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Mythsaje Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-13-07 02:10 AM
Original message
What Should Be Said
In the early days after the 9/11 attack, nearly the whole world stood by us in condemning the deed and those who had planned and implemented it. For a short time, the United States became not the beacon of hope it once was, but a shocked and injured entity with which the whole world mourned.

It could have been a watershed moment for us all. It could have been the impetus for a joyous reconciliation of all the mistakes we'd made as a nation, and given us the chance to rise above our admittedly rocky history to become something greater than we'd ever been.

We had the chance to show the world how strong America really was. How proud, and how open-hearted Americans can be.

Had we the right leadership on that day, we might have transcended politics, and repudiated revenge, and sought justice for justice's sake rather than for the sake of vengeance.

We'd been struck a telling blow and all around the world people cried out, angered and outraged at what had been done to us. Nations that themselves had felt the bite of terrorism offered both help and sympathy. People in such unexpected places as Iran marched in the street holding signs of protest on our behalf.

When we went into Afghanistan after Bin Laden, much of the world stood by our side. Few people objected when we took down the Taliban. We were after a criminal and the world believed we were doing the right thing. We were seeking justice.

But we did not have good leadership on that day. We had the worst kind of leadership, men who took the goodwill of our neighbors and tossed it away, who brought to bear upon their own people the psychological weapons of fear, hatred, and distrust, and turned our nation into an armed camp afraid of its own shadow.

You can't fight the tactics of terror with fear. You can only fight it with courage and pride. You cannot answer injustice with vengeance, but with justice itself. You cannot insult your friends and allies and expect to gain acceptance and support.

We had those things and they meant nothing to this Administration and the Republicans. They used what had been done to visit even more horrors on the American people. Threats of mushroom clouds and biological weapons, of unmanned drones carrying dangerous payloads, and foreign fighters swarming our shores with evil intent.

In the early days we had a chance to destroy Al Qaeda. Osama Bin Laden was the most hated man on Earth. But rather than respecting the goodwill of the people of the world, and using it to create an avenue for positive change, our alleged leaders took us all in the opposite direction.

There are those who blame all Americans for what has been done in our name. Not just over there, but here as well. But many of us never asked for this, never approved of it, and were never silent even as our armies were readied for war against a nation that had never done us any harm.

We were ignored. We are still being ignored. But we are not silent in the face of disaster. We are not rendered dumb by the threats of our authority figures.

It was not our idea to "fight them over there so we don't have to fight them over here." We did not choose to fight this battle in someone else's backyard. The people who did that are as much criminals in our eyes as the ones who planned and executed the attacks that began this terrible chain of events.

Many of those who helped put these people in power realize their mistake now. Far too many do not. We knew that it would never work, and that it was a terrible error of judgment, a grave moral lapse. We hated what was happening even as it happened. And were powerless to stop it.

Those who condemned us for speaking out will never apologize to us. But we can apologize to everyone else for this mess. We can apologize to the Iraqi people for what has been done to them.

We thank you, all our neighbors who stood by us on that fateful day and offered us your support. We recognize your contribution even if our so-called leaders do not. We thank you more than we can ever truly say, and apologize on their behalf for their ignorance, stupidity, and greed.

I only wish it were enough.
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Mythsaje Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-13-07 02:30 AM
Response to Original message
1. Crickets? Really?
Huh. Go figure.
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NanceGreggs Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-13-07 02:34 AM
Response to Original message
2. Cricket No. 1 weighing in ... n/t
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Mythsaje Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-13-07 02:36 AM
Response to Reply #2
3. Thanks, Nance...
I was actually starting to wonder here. I thought it was a good post. Enough that I've already submitted it to Bartcop AND to the Edwards blog.
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Swamp Rat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-13-07 02:50 AM
Response to Original message
4. "Those who condemned us for speaking out will never apologize to us."
Yep.



:kick:
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hang a left Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-13-07 02:54 AM
Response to Original message
5. I am sorry that I just don't have the sentiments regarding 911
that you have.

