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Rethinking 9/11

By CATHERINE TUMBER  |  September 11, 2006

But another thing I’ve learned politically concerns what I call followership. Before all these events, I was aware that the American public doesn’t pay that much attention to politics. It doesn’t have much knowledge; we don’t vote with the frequency that perhaps we should. But none of that seemed to matter. We managed to get along pretty well. Now, I think the single biggest thing I’ve learned from 9/11 and the reaction to it is how unbelievably hurt we have been by the fact that the American public does not know much about politics and doesn’t care that much. We are such a powerful country and such a great country, and yet so many people still think that there was a relationship between Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda. That is just chilling. This war in Iraq has been such a disaster, and there is no accountability. The voters re-elected men who led the war — a major war of choice, starkly breaking with a couple hundred years of tradition. The president himself has never held the secretary of defense accountable, and if you don’t have accountability in a political system you get these festering sores that never go away. But ultimately the failure of the political system to hold leadership accountable is not attributable to the leadership. The people themselves aren’t demanding accountability. The leader can be changed, but I don’t know how you change the American people.

I still think that Americans have a strong moral sensibility, especially on big cultural issues. They never bought the Terry Schiavo business or the stem-cell business. But there’s a difference between a kind of moral outlook and a political willingness to engage politics, to become knowledgeable and active. And that sort of doubles the shame, that a moral people are allowing their leaders to get away with what they’ve gotten away with.

060908_911t_main7
Wendy Kaminer, social critic, attorney, and journalist

September 11 didn’t affect me intellectually or ideologically so much as emotionally; it was an emotionally devastating event, and it didn’t change my mind so much as my attitude. In fact, my opinions about government and politics have mostly been confirmed by September 11. Unchecked, until recently, by Congress, the Courts, or the press, (not to mention a sense of reality), the administration has done a pretty good job of making us less free and a really bad job of making us more safe. The extraordinary damage done by the government worldwide, some of it irreversible, is mind-boggling.

So September 11 and the appalling inability of our government to respond intelligently to the threat of terrorism have left me with a heightened sense of despair, a belief that we’re living on borrowed time. I wonder if that belief is more widely shared than we know. On the surface, cultural and social life in America seem strangely unchanged by September 11, but I imagine that fear and even some hopelessness have a strong subliminal presence, for which people seem to be compensating in all kinds of ways.

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Related: Quiet warfare, Grow jobs, Letters to the Portland Editor, May 12, 2006:, More more >
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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

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