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March 15, 2006

It's Time To Forget September 11th
by Jonathan David Morris

It’s time to forget September 11th.

That’s right. You heard me.

It’s time to push it out of our minds.


You can hoot and holler all you want about this concept. You can say I’m anti-American. You can even accuse me of spitting on the memories of all those who died. But you would miss the point of what I’m about to say here, because this has nothing to do with the heroes or victims, and nothing to do with politics.

This has to do with us.

Four and a half years have passed since the craziest day in American history. At this point, that’s all 9/11 is: Just one crazy day that happened four and a half years ago. It sucked, but we can’t change it. We shouldn’t let it change the American dream.

I was reminded of how important this is last week, when the deal that would’ve sold six American ports to an Arab company—Dubai Ports World—collapsed under the weight of widespread American uproar. I’ve been thinking we should “forget 9/11” for a while now, but I’ve never shared it, because I know how folks will react to it, and I didn’t want people to get any wrong ideas. To me, forgetting 9/11 isn’t about forgetting the dead or forgetting what happened. It’s about returning to normal. It’s literally about getting over it, accepting it, and, for lack of a less politically loaded phrase, moving on.

To a certain extent or another, I tricked myself into believing we’d already done that. Not politically, but on a personal, practical, everyday level. I could’ve sworn we got all the paranoid fears out of our systems during the celebrity-bashing, freedom-fry-eating early days of the Iraq War. But I was wrong. The reaction to Dubai Ports World resembles 9/11’s immediate aftermath in every meaningful way. The only reason anyone cared about this transaction was because this Arab company was just that: Arab. No one cared that they were also just that: a company. And no one wanted to hear that enabling terror wasn’t in their best business interests.

This harkens back to September of ‘01, when everyone knew someone who knew someone who “saw” the Pakistanis down at the local Dunkin Donuts cheering the Twin Towers’ destruction. It resembles those days of national paralysis, when a forward—a mere email, from a friend of a friend who “never sends these things”—was enough to keep us out of the malls for fear of terror on Halloween.

It made sense to react that way back then. Because back then, we were starved for information. We were still gripped by the shock and the awe.

But after four and a half years, we’ve had time to think it over. I’m not saying we should forget those who perished, and I’m not suggesting we should pretend terrorism doesn’t exist. But is it time to get over September 11th, to move on—to, in some sense, “forget” it?

Yeah. It really is.

This place we call “post-9/11 America”—it’s not the same place I grew up in. This isn’t the land of the free and the home of the brave. A free people would fear doing business with no one. And a people committed to free enterprise would seek to do business with everyone—Arabs included. The ports scandal isn’t about national security. It’s about the new and unimproved America. The country that wants fences on its borders. The land where the free want protection from outsourced jobs.

Post-9/11 America doesn’t think it can compete with the rest of the planet. It doesn’t believe in the products it’s selling. And it doesn’t believe in its own ideals.

Nothing proves this more than an article I happened to read a couple of weeks ago, that complained about U.S. Olympians wearing Canadian-made uniforms. Apparently, this was “anti-American.” How? I don’t know. I would think the quest for better, less expensive products—wherever they come from—is patriotic. After all, it’s capitalism. And capitalism’s the American way.

But that was what we believed in the old country—in pre-9/11 America. This is post-9/11 America now. Things are different here.

Look around, and you’ll find the only thing America’s confident in anymore is its military. Take that away—take the pageantry, the yellow ribbons, and the thanks to “our men and women serving abroad” before sporting events—and it’s clear that we think we have nothing to offer. We’ve grown soft in the era of get-rich-quick McDonald’s lawsuits. Our culture is vacuous, and our belief in it is missing. Even the best stuff we have—like our colleges—are too busy being reviled to be respected and enjoyed.

I blame September 11th for all of this.

I blame the terrorists for the destruction that day caused, but I blame us—we, the people—for letting it destroy us.

It’s time to pack our bags and move out of here—time to get out of post-9/11 America, and time to return to our senses. Americans need to believe in themselves again. We need to get back to business. This country didn’t become great because of some abstract freedom imposed by an army. It became great because of the tangible things inspired by our zeal to be free. If the country that gave the world electricity, light bulbs, telephones, airplanes, moon landings, and cyberspace needs a fence on its border and a pledge to “buy American,” then that country can’t compete with the world anymore, because that country’s not dreaming the American dream.

On September 12, 2001, I wrote of the folks who attacked us: “screw their women, screw their children, screw every last one of them.” I don’t regret writing that, because I believed it back then. Most of us did. But for God’s sake, it’s time to move on now. Screw September 11th. Screw being attacked. Screw going to war. Screw anything that gets in the way of the peace and prosperity once synonymous with our name.

If we’re a free people, if we believe in free enterprise—let’s prove it. If we want our enemies to embrace our way of life, let’s embrace it ourselves. Let’s do business with Dubai. Let’s do business with Cuba. Let’s welcome a little competition from China and India. And let’s “buy American” because it’s better—not because it’s ours.

