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A
couple of months ago, I turned on the local evening
news. As the flashy news logo morphed into being
on the screen, along with the insistent, important-sounding
staccato theme that all news programs adopt, the camera
passed slowly over a gold-embossed photo album. The
album then dissolved into a montage of generic photos
from some anonymous wedding.
Through
it all, an announcer intoned, gravely, something insipid
about weddings. Something like, "Wedding memories
Something to cherish for generations to come
Keepsakes
of happy times with friends and family
But for
one area couple, their newlywed dreams are dashed
Their precious photos of the event stolen
Tonight,
its our top story."
I
thought, Youve gotta be kidding me! Stolen
wedding photos? This is what passes for a leading story?
Talk about a slow news day. True, I do live in Seattle,
a far more provincial town than my native Washington,
D.C., where the local news is basically the national
news. Still, this seemed to be a new low in barrel-scraping.
I
turned the TV off in disgust, thinking about how sensational
non-news items like this had taken over the American
psyche, despite all the obvious problems in the world.
I thought, When will this country ever get serious about
itself?
The
date of the broadcast? Monday, September 10, 2001. By
the time I turned on the TV again the next morning,
I got my answer. Suddenly everything in the world was
serious. Dead serious. A cold slap to the face, in the
form of four hijacked planes, had rendered everything
before it somehow inconsequential.
What
were we discussing before Sept. 11? Gary Condit and
Chandra Levy. Anything J-Lo-related. George Ws
month-long vacation. Harry Potter. Stem cell research.
A rash of shark attacks. Mariah Careys latest
breakdown. The tragic death of rapper Aaliyah. Campaign
finance reform. As insignificant and meaningless as
many of those media obsessions were at the time, now
they seem to be beyond piffle.
One
of the more modern barometers of these daily American
interests is, of course, the Internet. Though its demographics
skew heavily toward the under-25 crowd, it can provide
a good look at this countrys schizophrenic and
extremely limited attention span.
One
such Internet measuring stick is the "Lycos 50,"
a weekly list of the most requested user search subjects
for that particular search engine. As Sept. 11 dawned,
the top 10 search terms in Lycos included: 1) the Dragonball
fantasy game; 2) the CBS "Big Brother" TV
show; 3) the NFL; 4) the Morpheus file-sharing site;
5) the death of Aaliyah; 6) the U.S. Open; 7) Britney
Spears; 8) Tattoos; 9) Fantasy Football; and 10) the
IRS.
While
the Aaliyah plane crash was a legitimate news story,
and "Big Brother" was leading up to its summer
season finale, making it news of the most rudimentary
sort, all of the above were tied to pop-culture entertainment,
sports or money. Most of them were devoid of any hard-hitting
news or analysis, whatsoever.
By
Sept. 12, however, when the Lycos 50 was specially updated
24 hours after the attacks, the list was almost unrecognizable.
Five of the top ten search terms were directly related
to the attacks -- the World Trade Center (#1), New York
(#3), Osama bin Laden (#4), Terrorism (#6) and the Pentagon
(#9). Nostradamus, that perennial favorite of disaster
aficionados everywhere, also shot to the second-highest
spot on the list, as impressionable people sought to
define the tragedy in the most readily available historical
terms. Only Dragonball (#5), the NFL (#7), "Big
Brother" (#8) and Morpheus (#10) managed to survive
in the top 10 echelon, thanks mostly to this countrys
plethora of web-addicted teeangers and die-hard TV addicts.
Unprecedented
scale
In
short, we were simply mesmerized by the whole conflagration,
and rightfully so. A glance at even the preliminary
death toll staggers the imagination. In seconds, 220
stories each one measuring about an acre of office
space were turned into 1.2 million tons of rubble,
less than 80 feet high. Stephen Jay Gould aptly described
the demise of the WTC towers as "the largest human
structure ever destroyed in a catastrophic moment."
Including the deaths in the planes, the Pentagon and
the World Trade
towers, nearly 5,000 people were killed in less than
two hours, using only threats and a few well-placed
knives carnage on that scale would have made
a Nazi SS bureaucrat jealous.
Its
worth noting that any of the deaths from the crashes
in Washington and Pennsylvania would have been equally
devastating to the nations sense of well-being.