Your passion is palpable.

I just think that there were other forces at work.

I am just not an OCTer.
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clixtox Donating Member (941 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-13-07 03:22 AM
Response to Original message
6. There certainly is a tragic paucity of Jiminy Crickets...


Especially in political office. We need many more heros like Jiminy, and in the real world, Cindy Sheehan, Ralph Nader, Martin Luther King, Daniel Ellsberg, Jim Hightower, Medea Benjamin amongst many others, more and less well known.

They are the conscience our corporate reality can't "afford" while wringing out ever increasing profits by exploiting our labor, our health, our resources, ingenuousness and anything else here and especially elsewhere around the world.

This essay/apology just skims the top/edge of the huge stinking pile of our countries sins against the rest of the world and sadly, the poor, minorities and most working people in the USA.

Apologizing for only our evil ways over the last six years seems completely inadequate. One can count the countries now being "led" by war criminals on one hand...

I am very, very sorry also, and have the opportunity to express my feelings to some of our former victims often since I am in Vietnam most of the time.
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Mythsaje Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-13-07 03:34 AM
Response to Reply #6
7. Yes, this essay centered on a single facet... 9/11 and its aftermath...
There is SO much more to say. Some of it I've said already. Some of it others have said better than I ever will.

I can only contribute in my small way, though it can never be enough.
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Niccolo_Macchiavelli Donating Member (641 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-13-07 03:45 AM
Response to Original message
8. Your feelings in honor but

it's aknowledged that the administration isn't speaking for you. what's frowned upon is that you let them go so far. In Europe people would be on the streets in violence long ago. But the american world heroes continue write their bribed/blackmailed off representatives to act instead of doing something themselves (individuals aside).

Had the USA not had nukes i'd say the world would be in preparation to take on the USA militarily like it did to stop Germany some 70 years ago. Due to the fact that the USA has nukes the conquest of WWII isn't open without seriously risking thermonuclear war. That means the change must come from within the USA. Be it by political processes like voting, impeachment, economic measures (lasting strikes as example) or rebelling citizen. In changing your government, you are on your own. From outside the US government can't be taken down.

As for the leadership at 9/11. It was solidarity to the people. though many have not forgotten the rejects of the landmine ban, kyoto protocols etc. Many saw it also for what it probably was, the Reichstagsfire II in American proportions with publicity (this in 2001). At least when it was known that afghanistan and irak where planned ahead one should have grown suspicious. there's also enough circumstancials to make the "osama-did-it-theory/lie" highly questionable.

As subjects of the soon-to-be Corpo-Chimperial States of Oceania you will have 4 options in the new system

1. Fight
2. Flee
3. STFU
4. Participate

Have fun, i'll see ya in 1984

Greets from Eurasia
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Mythsaje Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-13-07 04:01 AM
Response to Reply #8
9. Well, Osama has certainly not denied responsibility...
If he wasn't responsible, he had no problem with taking the blame. Or credit.

As Professor Cornel West said... "He said he did it, and I believe him."

(That earned him an odd look from Bill Maher).

It's certainly possible that it was done with, at least, a little inside help. We may never know for sure.

A lot of us had problems with our support of the Taliban to begin with, and were more than a bit stunned when it was announced that was the first target. We had, after all, just given them several billion dollars in aid for helping in the drug war. (Not that the average American knew anything about that). I did, simply because I know several anti drug-war activists. Support for the repressive Taliban regime was looked upon with great disgust and suspicion by such people.

At the moment the Republican Party is starting to feel a little pinched. They're not our only adversaries, unfortunately, but they're the most visible ones. I've said on many occasion that if we cannot trust the corporate media to pass along the truth, we have to do it as individuals, and often times just by speaking the truth to those who might not hear it anywhere else...one on one.

As Henry Rollins says, the only way to keep your freedom of speech is to use it. I fully intend to keep doing so. It's the only real weapon I have.
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