Ho Hum...Four Years After
9/11
Have we forgotten?
While the flood waters are pumped out of the condemned
city of New Orleans, lost to the disaster caused by Hurricane
Katrina is the upcoming anniversary of an event which was wholly
man-made, and of singular importance: September 11, 2001. As the
fourth anniversary of that brutal and horrific day approaches,
the politicians--mostly Democrats--and the old media, are preoccupied
once again with the hunting of George W. Bush.
Not that I didn’t expect it, mind you, for let’s
face it: “If a tree were to fall in the forest, with no
one around to hear, does it make a sound?” We can leave
that for academia and the philosophers to debate, but what would
assuredly follow, and be dutifully reported, is that Bush himself
cut it down. But for all intent purposes, that’s where we
stand in these “Divided States” today. After September
11, 2001, we had the members of Congress signing “God Bless
America” on the steps of the Capitol.
Today, a few days after the largest and possibly deadliest catastrophe
to take place since 9/11, we have:
* Political officeholders like Louisiana Senator Mary Landrieu
(D), saying: “If one person criticizes our sheriffs, or
says one more thing, including the president of the United States,
he will hear from me…I might likely have to punch him.”
(www.newsmax.com/archives/ic/2005/9/4/101101.shtml)
* Howard Dean, DNC Chairman and the face of the Democratic Party,
speaking to the members of the National Baptist Convention, said:
“We must ... come to terms with the ugly truth that skin
color, age and economics played a deadly role in who survived
and who did not.” (www.breitbart.com/news/2005/09/07/D8CFNMPG0.html)
* Hollywood’s finest, like Sean Penn, trying to stage a
publicity stunt by going to New Orleans to “rescue children,”
but “sadly,” came up short, as his boat sprang a leak.
Rumors “abound” that Penn’s personal photographer’s
tripod may have been the culprit.
Either that, or his pointed, yet empty head. (www.heraldsun.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5478,16494464%5E1702,00.html)
* Prominent black personalities, like Oprah Winfrey stating:
“This makes me so mad. This should not have happened. I
think we all - this country owes these people an apology.”
(www.nytimes.com/2005/09/07/arts/television/07opra.html)
* Black rapper Kayne West, saying of America and its president:
“They've given them permission to go down and shoot us.
George Bush doesn't care about black people.”
* Black activist Randall Robinson, incredibly, stating that “black
hurricane victims in New Orleans have begun eating corpses to
survive.” Robinson also claims to “have finally come
to see my country for what it really is, a monstrous fraud.”
(Robinson has since retracted the claims of black cannibalism.)
(www.huffingtonpost.com/randall-robinson/new-orleans_b_6643.html)
* Black leaders like Jesse Jackson, speaking about Hurricane
Katrina, and calling Bush “incompetent,” saying that
racism is partly to blame. Jackson criticized “the historic
indifference to the pain of poor people and black people”
in this country. (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050902/ap_on_re_us/katrina_jackson_hk4)
* Al Sharpton, another black leader, was reported saying: “I
feel that, if it was in another area, with another economic strata
and racial makeup, that President Bush would have run out of Crawford
a lot quicker and FEMA would have found its way in a lot sooner.”
(www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9173374/)
Am I picking on our black brothers and sisters here? You bet
your sensitivity training manuals I am. Frankly, as an American
first, and a “white” American second, I would ask
all of you “black Americans” if that is how you wish
to be viewed--as a separate entity for the media and the rest
of America--to look at as a continually put-upon people, subject
to the whims of “the white man.” Please, get a grip
on yourself, and think about what you say.
The Caucasian equivalent of such racial and muddle-headed thinking
would go something like: “I have seen nothing but white
people doing the rescuing and donating on your behalf” or
“Governor Blanco is white, so you are right, and she must
be to blame.” Whoops. She’s a Democrat, so that’s
just not possible.
Are the above statements as absurd when you actually say them,
much less read them? Of course, they are. But what the heck, race
hustlers do it all the time, and the mainstream media just print
it anyway as if it’s monolithic, unimpeachable fact.
And speaking of the facts, many have been learned in recent days,
and will be learned in the weeks to come. It is becoming increasingly
clear that the biggest disaster besides Hurricane Katrina is the
state and local government branches of Louisiana, which, among
other things:
* Did not follow their own evacuation plan. (http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/HurricaneKatrina/story?id=1102467&page=1)
* Did not inform FEMA officials as to the severity of the situation
until 9/1, nearly three days after the Hurricane. (www.washingtontimes.com/national/20050905-120743-9482r.htm)
* Warned the City of New Orleans residents that “In the
event of a major hurricane, you're on your own.” (http://drudgereport.com/flash3kt.htm)
* Resisted the personal efforts of President Bush to nationalize
relief efforts. (http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0509/05/ltm.01.html)
* Blocked the Red Cross from delivering lifesaving food and water
to the New Orleans Superdome. (http://www.newsmax.com/archives/ic/2005/9/7/235423.shtml)
The human and economic loss that has transfixed the nation’s
attention since Hurricane Katrina laid waste to the Gulf Coast,
has been hijacked in other troubling directions.
To think that an actual dialogue is being established among the
old media, unthinking black leaders, and partisan-poisoned Democrats
that a white Republican President would calculatedly turn his
back upon black Americans after such a cataclysmic event….
Well, that is more than any person of sanity could hold to.
I condemn all who would think such thoughts, and I call on those
who are unbalanced by those thoughts to dismiss them. Those who
would engage in such political harlotry and undisguised power-seeking
do it on the backs of the right and good in this country.
A close friend who was filled with concern over the recent hurricane
destruction and the coming anniversary of 9/11, asked me: “How
can we defeat terrorism, and stop another 9/11 from occurring
again, when we cannot even come together in our own country without
politicizing any and all events, so much so that we accuse each
other of murder by neglect?” I could not answer in any way
that wholly satisfied her, and could not help but think of a saying
voiced by the late British playwright, George Bernard Shaw: “We
learn from history that we learn nothing from history.”
Sunday was the fourth anniversary of 9/11, and to some, it is
merely an afterthought. Can the nation afford to engage in such
profligate hate every time God, nature, or terrorism asserts itself
into our lives?
So far, the playwright seems prophetic as we forget our recent
history involving the solidarity of 9/11, thereby dooming America
to repeat it.
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