An unapologetic collection of observations from the field as the world comes to what promises to be a glorious and, at the same time, a very nasty end.
Showing posts with label 9/11. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 9/11. Show all posts
Monday, December 5, 2011
Friday, September 17, 2010
The Promises We Made - Remembering 9/11
There were two reactions that day in September - fear and anger. The fearful curled up and hid somewhere, hoping they would not be next. The angry stood up and did something, even if it was only to go outside and hang a flag out front of the house in defiance. I remember hanging my second flag (I already had one up), looking around the neighborhood in defiance and thinking, "Bring it on, wherever you are hiding. Here I stand!"
Maybe John Edwards was right. Maybe there are two Americas, but I doubt it was the two Americas he envisioned. I think the two Americas are inhabited by the fearful and the brave. Like children on a playground, the fearful surrender and submit in hopes that the local bully won't hurt them much. The brave stand up to the bully and take a pounding if they have to, but they refuse to submit or surrender. The cost of cowardice is far too high to pay and you will never cease to pay that price. Its not just we who pay the cost either. It will be our children and our children's children who will pay the price if we are too fearful to stand up to the bullies of this world.
God placed us in this land to create a refuge for the bullied peoples of the world. He blessed it so that those refugees now live in the most prosperous, peaceful land in the world. We didn't steal it our prosperity from others. We dug deep, worked hard and held on against those same bullies and thugs who would follow us here to prey on us in this new land. Our forefathers taught us to fight tyranny, to fight the bully boys of the world that our children might enjoy the blessings of liberty. We fought tyranny during the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812. We fought it again during the Civil War, and World War II. We owe our fathers and our children a toe to toe, knock down drag out fight like this world has never seen to preserve our sacred liberty in this generation. There are those among us who would surrender our liberties to the very same thugs and bullies that generations of Americans fought so hard to free themselves from, mainly because they are too afraid to fight. Dylan Thomas' famous poem says, "Do not go gentle into that good night. Rage against the dying of the light." Good advice for this generation of Americans for we are in danger of slipping quietly into the long night of tyranny in exchange for bread and circuses and the illusion of peace and safety.
It is well on this anniversary to remember 9/11 and what can happen to us if we cease to be vigilant. It is better that we remember the promises we made to ourselves and our posterity in the days after 9/11 when the horror of what was done to us was still fresh in our minds.
Tom King, Tyler, TX
* Image available at: http://concordville.org
Maybe John Edwards was right. Maybe there are two Americas, but I doubt it was the two Americas he envisioned. I think the two Americas are inhabited by the fearful and the brave. Like children on a playground, the fearful surrender and submit in hopes that the local bully won't hurt them much. The brave stand up to the bully and take a pounding if they have to, but they refuse to submit or surrender. The cost of cowardice is far too high to pay and you will never cease to pay that price. Its not just we who pay the cost either. It will be our children and our children's children who will pay the price if we are too fearful to stand up to the bullies of this world.
God placed us in this land to create a refuge for the bullied peoples of the world. He blessed it so that those refugees now live in the most prosperous, peaceful land in the world. We didn't steal it our prosperity from others. We dug deep, worked hard and held on against those same bullies and thugs who would follow us here to prey on us in this new land. Our forefathers taught us to fight tyranny, to fight the bully boys of the world that our children might enjoy the blessings of liberty. We fought tyranny during the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812. We fought it again during the Civil War, and World War II. We owe our fathers and our children a toe to toe, knock down drag out fight like this world has never seen to preserve our sacred liberty in this generation. There are those among us who would surrender our liberties to the very same thugs and bullies that generations of Americans fought so hard to free themselves from, mainly because they are too afraid to fight. Dylan Thomas' famous poem says, "Do not go gentle into that good night. Rage against the dying of the light." Good advice for this generation of Americans for we are in danger of slipping quietly into the long night of tyranny in exchange for bread and circuses and the illusion of peace and safety.
