
+4 # giraffe 2011-09-11 12:16
in 2012 - more than YOUR vote (bc I KNOW YOU will vote) -- get to those Dems (especially in states with GOP/TP governors) - to register and get mail-in ballots. We need them to know that in America "the right to vote is FREE" (See Walker, Wisconsin who is charging 28 dollars for IDs - although the IDs are free)

The applause given Gov of Texas (Perry) when he explain execution at the last GOP/TP 'whatever" made clear that Repugs/TP are not only for GUNS (anywhere, to anyone) but they remind me of those who threw people into the lions' dens to see them killed for SPORT---

One more point: The racism in the TP is obvious and in TX most of those executed are black/brown people.

Please do as Michael More said "and turn off the TV, etc." and get out to make the 2012 election "for demnocracy" -- VOTE Democratic --even if they too are tainted (but not as much)

Whoever said "this article could not have been published under Bush" is right and under another GOP/TP -- ..... you can fill in the blanks.. things will be worse than 2000-20008
 
 
+7 # Paul Larudee 2011-09-11 12:18
"They are us. We are them." - Rachel Corrie, age 10. Thank you, Chris, for pointing out the inevitability of this statement, whether we accept it or not. If we accept our it, we will care for each other and build a better society. If not, we become loathsome antagonists who nevertheless resemble each other and participate in our reciprocal misery and destruction.
 
 
+3 # bikewriter 2011-09-11 12:31
It was wisdom and courage that were missing in the days following 9/11. Wisdom would have foreseen the path to economic ruin that the retaliatory wars we so blindly chose led on onto. True courage would have been to choose the path of peace. Our so called leader of the day chose the road more (in this country's history) traveled upon, and that, sadly, has made all the difference.
 
 
+11 # tomo 2011-09-11 12:49
Chris is eloquent. I think his moral sense is faultless. Some reflections of my own:

1) We've never bothered to investigate 9/11. Most of the reporting is nostalgia rather than an effort to shed light. There are many uninvestigated
indications of facilitation from our side.

2) Victims of 9/11 were victims. To call them heroes somehow gets things off on the wrong foot.

3) We have refused to analyze the motives of the Arabs involved. This recklessness of ours lets us continue to motivate the kind of hatred manifested on 9/11.

4) Bush, Cheney, Obama have all greatly increased our jeopardy to further attack by doing things (as Chris enumerates) to many, many innocents (new victims) that no people can easily absorb or forget.
 
 
+2 # noitall 2011-09-11 12:57
The fraud that is the "official account" of what happened before, during, and after the attack on 9/11 continues to be the cancer that keeps the sore from healing. In order to heal, we are expected to have faith and believe, much like we are expected to do to be good Christians. Sorry, it has to make sense! What makes sense is that what we know from experience: this country needs war to be financially healthy. That is the way we are set up and that was the grief that many experienced at the end of the cold war. Everything is looked at as a WAR otherwise, how do we justify the cost when it makes no sense and shows no fruits. The WAR on drugs, the WAR on Terrorism. In order for these wars to continue being fought and funded, the drugs and terrorism have to be present. We make sure of that by keeping a steady supply of both by our actions. Heroin from Afghanistan (after the enemy eliminated it), terrorism from blown up wedding parties. All, in our greed and hate is perpetuated. We are out of control and our Democratic majority can do nothing but join hands in mass in the yard of the great white father and demand SANITY in a sustained way, one that cannot be ignored or skewed in its intent by the media and as viewed by this country's leadership. Join us on October 6th in Peace, Patriotism, tenacity, and resolve! We are not who our "leaders" say we are, we are MUCH BETTER THAN THAT.
 
 
+5 # Peacedragon 2011-09-11 13:35
When will we ever learn?
 
 
+6 # anarchteacher 2011-09-11 13:49
Google "Why They Hate Us," by Laurence M. Vance

If you only read one other article concerning the 10th anniversary of the September 11, 2001 attacks upon the United States, I highly recommend that this is the one to read. The important information it contains is not widely known to most Americans.
 