Outside the small town of Shanksville, Pa., 45 people
perished as a result of a hijacking that went awry on
United Airlines Flight 93, most likely due to an attempt
by some passengers to overpower the hijackers. The story
of their heroism and the speculation about the hijackers
intentions would have led the news broadcasts for weeks,
if not months. At the smoldering Pentagon, 189 people
died 21 more than were killed in the Alfred P.
Murrah bombing in Oklahoma City, the nations previous
high-water mark for domestic terrorism. Such a calamity
in the heart of the military-industrial complex, on
its own, would surely have driven the U.S. Congress
into a warlike, vengeful mood.
Instead,
the two non-New York crashes are almost considered afterthoughts
to the WTC disaster. In the weeks after the crashes,
footage of the Pentagon scar and the smoking crater
in Pennsylvania seemed to be included in newscasts only
if the networks had extra time. At what other time since
World War II could 234 American people be murdered so
dramatically and be considered below-the-fold news?
Its simply unprecedented.
When
you hear such appalling numbers, you dont immediately
think of the relatively recent terrorist tragedies at
Oklahoma City, Pam Am Flight 103 or the Beirut car bombs
of the 1980s. You start thinking of haunted, terrible
ordeals we havent had to endure in 136 years.
Places like Shiloh. Fredericksburg. Antietam. Gettysburg.
During
those Civil War battles, however, American soldiers
were shooting at fellow American soldiers, thus increasing
the rate of destruction twofold. To compare the WTC
attacks to other single-event deaths caused by non-Americans,
you tread on virgin territory. From the trenches in
France to Pearl Harbor to D-Day to Iwo Jima, no single
day of battle produced a higher American death toll.
The fact that the vast majority of the WTC victims were
utterly unprepared, unaware civilians makes the suffering
infinitely worse.
The
terrorists themselves have been called cowards for their
actions. However, I dont know how you could describe
strapping yourself into a fully fueled plane and willingly
crashing it into a building to support a cause a "cowardly"
act. You can call them evil, you can call them crazy,
but certainly they were no shrinking violets.
For
outsiders looking in, one can only imagine the sense
of loss still being felt by those living in New York
and Washington at the time of the attacks. A few memorials,
mass funerals and moments of silence are obviously inadequate
to absorb the tremendous amount of shock and sorrow
that New Yorkers and Washingtonians must deal with.
The healing process will be long and hard for many until
they can look up at the sky at a descending airliner
without trepidation.
Not
to be forgotten are the cultural impacts of the disaster.
Once the human toll is finally determined, historians
can start determining how much great art was lost in
the disintegration. So far, about $10 million worth
of famous works are reportedly known to be lost, including
sculptures by Alexander Calder and Louise Nevelson;
a tapestry by Joan Miro; and at least one Roy Lichtenstein
painting.
While
the ugly gash in the Pentagon can ultimately be repaired,
the unmistakable skyline of New York may be forever
scarred. Though never fully embraced or loved by New
Yorkers, the boring, stodgy towers were an unavoidable
backdrop and perfect foil for the vast array of prettier
architectural styles surrounding them. Any quick sketch
of Manhattan from the 1970s on would have to include
the Empire States needle-like point, a green Lady
Liberty holding her lamp above the harbor, and those
two solid totems standing defiantly, impossibly close
to the tip of the island, seemingly resting on the Hudson
itself.
While
the WTC may have been topped by a handful of taller
structures in recent years, few others could even come
close to the sheer mass of those twin monoliths. Inside
the rather unimaginative silver-gray ribs of the buildings
skin resided up to 50,000 workers -- an entire ZIP code
full of people in a virtually self-contained city. One
tower of such proportions would be jaw-dropping on its
own; having an identical, immense tower right next door
simply boggles the mind, like only audacious American
overkill can. While other, rival skyscrapers added height
with an ever-thinning spire or atrium as they neared
their apexes, the World Trade towers stayed ramrod straight
and honest from the first inch to the last.
As
a kid, I remember some early visits to the WTC, marveling
at the intense verticality of the towers, rising so
abruptly from an antiseptically clean plaza in the oldest,
densest, most chaotic part of the city. I still treasure
a photograph looking straight up, up, up the corner
of one of the towers, allowing one to see to
experience the full height of the building in
a narrow, foreshortened field of vision. Unlike their
tapered, more elegant cousins in Midtown, the WTC never
tried to hide its frightening height from the viewer.
