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September 11, 2002 ...

September 11, 2002 ~ 11:38 a.m.

�This [question] should be whether or not the world is safer now than it was on September 11, 2001 and, if so, whether the strategy adopted by George W. Bush and his Administration contributed to that outcome. The answer, with little ambiguity on careful reflection, is affirmative on both counts �

�If the War on Terror since September 11 is to be considered a �failure,� that is the consequence of an excessively stringent concept of success �

�The United States became painfully aware that it was not only an advertisement for human progress, but, for its opponents, the citadel that had to be destroyed for others. Nor was there any course that Americans could take to isolate themselves from that hatred �

�We are only at the beginning of the attempt to understand what this will demand of capitalist democracies such as the United States and the United Kingdom. In that sense, while it is September 11, 2002 today, the hands on the clock have barely moved since September 11, 2001.�

� Excerpts from The Times, September 11, 2002

This, no matter how it was presented on the surface � and for me it was a business-as-usual work day, complete with deadlines and a board meeting � was not, and could never hope to be, a normal day. At 1:46 p.m. our time (British time), I was showering in the stalls after my swim. I observed the moment of silence that was the law of the land on this sunny, pleasantly mild day. The warm water ran down my back while I just lost myself in remembrance of the terrible thing that happened on this day, at that time, last year. Concentration all day was an effort, office jokes and good humor lost on me. I saw the date �11 Sep� on the digital display on my phone and thought I would fill the trash basket with pure bile.

Lately, I have endured criticism in the papers and in the media about what a failure the American-led War on Terror has been and how pernicious the Americans are to even think about causing further mayhem and destruction by attacking Iraq. So inured was I to this � for it seemed the whole damn country had turned into a seething mass of hippy pacifists from hell � that I forgot that there were memorials and dedications and services that took place here, in this country, in this city. At the American Embassy, Home Secretary David Blunkett declared, after receiving a tattered Union Jack that had been found among the rubble of the World Trade Center, �God bless America.� Later, at St. Paul�s Cathedral, where the very same British flag draped across the altar, the American national anthem was played, 3,000 flower petals representing the dead were dropped from a balcony, and many families of the victims � American and British alike � in addition to Princes Charles and Harry and Prime Minister Tony Blair were present to pay their respects. I was heartened while watching news coverage of these events.

It�s as if, for one day, we were all Americans again. It�s as if we all grieved once more, felt the shattered nerves and dug down deep inside our souls. This time, there was no need to think about war, revenge or even justice. Over the past year, we have seen to that and still are in the process of administering justice. Today, on this one-year anniversary of hell on earth, we were liberated from the anger and could truly and refreshingly come to terms with the attack and what it has meant to every one of us. September 11 violated all of us, personally and spiritually, in some way. The fear and the sorrow were real and they served as a reminder that, yes, there really is such a thing as evil. Evil perpetrated by men turned chillingly robotic by fanaticism.

But there is also good. Warm, bright, encouraging goodness. We cannot lose sight of that. Even in the face of detractors whose muddled thinking regarding their opposition to ousting Saddam Hussein is downright scary � one can only wonder what their approach to Hitler would have been � there is good. Even in the face of the self-righteous who declare, as one did in a letter to The Metro, that they plan to spend the moment of silence thinking about the innocent victims of �America�s lust for revenge,� there is good. Even in the face of crazy, ruthless, tyrannical men such as bin Laden and Hussein, there is good. The outpouring of sympathy and affection that took place one year ago and which took place again today, all across the world, restores one�s sense of faith that maybe, just maybe, we�ll get through this harrowing era of history alive and well and happy.

Dove or hawk, Left or Right, American or otherwise, this was a tough day to get through � tough for anyone with any sense of compassion or goodwill. Like or loathe the ongoing War on Terror, on this day you needed to contemplate the future and promise to learn from the past and vow to live in the present. It�s all you can do. And it�s certainly enough.

Tomorrow is another day. And, for a whole lot of us, it cannot come soon enough.

� M.E.M.

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Copyright � 2001-2007 by M.E. Manning. All material is written by me, unless explicitly stated otherwise by use of footnotes or bylines. Do not copy or redistribute without my permission.

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