Let’s open the markets and open the borders. Make America more free, not less.

We should never forget September 11th happened. And we should never forget the lessons of the carnage that it caused. But just because 3,000 people died four and a half years ago doesn’t mean we should stop believing in the power of what we believe. Let’s stop living in fear and start dreaming again. At the end of the day, that’s what people in the land of the free are supposed to do.

Freeliberal.com

Oh I love liberal "thinkers" I really do.

Please circulate this article freely amongst friends, family members, colleagues and co-workers.

This message really needs to get out.
 
Eh, bush already said finding osama wasn't important, why I should I care that a random liberal doesn't want the terrorist strike to influence our behavior?

"I don't know where bin Laden is. I have no idea and really don't care. It's not that important. It's not our priority."
 
wow. Trolling blogs to find an incitation. How long did that take you?

I actually pull the papers from that day out once in a while a re-read them. And seeing how far we are removed from that day shows me that this author is not the only one who wants to forget.
 
[quote name='AFStealth']I love how it's mostly liberals who were against the Dubai Ports deal.[/QUOTE]

A who to the what now!?!? Are you being facetious, or are you truly dense?
 
Actually re-reading the article makes be think PAD stopped reading after his last red note.

Tell me PAD, king dipshit, what is wrong with this..

We should never forget September 11th happened. And we should never forget the lessons of the carnage that it caused. But just because 3,000 people died four and a half years ago doesn’t mean we should stop believing in the power of what we believe. Let’s stop living in fear and start dreaming again. At the end of the day, that’s what people in the land of the free are supposed to do.
 
[quote name='mykevermin']A who to the what now!?!? Are you being facetious, or are you truly dense?[/QUOTE]

Remember how he stopped posting here for weeks because he got called on his bullshit?
 
This is another one of those "OMG!!!!1! Did he say FORGET 9/11!!111!!1" moments where after getting that idea in their heads certain people don't take the time to read the whole thing. I agree with large parts of the article, including the main premise: we have let 9/11 influence our society too much. Of course we want to do what we can to prevent such a thing from happening again, but I don't think we should flush our values down the toilet because we were attacked; rather, we should hold even tighter to said values. I guess it is just an extension of the torture justification we see in some unfortunate arguments nowadays. I'm sure Ace or someone will post about how I am soft on terrorism in response to this, but whatever.
 
[quote name='Msut77']Remember how he stopped posting here for weeks because he got called on his bullshit?[/QUOTE]

So, why are you still posting then?
 
That seems to be a rather strange website. I honestly couldn't tell if it was a genuine webzine, or blog, or if it was a parody site; I'm sure many of you felt the same way the first time you went to www.landoverbaptist.org

Part of you thinks "This is too stupid to be real," while the other half sez "well, if they're taking the piss they put a lot of effort into it."

It seems to be too far left wing for me; borderline anarchism kinds of discussions. There was one quote I found interesting, not because of anything it says, but I think it sums up bmulligan's approach to almost every facet of political discourse:

"Many libertarians argue vociferously for ‘economic thinking’ – which implies an analysis of tradeoffs. But, often, libertarian arguments assume that tradeoffs come as “all or nothing” decisions. Accepting one small bit of government equals accepting every big government idea. This thinking leaves two choices – all government or all liberty. Which side are you on?

A better way to look at our tradeoffs is to see what an additional bit of government costs us in terms of our liberty. And also, what does another bit of liberty costs in terms of other values we might pursue? This marginal analysis allows us to choose not just between “all or nothing” but a wide variety of combinations and possibilities."

-- Kevin Rollins, Editor's Notes: Liberty and Community

Sometimes I feel that bmug's discourse lies strictly within the bolded part; he simply cannot fathom government that has a reasonable amount of control or say in people's lives. Any increase in power is a bad one; it's such a dichotomous viewpoint that it makes interpreting situations a fairly easy action, but also makes discussion virtually impossible (as when one views situations in such stark black/white terms, and refuses to entertain the idea that they may be incorrect, or merely acting out of reactionism or selfishness, concessions and progress in discourse just won't happen). Any governmental increase in power makes you Mussolini. It's oh-so-very tired.

BTW, I'm not sorry to threadcrap, because this is a stupid topic with a stupid bait. I don't care if the editorial has any good points (primarily because they're so offensively and opaquely stated that few people, outside of those with the patience and reading comprehension of elprincipe, got it), PAD took five sentences out of an entire editorial from a far, far, far left website (or so it seems) to lambast all left-leaning peoples. I don't go quoting stormfront.org to lambast the right.
 
Landover baptist is a great joke site. I should buy one of these bumper stickers linked from their site:

dick1cv.jpg

dick12xg.jpg

permit4ni.gif


Which should I buy to go along with my "if you can read this you're not the president" sticker?
 
bread's done
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