The towers seemed to taunt the observer in classic New
Yorker swagger: "Yeah, were friggin
tall. You gotta problem with that, pal?"
Today,
the absence of the twin capitalist cathedrals is felt
just as surely as their cool shadows that used to be
cast across the Financial District. The gaping hole
left in the skyline is vacuum that may never be filled,
no matter how much glass and steel we throw up in its
place.
Misguided
reaction
But
lets face some cold, hard reality as
horrible and unforgivable as they were, the attacks
on the two U.S. landmarks should hardly be as shocking
as they seemed. In fact, they should be considered long
overdue, in light of the world events that have been
building, mostly unnoticed, beyond our borders for decades.
We
did not "lose our innocence" on Sept. 11,
as many network anchors have claimed in recent months.
Any innocence we still had left was wrested away from
us sometime during the tumultuous period between the
J.F.K. assassination and the resignation of Richard
Nixon. Since then, our country has been a constant and
explicit manipulator of world politics to our own advantage.
Any protest or challenge to our nearly uncontested dominance
should not only be unsurprising, it should be entirely
expected.
Its
no secret that Americans inspire violent passions
on both ends of the spectrum around the rest
of the world. People either love us or hate us, often
at the same time. Many of the worlds most impoverished
nations have felt bulldozed by our fanatical Communism
containment efforts during the Cold War, and our myopic
pursuit of global hegemony since the fall of the Soviet
empire. Even some of the more moderate political factions
within these nations would like nothing more than to
see the U.S. taken down a notch, if not outright destroyed.
While
some of the attempts at cultural world domination by
our largest corporations, like Coca-Cola, McDonalds,
and Exxon, are obvious reasons to hate us, the real
reasons for anti-U.S. sentiment in the Middle East begin
and end with Israel. Decades of unwavering support for
the Jewish state, even as its government has become
increasingly aggressive in its responses to the Palestinian
uprising, has made many Arab countries in the region
very uneasy with the U.S. Some have even gone so far
as to pledge a holy war on us. It should be no surprise
to see young, uneducated Palestinian youths, whove
only known war and oppression in their lives, jump for
joy over the terrorist attacks against a nation (U.S.)
which they see as the muscle behind their main aggressors
(Israel).
While
I would never advocate cutting off aid to Israel, which
would literally not exist without us, I think it would
behoove the U.S. to begin rethinking its foreign policy
decisions and choose very carefully which regimes it
decides to support. For most of this century, in places
like Haiti, Cuba, Chile, Panama, El Salvador, Nicaragua,
Indonesia and many other countries, we have continually
backed whichever dictator happens to dislike Communism,
regardless of the human atrocities committed by the
governments military or police.
This
global chess game with the old Soviet Union has backfired
in many ways, as the rebels we once backed later get
strong enough to turn our own weapons on us. It happened
with Iraqs Saddam Hussein, who we supported during
their war with Iran, and now its coming home to roost
in Afghanistan. The mujahadeen rebels who dislodged
the Soviets with U.S.-supplied Stinger missiles have
now morphed into the Taliban, one of the most backward
regimes of modern times. Responsibility for the current
mess in Afghanistan lies more with the U.S. and Russian
military that it does with the Afghan people.
Meanwhile,
our response to this rising tide of resentment against
the U.S. up until Sept. 11 has been mostly
indifference. While most of the post-Cold War U.S. was
fixated on the most arcane minutiae imaginable
celebrity murder trials, flag-burning amendments, meaningless
sex scandals, anti-abortion zealotry, political witch
hunts, etc. the world has been quite loudly brimming
over with hatred over our past sins. Only when foreign
anger passes the boiling point and bombs start going
off do we ever try to respond. Essentially, we have
been asleep at the wheel for more than a decade.
This
is precisely why I feel extremely uneasy with this new
surge of patriotism that has taken root since the terrorist
attacks.
Its
one thing to mourn thousands of innocents and to memorialize
the true heroes that gave their lives in the aftermath.
How else could you possibly describe the actions of
the New York police and fire departments but "heroic"?
The efforts of those rescue crews, running back into
those burning towers to save whoever they could while
knowing they could die at any moment, is worthy of every
tribute we can muster. No matter what we do to honor
their names, it will not be enough for their grieving
relatives.
