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SOME THOUGHTS ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF 9/11
The
Port Authority of New York and New Jersey recently released some 2000
pages of conversations from their employees trapped in the World Trade
Center just after Arab terrorists had flown high jacked airplanes into the
buildings on Sept. 11, 2002, killing almost 3,000 people. The calmness
and bravery of the victims is overwhelming.
The
transcripts were released at the insistence of the New York Times, who
doesn’t give a tinker’s dam about how the victims’ families must feel as
they read the last words of their loved ones along with the rest of us.
The Times insensitivity is matched only by the Florida newspapers that
sued to get photographs of Dale Earnhardt’s autopsy over his family’s
pleas for privacy after the race car driver was killed. You see, we
journalists live in a different world from the rest of you plebeians. Bad
taste is our middle name.
At
the same time the Ports Authority transcripts were being made public, a
group of Muslims in Britain announced that they are planning a conference
to celebrate the second anniversary of America's "comeuppance.” These
slime bags are going to honor the 19 terrorists, who think they got a HOV
lane trip to heaven for killing people whose only sin was to enjoy a way
of life that these barbarians can’t fathom.
I have
been waiting for Arab clerics or Arab heads of state or Arab special
interest groups to publicly denounce the blind hatred of the boobs in
Britain and to reject them and their actions. But, alas, all is silence.
I should have known better. Let’s assume that a white religious sect
announced it was going to “celebrate” the 1963 Birmingham church bombing
that killed four children, whose only sin was to have a different skin
color from the bombers. The uproar from right-minded people in this
country would have been quick and condemning of such outrageous bigotry.
Evidently, it takes a lot to sicken the Arab world. Having fellow Muslims
associated with a public celebration of the murder of thousands of
innocent people seems to fall within their tolerance range.
My
faith teaches that we should forgive and “turn the other cheek” when we
are wronged and “judge not, lest we be judged.” In my heart I know that
is right, but I can’t bring myself to forgive the highjackers for what
they did nor can I turn the other cheek while they blow up a few more
buildings and kill a few thousand more people. I can’t help judging a
bunch of sick and depraved people – and those that refuse to condemn them
– who think a sneak attack that murdered thousands of innocent people is
something to celebrate. Clearly, Gil Watson, the World’s Greatest
Preacher, has his work cut out for him if he is going to save this
wretched soul. (Maybe my punishment will be that when I will get to the
Pearly Gates, I will discover that God holds an honorary degree from
Georgia Tech and reads the New York Times.)
We had
better understand just how seriously other people want to see us fail and
the lengths to which they will go to make it happen. There will be other
attacks, rest assured. We need to worry less about hyphenating our
differences and more about defending the things that unite us. We need to
consider our collective security for a change. If the Republic isn’t free,
then neither are we. We think that trashing our country as well as those
who govern us is a glorious exercise of our free speech. It may be, but
we should remember that it also gives aid and comfort to those who would
harm us. We say we are one nation under God and indivisible. But are we?
It has
been two years and I am still angry about the events of 9/11. Those who
died that day are heroes. Those who killed them are cowards. Those who
celebrate the deaths are despicable. Those who look the other way or try
to rationalize what happened that day are contemptible. Turn the other
cheek? I’m not there yet.
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