Bob Belvedere at Camp of the Saints remembers the piece written by Mark Steyn last year on this date:
Let’s Roll Over
We retreat to equivocation, cultural self-loathing, and utterly fraudulent misrepresentation of 9/11.
Waiting to be interviewed on the radio the other day, I found myself
on hold listening to a public-service message exhorting listeners to go
to 911day.org and tell their fellow citizens how they would be observing
the tenth anniversary of the, ah, “tragic events.” There followed a
sound bite of a lady explaining that she would be paying tribute by
going and cleaning up an area of the beach.
Great! Who could object to that? Anything else? Well, another lady
pledged that she “will continue to discuss anti-bullying tactics with my
grandson.”
Marvelous. Because studies show that many middle-school bullies
graduate to hijacking passenger jets and flying them into tall
buildings?
Whoa, ease up on the old judgmentalism there, pal. In New Jersey,
many of whose residents were among the dead, middle-schoolers will mark
the anniversary with a special 9/11 curriculum that will “analyze
diversity and prejudice in U.S. history.” And, if the “9/11 Peace Story
Quilt” at the Metropolitan Museum of Art teaches us anything, it’s that
the “tragic events” only underline the “importance of respect.” And
“understanding.” As one of the quilt panels puts it:
You should never feel left out
You are a piece of a puzzle
And without you
The whole picture can’t be seen.
And if that message of “healing and unity” doesn’t sum up what
happened on Sept. 11, 2001, what does? A painting of a plane flying into
a building? A sculpture of bodies falling from a skyscraper? Oh, don’t
be so drearily literal. “It is still too soon,” says Midori Yashimoto,
director of the New Jersey City University Visual Arts Gallery, whose
exhibition “Afterwards & Forward” is intended to “promote dialogue,
deeper reflection, meditation, and contextualization.” So, instead of
planes and skyscrapers, it has Yoko Ono’s “Wish Tree,” on which you can
hang little tags with your ideas for world peace.
What’s missing from these commemorations?
Firemen?
Oh, please. There are some pieces of the puzzle we have to leave out.
As Mayor Bloomberg’s office has patiently explained, there’s “not
enough room” at the official Ground Zero commemoration to accommodate
any firemen. “Which is kind of weird,” wrote the Canadian blogger Kathy
Shaidle, “since 343 of them managed to fit into the exact same space ten
years ago.” On a day when all the fancypants money-no-object federal
acronyms comprehensively failed — CIA, FBI, FAA, INS — the only bit of
government that worked was the low-level unglamorous municipal
government represented by the Fire Department of New York. When they
arrived at the World Trade Center the air was thick with falling bodies —
ordinary men and women trapped on high floors above where the planes
had hit, who chose to spend their last seconds in one last gulp of open
air rather than die in an inferno of jet fuel. Far “too soon” for any of
that at New Jersey City University, but perhaps you could reenact the
moment by filling out a peace tag for Yoko Ono’s “Wish Tree” and then
letting it flutter to the ground.
Upon arrival at the foot of the towers, two firemen were hit by
falling bodies. “There is no other way to put it,” one of their
colleagues explained. “They exploded.”
Any room for that on the Metropolitan Museum’s “Peace Quilt”? Sadly not. We’re all out of squares.
What else is missing from these commemorations?
“Let’s Roll”?
What’s that — a quilting technique?
No, what’s missing from these commemorations is more Muslims. The
other day I bumped into an old BBC pal who’s flying in for the
anniversary to file a dispatch on why you see fewer women on the streets
of New York wearing niqabs and burqas than you do on the streets of
London. She thought this was a telling indictment of the post-9/11
climate of “Islamophobia.” I pointed out that, due to basic differences
in immigration sources, there are far fewer Muslims in New York than in
London. It would be like me flying into Stratford-on-Avon and reporting
on the lack of Hispanics. But the suits had already approved the trip,
so she was in no mood to call it off.
How are America’s allies remembering the real victims of 9/11?
“Muslim Canucks Deal with Stereotypes Ten Years After 9/11,” reports CTV
in Canada. And it’s a short step from stereotyping to criminalizing.
“How the Fear of Being Criminalized Has Forced Muslims into Silence,”
reports the Guardian in Britain. In Australia, a Muslim
terrorism suspect was so fearful of being criminalized and stereotyped
in the post-9/11 epidemic of paranoia that he pulled a Browning pistol
out of his pants and hit Sgt. Adam Wolsey of the Sydney constabulary.
Fortunately, Judge Leonie Flannery acquitted him of shooting with intent
to harm on the grounds that “‘anti-Muslim sentiment’ made him fear for
his safety,” as Sydney’s Daily Telegraph reported on
Friday. That’s such a heartwarming story for this 9/11 anniversary they
should add an extra panel to the peace quilt, perhaps showing a terror
suspect opening fire on a judge as she’s pronouncing him not guilty and
then shrugging off the light shoulder wound as a useful exercise in
healing and unity.
What of the 23rd Psalm? It was recited by Flight 93 passenger Todd
Beamer and the telephone operator Lisa Jefferson in the final moments of
his life before he cried, “Let’s roll!” and rushed the hijackers.
No, sorry. Aside from firemen, Mayor Bloomberg’s official
commemoration hasn’t got any room for clergy, either, what with all the
Executive Deputy Assistant Directors of Healing and Outreach who’ll be
there. One reason why there’s so little room at Ground Zero is because
it’s still a building site. As I write in my new book, 9/11 was
something America’s enemies did to us; the ten-year hole is something we
did to ourselves — and in its way, the interminable bureaucratic sloth
is surely as eloquent as anything Nanny Bloomberg will say in his
remarks.
In Shanksville, Pa., the zoning and permitting processes are
presumably less arthritic than in Lower Manhattan, but the Flight 93
memorial has still not been completed. There were objections to the
proposed “Crescent of Embrace” on the grounds that it looked like an
Islamic crescent pointing towards Mecca. The defense of its designers
was that, au contraire, it’s just the usual
touchy-feely huggy-weepy pansy-wimpy multiculti effete healing diversity
mush. It doesn’t really matter which of these interpretations is
correct, since neither of them has anything to do with what the
passengers of Flight 93 actually did a decade ago. 9/11 was both Pearl
Harbor and the Doolittle Raid rolled into one, and the fourth flight was
the only good news of the day, when citizen volunteers formed
themselves into an ad hoc militia and denied Osama bin Laden what might
have been his most spectacular victory. A few brave individuals figured
out what was going on and pushed back within half an hour. But we can’t
memorialize their sacrifice within a decade. And when the architect gets
the memorial brief, he naturally assumes that there’s been a typing
error and that “Let’s roll!” should really be “Let’s roll over!”
And so we commemorate an act of war as a “tragic event,” and we
retreat to equivocation, cultural self-loathing, and utterly fraudulent
misrepresentation about the events of the day. In the weeks after 9/11,
Americans were enjoined to ask, “Why do they hate us?” A better question
is: “Why do they despise us?” And the quickest way to figure out the
answer is to visit the Peace Quilt and the Wish Tree, the Crescent of
Embrace and the Hole of Bureaucratic Inertia.
— Mark Steyn, a National Review columnist, is the author of After America: Get Ready for Armageddon. © 2011 Mark Steyn.
http://thecampofthesaints.org/2011/09/11/september-11th-look-back-in-anger/
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