It
is quite another thing, however, to turn this tragedy
into some springboard for mindless
flag-waving and hive-minded saber-rattling. Seeing neighborhoods
awash in red, white and blue, with "God Bless America"
playing on the radio and TV every five minutes, gives
me the same queasy feeling I remember from those awful
days before, during and after the Gulf War more than
10 years ago.
Think
back to 1991: The huge military buildup in Iraq and
the pressure to conform with and even rejoice
over a devastating military victory over a completely
outmatched opponent was not only in bad taste, it was
a complete mirage. After Desert Storm pushed a scared,
surrendering army out of Kuwait in mere days, we pulled
up stakes, went home and paraded around liked wed
beaten Hitler all over again. Meanwhile, Saddam Hussein
stayed in power, sat back and laughed at us, while quietly
exterminating as many Kurds as he could. Today, hes
still a major thorn in our side, his power practically
undiminished, while the rest of the former Arab coalition
from Desert Storm still smolders with resentment that
the U.S. left them in the lurch before completing the
job.
Whos
to say this wont happen again? A full month after
the WTC attacks, it looks like were headed down
that same misguided path. In a bizarre episode of déjà
vu, the Gulf War names of 1991 are back again to haunt
us: Bush, Powell, Cheney, Rumsfeld. The enemy has changed
names from Saddam to another convenient scapegoat, Osama
bin Laden, but the tactics are the same taunt
the West into just enough of a military action to gain
sympathy from other fundamentalist groups and gain in
strength.
Here
at home, the pressure to conform, to "support our
troops" no matter what the mission is, has resurfaced
from 1991 with a new, sinister edge. On Halloween, Bush
signed the "USA Patriot Act" into law, giving
the federal government the authority to suspend basic
civil liberties in the fight against terrorism. Under
the act, the FBI can now conduct searches and detain
or deport suspects indefinitely, without cause; eavesdrop
on Internet communications, regardless of their relevancy
to national security; monitor financial transactions;
and obtain electronic records on individuals without
notice. A few days later, Attorney General John Ashcroft
allowed the Justice Department to begin eavesdropping
on attorney-client communications that had, up to now,
been sacrosanct. The Ashcroft ruling gives the feds
the authority to intercept all mail and monitor conversations
between those suspected of committing a federal crime
and their attorneys, even if the suspects have not been
formerly charged.
These
shocking attacks on citizens rights to privacy,
due process, counsel and protections against illegal
search and seizure are almost as bad as the Sept. 11
attacks themselves. To give up the freedoms that make
this country great in the first place are exactly what
the Taliban and its followers want us to do, so chalk
up the USA Patriot Act and the Ashcroft eavesdropping
ruling as bin Ladens latest victories. These flagrantly
unconstitutional acts are, quite simply, an insult to
everything America stands for.
Im
a staunch proponent of a long-overdue overhaul of the
nations woefully inadequate airport security system.
Better training of airport crews that have been farmed
out to the lowest bidder and greater regulation of security
services can only improve the status quo. The only problem
is, how do we fight todays ragtag army of terrorists
equipped only with knowledge of security systems, a
few box-cutters and the ability to bluff their way through
a metal detector? Do we declare all knives illegal now?
Cant they still use their fingers to strangle
the pilots? Where does it end?
One
thing our anxiety has already led to is the unfair demonization
of an overwhelmingly innocent population of Arabs living
in the U.S. Reports are coming in about reprisals against
anyone looking vaguely Middle Eastern. Some airlines
have asked some innocent passengers of Arab descent
to leave a loaded plane before takeoff because some
of the passengers were "uncomfortable" with
their looks.
Many
American citizens of the Sikh faith, including several
cab drivers in New York City, are facing harassment
and threatening phone calls solely because their brown
skin and turbans make them slightly resemble a cliched
image of an "Islamic militant." The only problem
with that assumption is that Sikhs are not even Muslims!
It would be almost comical if it werent so shamefully
true.
Adding
insult to injury, the public has also had to endure
corporate Americas hypocritical public relations
blitz on TV. For the last two months, every broadcast
has been clogged with sponsors offering solemn corporate
statements about pledging their financial support and
telling the world how much they care about the victims.
"Were all in this together," is the
most common platitude from most of these self-serving
ads.
Really?
Then why do these "caring" billion-dollar
corporations feel the need to run special ads about
their alleged generosity? To boost sales, of course.