 
+14 # washingtongriz 2011-09-11 15:15
An excellent narrative and commentary, Chris. Unfortunately, I believe it's even worse than that. Much, much worse. A lot of what I've seen and read points to the whole thing being an inside job, planned months if not years in advance. It appears that the girders of the towers were painted with paint containing a type of thermite that only the US government had possession of at the time. Building #7 collapsed exactly as the towers had--into its own footprint--without having been hit by a plane or any significant amount of debris from the towers. All the buildings fell just exactly like planned demolitions, according to experts in explosive demolition. Witnesses speak of hearing numerous explosions coming from parts of the buildings distant from the plane impacts. The BBC reported the collapse of Building #7 a full half hour before it actually did fall. And on and on. The ramifications of all this are extremely disturbing, to say the least. What about GWB's otherwise inexplicable 20-minute delay in leaving the classroom of 2nd graders where he was visiting, after hearing such news? Now, if you draw the conclusions that I've drawn, THAT'S a shocking, stunning overlay to what you've written above. Not a thing you wrote needs to be changed. It just adds another order of magnitude of revulsion to what we should already feel.
 
 
+86 # Splinter 2011-09-11 20:06
Very well said and painfully accurate.
 
 
+28 # OpenMind 2011-09-11 21:00
Thank you Chris for articulating what I have been feeling for a long time. If we had a true leader in the White House on September 11, 2001, rather than one who decided to use the tragedy to advance his own personal agendas, what a different world we would be living in right now. I am so disappointed in the country we have become.
 
 
+31 # tm7devils 2011-09-11 22:01
…and to put it on a more personal level..
When our government decides to perform a terrorist act(of which there have been many in the last 30 years(min)) and the American citizen: mouths, “my country, right or wrong”; displays a bumper sticker saying “ I (heart) AMERICA”; walks around with an American flag lapel pin; or, states emphatically that he is a dyed-in-the-wool patriot, - and doesn’t hold our leaders or representatives to
task - then he, or she, is abetting the acts of said government and is, by legal definition, a terrorist.

Naomi Klein’s book : The Shock Doctrine” describes many of these acts which illustrate just how culpable we are in enticing own destruction.

The alarms have gone off…and America keeps on sleeping. If we don’t wake up that sleep may be more permanent than we would like.
 
 
+14 # RLF 2011-09-12 04:39
"Human imagination lost."

We have not nurtured the imagination in this country for 40 years. We have eliminated it in all but the basic and banal levels from our educational system and this is just one of the rewards. The others include that we can't foresee where the terrorist are going next, we can't design products that we ourselves want to buy, and we can't imagine having a government that does for us and doesn't just take and destroy.
 
 
+15 # mjnk 2011-09-12 08:04
I look at it as the day we lost our country, gained a 'homeland', the TSA and the Patriot Act. Truly sad.
 
 
+3 # eyesea 2011-09-12 09:12
I worked nights. I was awakened by a phone call and given the news. I did not own a television so I would not see the images until I went to work later that day. Mostly I remember thinking,"the world will never be the same".
 
 
+6 # Tee 2011-09-12 10:42
"Those who knew the attacks where rooted in the long night of humiliation and suffering by Israel". This conclusion by Chris Hedges invites another attack, more people jumping out of windows, blaming Arabs, and starting another phase of the war on terrorism.

The question s posed by Architects and engineers, Ray Griffin, and other maliciously labeled "Truthers" have yet to be entertained by people like Hedges, Chomsky, and other liberals.

How about all of the neocons and dual Israeli citizens deeply imbedded in the Bush adminsitration who had much greater opportunity and who benefitted Israel a great deal from attacks on Iraq, and other countries in the middle east.

