More than ever before the U.S. looks at those outside its borders with an uneasy paternalism and a deep distrust. Our new common sense encourages a triumphal yet acidic nationalism. All of this thanks to a cultivated public
semi-religious worship we nurtured surrounding the remembrance of 911.
Right after the terror attack against the towers, Ground Zero became a hallowed ground that rivaled for devotion against Civil War and American Revolution's sites. Nationalism fomented super-patriotism at the expense of fairness, diversity, and rationality.
The popular discourse became congested with rhetoric about freedom at a time when we practiced it the least. This language of national self-love belied an impulse for vengeance to placate our thirst for fleeting justice.
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Old Glory became the visual representation of this discourse. In some areas, it was virtually mandatory to wear some kind of flag likeness or display its colors.
Flag-wearing creativity reached its climax then.
Those pursuing the proliferation of such a violent discourse right after 911 outshine by far Pericles success on the funeral speech. Thucydides informed us that Pericles used the memory of dead soldiers to recruit new ones destined to die in a senseless and doomed war against Sparta. Likewise, we were mostly united, as no other country in the world, to support our state in its favorite sport: war.
In declaring war against Iraq in the name of retaliation, we outdid the disaster of 911 in deaths, terror, and trail of bitterness. By sending our troops, our leaders aimed to squash the enemy, seed global democracy, and foment good will toward us. But it had the opposite effect.
The memory of 911 was used to impose a world order of disgust. Weighing our pains, we thought right to display our godly wrath. It was just convenient that where we deposited our wrath coincided with oil deposits.
Our state spoke of reviving the spirit of conventional colonization by lobbying the aggressive exportation of its culture through war. Unhappily, this war has been disproportionably costly to female and Latino soldiers--groups with diminished power to shape the exported culture.
Some, who are happy to display a hyper-masculinity and a self-righteous political religiosity, would like us to persist remembering 911 as an excuse to continue this nation's recent path. Some sort of religious jealousy exists at their rhetoric root. They appeal to our compassions and attempt to convince us that dashing the 911 rites would be a sacrilege against the lives lost, and the "sacred" idea of a united nation.
These rites have a special attraction to some. They are also more dramatic. Remembering the towers falling can intensify revulsions and bring chilling thrills down the spine. That kind of excitement beats most religious services.
It should be obvious by now that the way we have been remembering 911 have led this nation into a path of isolation, anger, and disrespect. I would argue that some of those who quietly forgot 911 are simply avoiding participating in the repercussions of this ritual. They have realized, probably viscerally, that this is not the correct way of remembering our painful past. It has fueled one of our worse international tragedies ever.
I am all for remembering the past, but the fewer rituals we use, the better we would understand it. And if there most be formal memorial services, then the procedures should be intended to seek harmony and peace with the world, and not only with ourselves. After all, many lives have been and continue being lost to terrorism and unnecessary wars, and we can join others in grieving and working for reconciliation.
Opinions?