To lure people back to the stores, companies are tripping
over themselves to exploit the publics need to
give generously: "Want to donate to the WTC relief
effort? Well, buy this new, unnecessary SUV and well
donate 10 percent to the Red Cross." By equating
conspicuous consumption with patriotism, corporate America
stands to make a pretty penny off the deaths of thousands
of people. You dont get much lower than that.
New
era, new tactics?
To
all of those marching in lock step with the Bush administration
to those who agree with his insulting, supremely
arrogant statement, "Youre either with us,
or with the terrorists" Id like to
remind you that this is still a democracy, meaning there
is plenty of room for debate and dissension.
One
does not have to blindly support the decisions of the
president to be a patriot. The extension of the Vietman
War, in my eyes and in the eyes of many millions of
others who grew up in the 1960s, was terribly flawed
foreign policy, to say the least. The young people of
that time who were told to fight and die for an unjust
cause were right to have protested it with all their
might. Absolutely, goddamn right.
Looking
back on them, I consider them patriots, in their own
way, trying to educate the government on the errors
of its tactics. As it turns out, many of the architects
of that war later agreed that Vietnam could never have
been won the way it was fought and that the continuation
of fighting into the early 1970s was a vast miscalculation
that wasted thousands of human lives.
Now,
we have a shoot-from-the-hip president (and I use the
term "president" very loosely) who is fond
of using such pithy statements as "wanted, dead
or alive." This kind of confident arrogance comes
from a man who was appointed president with no clear
majority, who is embarrassingly underqualified for virtually
all aspects of the office, and who has admitted that
he has very little interest in or knowledge of foreign
affairs. And now, he wants me, the rest of the country
and the world to trust in his judgment and to back his
decision to send more troops in harms way to face
a homeless, faceless opponent in some of the most inhospitable
terrain known to man.
Well,
"Mr. President," let me be one of the first
to break stride with the politically correct ranks and
say "Hell, no!"
In
the aftermath of the disaster, I kept hearing the president
and the defense secretary describe this crisis as a
new type of war for a new type of enemy. But so far,
the response has been alarmingly conventional. As this
is being written, major air strikes are still being
carried out on Taliban-controlled targets in Afghanistan.
Special forces commandos are being readied, and carriers
have been mobilized. On CNN, we once again see the familiar
ballet of antiaircraft fire, through the green desert
haze of night-vision scopes, and the black-and-white,
slow-motion explosions of nondescript buildings in the
cross-hairs. (Are they from yesterday, or are they Desert
Storm re-runs? How can we tell?)
These
air-strike reprisals are an entirely understandable
emotional response to such a terrible act of violence.
But are they the most rational first responses we can
make?
Think
of the terrorists tactics in terms of bin Ladens
fevered mind: He had to have known that we would respond
first with air strikes or ground troops. He might also
assume, correctly, than any kind of military action
on this scale would cause enough "collateral damage"
to outrage other predominantly Muslim countries and
draw them into the conflict. With this snowball effect,
he, or his surviving fanatics, would be able to orchestrate
a full-scale holy war between the secular West and the
Islamic world a conflagration he has encouraged
for years in his terrorist camp recruiting speeches.
If
this were all part of bin Ladens master plan,
he could not have orchestrated it any better than this.
Perhaps he has only been lucky and is now taking advantage
of Islamic passions and long-held suspicions about the
West. Either way, we are playing directly into his hands
by firing missiles at a hopelessly impoverished country
that has already been mostly reduced to rubble.
So
far, the U.S. government has made some attempts to shut
down the Talibans precious bank accounts and has
managed to keep some Arab states on its side in the
war against terrorism all commendable actions.
But when will the military follow through on their promises
and do something truly unique?
First
of all, rather than acting like were the only
victims, this nation should emphasisze the fact that
Sept. 11 was an attack on the whole civilized world.
By choosing the WTC as a target, the terrorists ensured
that not only Americans would die. In fact, the list
of the dead in the WTC includes citizens from 60 different
countries, some of which suffered losses in the hundreds.
Gaining support from Great Britain, Russia and other
European allies, along with permission to use bases
in crucial places like Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, are
good first steps. But we need to make sure that this
will be a fight about civilization versus backwards
zealots, not Bush versus bin Laden.