It is well on this anniversary to remember 9/11 and what can happen to us if we cease to be vigilant. It is better that we remember the promises we made to ourselves and our posterity in the days after 9/11 when the horror of what was done to us was still fresh in our minds.
Tom King, Tyler, TX
* Image available at: http://concordville.org
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
9/11 - Media Reluctance to Use the "T" Word is Nothing New
I stumbled on an archive file of video clips of the news coverage on the morning of 9/11. It was stunning how long some of the mainstream news media avoided using the "T" word. CNN and NBC kept trying to suggest that the FAA had some sort of malfunction or something. You have to hand it to Fox News in Washington and Charlie Gibson on ABC. Fox mentioned the potential that it was a terrorist attack and confirmed it when the second plane hit. Charlie called it an attack. I was watching Charlie and you could here him square his shoulders just before he called it an attack. Diane stumbled a bit, but followed his lead. I'm sure the producer wet his pants at about that point, but to his credit, he kept the clips coming in. Even after the second plane hit, you could here the CNN reporter still pushing almost desperately for the "FAA malfunction" explanation and they still hadn't used the "T" word.
You want to know where Fox News Network came from. It was the the way CNN botched the 9/11 coverage by refusing to call it what it was until way after their audience had figured it out and were collectively shouting "It's a terrorist attack you moron!" at their TV sets..
Much of the confusion was the product of serious wishful thinking on the part of news media. President Bush came on quickly and called the act what it was - terrorism. Then he called for a moment of silent prayer for the victims and then said an amen for all of us.
Internationally, the most rattled news reporter was the Russian news anchor who was hyperventilating during his entire report. Can't blame him. Someone had just hit the largest nuclear power in the world and he was sitting on ground zero if we thought it was them. This guy knew what it would mean if it had been his own country attacked - in terms of retaliation. The guy was probably hoping Putin was on the phone going, "It wasn't us! It wasn't us!" The Chinese reporter was almost perky - it was kind of weird, like "Look what's happening to those crazy Americans now!" The Canadian reporter just stopped talking when the second tower came down and mentioned later that the Canadians were taking security precautions just in case. The Iraqi report mentioned Kuwait and showed bits of a downed Navy jet. I couldn't understand a word, but it seemed like cautious gloating to me. The reporter guy looked nervous (turned out with good reason). BBC was typically restrained, but did mention terrorism early on. Within hours they released a special report that sounded like an Alistaire Cooke documentary.
The Japanese had the best high-quality photographs and video - way better than the other guys early on and much of it shot at street level. Of course there were probably 10,000 Japanese tourists in New York at the time with 30,000 or so top of the line cameras strung round their necks.
Our media had a hard time reporting it. Matt Lauer and Katy Couric were eerily calm, but confused like they couldn't believe this was happening. Frankly everybody did that at first, but they never quite got over it.
When you don't believe in evil, you naturally want to look away when you see it happening right in front of you. Military and ex-military guys figured out it was an attack early on. The more liberal the news media outlet, the longer they took to use the "T" word even after it was obvious that we were under attack. The Fox Station in New York nailed what was going on from the moment they came on the air with the report. The "T" word was used in the first 60 seconds.
What I found really interesting was how so many stations cut to commercial before coming on with the news. The Fox locals just broke straight to the story. At one time news in this country, when something like that happened, Walter Cronkite would cut in.....
"We interrupt your regularly scheduled program to bring your this breaking news story!"
Now, it's more like "What?, uh, we have, a uh............We'll be right back after this commercial break"
Just watching the coverage, however, will take you right back to the day it happened and help you remember the magnitude of what was done to us. Next time someone tells you about how wrong the war is or how we had no reason to wage it, send them to this archive page and spend an hour or two remembering.
Oh, and God bless George Bush. Watch his announcement of the attacks. He calls a spade a spade. The man had more leadership in his pinky finger than the entire bunch of goobers that run the current administration. Can you imagine Al Gore handling the announcement?
