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Rethinking 9/11

By CATHERINE TUMBER  |  September 11, 2006

We are seeing various expressions of the totalitarian impulse, including in our government right now. That tendency to fight totalitarianism with totalitarianism. That, if there are people who want to “destroy” our way of life, then we have to fight them by pretty much doing the same things — the mirror impulse that led to things like Guantánamo, Abu Ghraib, or “extraordinary rendition.”

The impulse toward safety through absolutism and idealism is so terrifying and so deep in human nature; it occurs in progressive and leftist thought just as often as it does on the right. Every utopianism is totalitarian at heart. This is such a human impulse and so complicated and difficult to recognize. It recurs so regularly in so many different clothes. Almost nobody goes and blows up buildings because they think of themselves as evil. They do it out of a belief in good — and good is a terrible thing sometimes, a very dangerous temptation.

060908_911t_main6
Alan Wolfe, director of the Boisi Center for Religion and Public Life, Boston College

What the last five years have proven to me is how unbelievably important leadership is. The more time goes by, the more I see how truly unlucky we were. We’ve had huge crises before in this country — the Civil War, the Depression, Pearl Harbor, but we managed to come through those essentially because of who was in the president’s office. Lincoln, for example, was an unsuccessful and inexperienced politician, and people saw him as one of the weakest candidates in the election of 1860. Yet he became the greatest president in our history. That was really a lucky break. FDR was kind of a playboy. Nobody pictured that he would rise to the occasion, but he did and also became one of our greatest presidents. I think that could have happened on September 11, and in fact I thought it did happen on September 11, at least initially. I was not a Bush supporter, but my reaction to this horrible event was, my god, once again we’re blessed. After a few moments of hesitation he really came through. But I sure don’t feel that way now. We’re at a great historical turning point in this country because — and I don’t want to sound like an extremist, here — we have one of the worst conceivable men in office, and the setback to our country as a result of what he has done and used 9/11 as cover for, will take at least half a century to recover from.

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Comments
Rethinking 9/11
I was very impressed with Alan Dershowitz's grasp of the changes affecting the US today as it relates to our laws and freedoms. John Silber also grasps the complexity of the problems facing us, portraying a very balanced view of today's issues. I found all of the other articles demonstrating an alarming amount of naivete underlined by America hatred. Of course, given this newspaper, there were no articles covering more right leaning points of view. It is a shame that newspapers cannot provide balanced viewpoints allowing us to have choices on both sides of these important issues. It is more shameful that those same newspapers allow their opinions to leave the editorial page and jump into the selection and positioning process of supposedly unbiased reporting. After 9/11, this has been the biggest change -- at a time that we need leadership, it is true we don't get it from the President, but it is also true that the newsmedia stifles true debate that could lead to better leadership in the future. I am not sure that George Bush would have been a better President with a balanced media, but Rooesevelt, Lincoln and others did not have to face that same obstacle. For Lincoln, communication was slow, for Roosevelt, it ralied around him. What bothers me, is the media today prevents very high qualilty leaders from emerging -- instead we get Bush, Kerry, Hillary and Gore.
By Earl on 09/07/2006 at 8:45:45
Rethinking 9/11
Of all the articles about 9/11 in the past five years, I've never seen one quite like this. Each of us probably has an answer lurking inside waiting to jump out. Regarding E.J. Graff's comments on totalitarianism, a lesson I've learned since 9/11 is just how total totalitarianism is. Like the Nazis (sorry for the verboten simile) and Communist Russia, the administration has left no stone unturned, no legal means untested, no area of policy unviolated. Come to think of it, an approach this comprehensive, as well as dedicated, is another lesson to be learned, an example for all of us!
By Russ Wellen on 09/08/2006 at 1:31:13

ARTICLES BY CATHERINE TUMBER
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    Many Americans feel as if they'd been living helplessly amid the handiwork of extraterrestrials, as if a spaceship had suddenly blown in and zapped the landscape with suburban sprawl while sucking up middle-class wages in exchange for low-paid service work.
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    A few years ago, if you googled student-loan giant Sallie Mae and the word “lawsuit,” a live-journal blog called Southern Girl Babbling would turn up.
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