But
then again, look at Bushs appalling foreign affairs
track record less than a year into his term. In just
a few months, he established a reputation for thumbing
his nose at the rest of the world. Bush refused to sign
the Kyoto Protocol on global climate change and defied
a long-established arms control treaty to pursue an
unworkable missile defense system for an enemy that
no longer exists. Dont forget that he is also
the first president to upset China and Russia to such
an extent that the two eternal antagonists actually
formed their first-ever solidarity pact earlier this
year. And lets face it to Bush II, the
Middle East means only one thing: cheap oil.
And
now Bush, the Lone Cowboy, wants the rest of the world
to rally around him because his country has finally
been touched by an evil that his government helped create.
All I can say, Mr. President, is that you may find more
than a few cold shoulders at your next U.N. meeting.
Take a look at the anti-U.S. demonstrations in Pakistan
and Indonesia. Angry young Muslims everywhere
the leaders of tomorrow are running out of patience
with us as bombs continue to fall on members of their
faith.
More
importantly, how about trying some non-military means
for once? Why go directly to military force against
an enemy we cant even firmly identify? One tactic
that would completely throw the simple, uneducated clerics
in the Taliban off guard would be compassion. Never
in a million years would they expect it.
Sure,
weve already dropped some badly needed food and
medicine into some areas, but they also came with nightly
bombing raids in other areas. In the struggle for the
hearts and minds of the Afghans, what images do you
think they will most remember in the end a few
token care packages or the sight of their neighbors
being torn to "collateral" shreds by a wayward
U.S. missile?
According
to a report from BBC broadcasts, the food packages being
dropped are packaged in yellow bags that can easily
be seen when strewn over the ground. The only problem
is that many of the bomblets from American cluster bombs
are also painted yellow, the BBC reports. Can you imagine
the social repercussions in an impoverished community
if a kid gets blown to bits by a stray unexploded piece
of ordnance, thinking it was really food?
Instead
of this confusion, why not shower the impoverished people
of Afghanistan with food, water, building materials
and medicines before we try to stir up their rubble
with more artillery? Even, if the materials wind up
in the Talibans hands, the airlifts can only help
our image among the desperate populace. Then, with enough
people on our side to help overthrow the Taliban, we
can think about sending in troops to bring those responsible
to justice.
Lets
not forget who we can be: The strongest, richest, most
powerful democracy in the world, with a government based
on one the best-written public documents of all time:
the U.S. Constitution. We have the capacity to do incredible
things, like wipe out the scourge of fascism in the
1940s, eradicate terrible diseases, raise the worlds
standard of living and keep a hungry world from starving.
Our potential for helping the world to become a better
place is as unlimited as our cherished freedoms.
But
lets also not forget who we have become: A nation
contaminated by enormous supplies of money earned off
the backs of underpaid laborers, and controlled by an
ever-shrinking fraction of the population. To take care
of the bottom line, the multinational corporations that
essentially dictate public policy will stop at nothing
to make sure their own agendas are met, including paying
off members of Congress to ensure their re-election.
Just
look at the facts: Despite comprising just 5 percent
of the worlds population, we use most of the worlds
power, contribute the highest amounts of pollution,
produce the most industrial greenhouse gases, and manufacture
the most deadly weapons currently circulating on the
black market. Its no wonder we are considered
the scourge of the Earth in many corners of the world
that have not benefited from our obscene bounty.
For
many years, a booming high-tech economy lifting
all boats, as it were has made these inequalities
easier to ignore. Since the bursting of the "dot-com"
bubble in April 2000, however, the economy has been
on a long, steady decline towards a recession. While
the Dow has recovered somewhat since its historic plunge
after Sept. 11, Big Business is still hurting, and more
massive layoffs are planned into next year. In the coming
months of economic uncertainty, it will be harder and
harder to hide the fact that our system of democracy
has been thoroughly corrupted by corporate greed.
The
time is now for America to shake off the shock from
this heinous attack, stop its endless habit of navel-gazing
and start waking up to compromises it must make to take
part in the new global economy things like enforcing
fair labor practices, environmental responsibility and
limiting corporate influences on government. The changes
needed to move from a unilateral superpower to part
of the worlds community of nations will take much
patience and intestinal fortitude, but this is a golden
opportunity to make the first baby steps.
Lets
hope the countrys capacity for serious, critical
thought can last longer than it takes to bury its dead
from the WTC.