This article on the surface spouts sympathy for those jumping out of windows. But about sympathies for those future window jumper? Instead of coming to a quick conclusion that Arabs did it because of the Palestinians, how about posing the question in the of who really benefitted the most from this attack. Was it Arabs, who have seen their countries bombed, invaded, and decimated. Or is it Chaney's Halliburton, Israel securing American aid to fight terrorism, and the neocons?
 
 
+5 # Billy Bob 2011-09-12 16:25
I watched the entire thing from before the 2nd plane hit until the next morning without leaving the TV. I was obsessed. I kept changing channels every few minutes trying to hear everyone's spin - even fox's. I remember how quickly people like Tom Clancy were rolled out discussing our need to stop being squeemish about torturing people, and I remember hearing the famous pat robertson garbage about who to blame, as it happened live. I also remember knowing about PNAC and the fact that the very people who signed the proposal were sitting in the White House. Like most liberals, I remember predicting the future with absolute clarity. You know the scenario - that bush would plan to use this to his advantage and that something resembling the “patriot act” was bound to happen.

There were a lot of crazy and stupid things being said by pundits on that day. Many of them have been forgotten, unfortunately.

I remember the discussions about the jumpers implying how cowardly they were. That really pissed me off. But, I’ve always thought an important fact about the suicide jumpers was missing from discussion.

CONT.
 
 
+6 # Billy Bob 2011-09-12 16:25
CONT.

One thing I kept wanting to hear was the fact that these people weren't jumping to avoid an ugly death. They were jumping because they were already burning. I really don’t think they made a conscious decision to “take control of their deaths”. I think they were in rooms with an air temperature near boiling and needed to get out before their skin started being melted right off. There isn’t a human being alive (unless they’re into self-immolation) who wouldn’t have gladly jumped from those windows to escape the searing agony. They were probably running to those windows as fast as possible.

I guess this matters, because I always thought people were somehow ashamed of it, as if they’d be willing to “tough it out for the flag” or something. This wasn’t a moment of American cowardice. It was a moment of human mortality.
 
 
+3 # Califa 2011-09-13 08:51
I remember my 7 year old son asking why people were jumping. I asked him if no matter what you were going to die and you will either burn to death or you could jump. What would you do? He said he would rather burn. I told him that some people would rather jump. He just nodded his head and understood the harsh reality of that day.....
 
 
+3 # itsme 2011-09-12 17:34
I am not sure exactly what I want/need to add except thank you for writing the truth. I have felt this way since the beginning and have definitely been in the minority in my area of the US. We have been in an illegal and immoral war for which every single American should be absolutely ashamed and yet there are people that will still argue that we are after the terrorists no matter where there will go. I have to admit that I did have a flag on my car immediately after 9/11 but the reason was more for empathy/solidarity with the people of NYC. I was not able to go to NYC to help and I wanted to let them know that there were in my thoughts. As a country and a people the last ten years have made dramatic changes in our culture and morality. May God (or your personal higher power) forgive us.
 
 
+4 # Tee 2011-09-12 18:53
This link offers a lot of food for thought regarding Israeli involvement in this dispicable act.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GemBPvSsbG4&feature=related
 
 
0 # farnk 2011-09-18 02:32
There seems to me to be a missing piece in all the evaluation that is generated in response to human events. We stubbornly entertain the possibility of other, more admirable responses to circumstances of threat, but we have only modest successes to point at of occasions when reason and a benenvolent utility were the underlying causes. The entire scope of history suggests that all progress is linked to conquest and exploitation. It's interesting to ask where the abundance of complex manipulative powers that 21st century humanity possesses would have come from if not from conquest and exploitation. It seems fanciful to imagine that a social group better acquainted with its own tendencies would have, for example, come to the new world to offer mutual cooperation and shared results to the native peoples encountered. Where would the wealth to generate our American technocracy have come from if not from conquest and exploitation? More benevolent human interaction, I believe, can only be generated by a very different model of social environment, education, and a profound awareness of what motivates the self and the group. Other than that, we are pretty much doomed to endlessly fall prey to ourselves.
 

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