Itâs 21 years since the attack on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. As Michael de Adder says:
Twenty one years on, America is more at war with itself than with any foreign terrorists, despite having troops deployed in 80 countries. Our society and our democracy are threatened from within in a way that Osama bin Laden could never have managed. And where are we today? Cartoonist Mike Luckovich has a thought:
If ever so briefly after that fateful day. Today we face threats that might end our democracy:
- Weâve nearly lost our social cohesion
- We arenât dealing with income inequality
- Weâre seeing racism grow
- We see clear threats to the right to vote, or whether our votes will even count if we cast them
In these 21 years, Republicans have moved from being the Party of national security to the Party of grievance and anger. As Elliot Ackerman wrote last year in Foreign Affairs:
âFrom Caesarâs Rome to Napoleonâs France, history shows that when a republic couples a large standing military with dysfunctional domestic politics, democracy doesnât last long. The US today meets both conditions.â
MAGA asks the wrong question:
When you have no policies, this is what you get:
Letâs close today with a song by Mary Chapin Carpenter that she wrote back on the first anniversary of 9/11. Carpenter was inspired by an interview with Jim Horch, an ironworker who was among the early responders at the WTC site. Hereâs part of what Horch said:
âMy responsibility at the site was to try to remove big pieces of steel. The building fell so hard there wasnât even concrete. It was dustâŚ.I started to feel the presence of spiritsâŚnot very long after I was there. The energy that was there was absolutely incredible andâŚit was more than just the people that I was working withâŚit was energy left behindâŚ.One day when I was working, I felt this energy and it felt lost and it wanted to go home but it didnât know how to go home and it came to me to go to Grand Central Station. When I got off the subway, I walked into the Great Room. Into where the constellation is in the ceiling. And I walked around the perimeter andâŚout of the building. I didnât feel the energy anymore. I could feel it leave.â
And hereâs Carpenterâs âGrand Central Stationâ:
My 9/11 memory is in the website link (i do content for the Paterson Great Falls FB page)