Epilogue
But
really who are we kidding? Can we really
expect people in this country to stay focused for more
than a month on a story that doesnt involve sex,
sports or money? Even a threat as awful as a protracted
ground war can be compartmentalized and rendered abstract
by a desensitized populace attuned to five-second sound
bites and pre-digested, manipulated news.
Predictably,
the focus of the media these days has turned from the
plight of the less fortunate in the Middle East to our
precious, spoiled American way of life. In a nutshell,
its all about the anthrax. Though only 16 confirmed
people have been infected by anthrax spores as of Nov.
1, and just four have died as a result, the obsessive
nightly coverage of the few isolated cases have turned
a couple of fluke letters into the latest "disease
of the week." While BBC news broadcasts
reaching only a small fraction of U.S. homes through
PBS show how the Sept. 11 attacks and the U.S.
bombing campaigns are affecting the other 95 percent
of the worlds population, U.S. news programs focus
instead on panicked 911 anthrax calls, phony bomb threats
and political posturing. By constantly asking the unanswerable
question, "Can you and your family ever be safe?"
the mainstream media are, in essence, doing the job
of spreading terror better than the terrorists themselves.
Besides
the hyperbolic anthrax scare, however, we Americans
already seem to be settling into our old isolationist,
hyper-consumerist ways. For a full month, the Lycos
50 has shown signs of a "return to normalcy,"
as President Harding so memorably coined such a phenomenon
in the 1920s. By the week ending on Oct. 6, just 25
days after the hijacked planes hit their marks, at least
10 search subjects related to the terrorist attacks
have fallen off the Lycos list. Several other non-terrorist
subjects that were pushed off the list on Sept. 11 have
also returned. By Nov. 3, Osama bin Landen and anthrax
still held the #1 and #5 spots, with the American flag
holding a respectable #13. But more noticeably, the
frivolous topical subjects, like Halloween (#2), pumpkins
(#4) and costumes (#7), had also crept into the top
10.
While the hormone-driven topics, like Dragonball (#3)
and Britney Spears (#6) continued to make their Lycos
comebacks two months after the attacks, it is worth
noting that other Sept.11-related subjects the
World Trade Center (#18), Afghanistan (#29), the Taliban
(#34), terrorism (#47), and Islam (#49) have
all dropped precipitously in popularity. To the Internet
users credit, the term "gas masks,"
a sign of the publics misguided anthrax hysteria
that reached a #7 high-water mark in mid-October, has
now fallen completely off the top 50 list.
Some
of these frivolous signs of life returning to normal
are an inevitable and, in many ways, positive
development. We cant just wring our hands
and wallow in fear. But the horrors of the terrorist
wake-up calls are already in danger of sliding into
the gaping maw of U.S. pop culture exploitation.
On
a recent episode of NBCs ubiquitous "Dateline"
program, a full hour was dedicated to the heroes of
Flight 93. The segment, called "No Greater Love:
The Story of Flight 93," complete with a tear-jerking
theme song, was mostly schmaltz and rather low on hard
facts, but it still can be considered a form of news.
On
the same network, the attacks inspired a one-episode
plot line on "The West Wing," in which the
president and his staff are barricaded in the White
House during a terrorist attack on the U.S. Though the
debates brought up during that show were relatively
thought-provoking if not overtly didactic
they were certainly exploitative in the same way that
other shows callously boast that they are "ripped
from todays headlines." A few weeks after
panicky network executives attempted to excise all images
of the WTC and even the most oblique references to terrorism
from their programming, nearly every TV drama with a
New York theme ("NYPD Blue," "Third Watch,"
"Law & Order," etc.) is now airing its
own special tribute episode based on the WTC disaster.
My
favorite humor publication, "The Onion," which
almost always skewers mass American culture in the most
succinct fashion, recently summed up these terror-related
shows with this typically brilliant phony headline:
"Terrorism Storylines Being Added to TV Shows As
Quickly As They Were Dropped."
For
all their noble aims of elevating the level of political
and social discourse in this country, these terrorism-related
TV episodes are still little more than your typical
market-driven "infotainment" an attempt
to deal with real issues by diluting and simplifying
them through fictional characters, famous faces and
canned speeches.
One
can imagine a day in the not-so-distant future when
the agony of the real passengers on the three planes
that actually hit their intended targets will become
just another movie of the week, complete with earnest
last words and noble deeds.
Can
the return of lead stories about stolen wedding photos
be far behind?
Please,
America. Wake up.
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