"Uh, we have, uh, experienced a tragic, uh, event this morning. First reports indicate that these terrible plane crashes were the, uh, result of American caused global warming and the justifiable anger of the Muslim people over our exploitation of their resources, our abuse of the planet, the polar bears and our attacks upon the culture of the middle-east. Oh, and our support of the Israeli oppressor. Pray for the souls of the brave, but misguided patriots who were driven to do this terrible, but understandable thing to us.............I'll be in my bunker. And you all take care of yourselves."
(Sorry I keep promising I won't do that anymore.......")
Tom
You want to know where Fox News Network came from. It was the the way CNN botched the 9/11 coverage by refusing to call it what it was until way after their audience had figured it out and were collectively shouting "It's a terrorist attack you moron!" at their TV sets..
Much of the confusion was the product of serious wishful thinking on the part of news media. President Bush came on quickly and called the act what it was - terrorism. Then he called for a moment of silent prayer for the victims and then said an amen for all of us.
Internationally, the most rattled news reporter was the Russian news anchor who was hyperventilating during his entire report. Can't blame him. Someone had just hit the largest nuclear power in the world and he was sitting on ground zero if we thought it was them. This guy knew what it would mean if it had been his own country attacked - in terms of retaliation. The guy was probably hoping Putin was on the phone going, "It wasn't us! It wasn't us!" The Chinese reporter was almost perky - it was kind of weird, like "Look what's happening to those crazy Americans now!" The Canadian reporter just stopped talking when the second tower came down and mentioned later that the Canadians were taking security precautions just in case. The Iraqi report mentioned Kuwait and showed bits of a downed Navy jet. I couldn't understand a word, but it seemed like cautious gloating to me. The reporter guy looked nervous (turned out with good reason). BBC was typically restrained, but did mention terrorism early on. Within hours they released a special report that sounded like an Alistaire Cooke documentary.
The Japanese had the best high-quality photographs and video - way better than the other guys early on and much of it shot at street level. Of course there were probably 10,000 Japanese tourists in New York at the time with 30,000 or so top of the line cameras strung round their necks.
Our media had a hard time reporting it. Matt Lauer and Katy Couric were eerily calm, but confused like they couldn't believe this was happening. Frankly everybody did that at first, but they never quite got over it.
When you don't believe in evil, you naturally want to look away when you see it happening right in front of you. Military and ex-military guys figured out it was an attack early on. The more liberal the news media outlet, the longer they took to use the "T" word even after it was obvious that we were under attack. The Fox Station in New York nailed what was going on from the moment they came on the air with the report. The "T" word was used in the first 60 seconds.
What I found really interesting was how so many stations cut to commercial before coming on with the news. The Fox locals just broke straight to the story. At one time news in this country, when something like that happened, Walter Cronkite would cut in.....
"We interrupt your regularly scheduled program to bring your this breaking news story!"
Now, it's more like "What?, uh, we have, a uh............We'll be right back after this commercial break"
Just watching the coverage, however, will take you right back to the day it happened and help you remember the magnitude of what was done to us. Next time someone tells you about how wrong the war is or how we had no reason to wage it, send them to this archive page and spend an hour or two remembering.
Oh, and God bless George Bush. Watch his announcement of the attacks. He calls a spade a spade. The man had more leadership in his pinky finger than the entire bunch of goobers that run the current administration. Can you imagine Al Gore handling the announcement?
"Uh, we have, uh, experienced a tragic, uh, event this morning. First reports indicate that these terrible plane crashes were the, uh, result of American caused global warming and the justifiable anger of the Muslim people over our exploitation of their resources, our abuse of the planet, the polar bears and our attacks upon the culture of the middle-east. Oh, and our support of the Israeli oppressor. Pray for the souls of the brave, but misguided patriots who were driven to do this terrible, but understandable thing to us.............I'll be in my bunker. And you all take care of yourselves."
(Sorry I keep promising I won't do that anymore.......")
Tom
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