6 mins read

Remembering 9-11

I told you we would resume the caption contest today. But somehow as we go into this weekend it just doesn’t seem to feel right. So forgive me as I share this week’s cartoon I did the Guadalupe County Communicator in Santa Rosa, New Mexico as well as a column done by my friend, M.E. Sprengelmeyer, who is the editor/publisher/ of the Communicator.

I’ll bring back the caption contest next Friday, OK.

And I’ll have my Boulder cartoon up on Saturday as well as my 9News Broncos cartoon on Sunday night/Monday morning.

I don’t know where you were that horrible day. I was taking care of my wife, Debbie, who had just returned from the hospital after a difficult surgery for cancer. She was going through therapy at home now and the occupational therapist had just arrived to take Debbie through her exercises. We had just turned on the TV as the first tower collapsed. We had no idea what was going on until the therapist filled us in.

We decided none of us were up for OT that day and we rescheduled. Debbie and I sat stunned watching the coverage unfold. What we saw on the TV just added to our already overwhelming sense of numbness, having had our entire world turned upside down by Debbie’s diagnosis and surgery. We didn’t have any more room for sorrow or sadness or fear since we had already experienced so much of it in the last few months. The images of horror that we witnessed that day, seemed like some sick, stupid B movie out of Hollywood. Only it wasn’t some movie. It was real. And 10 years later, it is still so very hard to believe.

I hope you will take the time to read M.E.’s column. It’s an excellent and very interesting take on the ten years since that horrific day in September of 2001.

That Day Ten Years Later

By M.E. Sprengelmeyer

We had our chance.

Ten years ago this week, the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon gave us a rare moment of national and international unity.

Democrats and Republicans stood side-by-side and sang “God Bless America” together on the steps of the U.S. Capitol. People from around the world – yes, even in the Middle East – offered words of sympathy, support and solidarity.

Out of horrible actions came heroism. Meanwhile, there was a fleeting opportunity for Americans who regularly disagree to realize that they had far more in common with one another than with a monster like Osama bin Laden.

Ten years later, all of that is gone. We’ve slipped back into the quagmire of divisiveness.

It’s “us” versus “them.” We have divided government.

One side calls the other side “socialist,” questions whether they’re really Americans and claims “they” are trying to destroy the country.

The other side fires back with charges of “racism,” or fascism, or resorts to the grammatically-questionable slur “son of bitches.”

We’re back where we started before Sept. 11, 2001 – or worse.

But didn’t we all feel the horror the same. A group of delusional terrorists looked across the ocean at all of us and didn’t like what the United States of America stood for. They didn’t discriminate. They targeted all of us — Republican and Democrat, business and labor, Christian, Jew, Muslim, atheist and more.

We all shuddered at the attacks. Wherever we were, we stood side by side with people who aren’t necessarily like ourselves, and we realized we were shedding the same kind of tears.

At that moment, all of us could see we had a common, obvious enemy. Evil incarnate.

Ten years later, as we honor the fallen in a world without an Osama bin Laden, I hope we can reflect on something we lost with or without him: our sense of common cause.

It slipped away from us sometime after our nation started a couple of wars without asking the nation for the type of shared sacrifices that kept us all together during World War II.

With an all-volunteer military, only about 1 percent of Americans have paid a disproportionate price. The other 99 percent were quite literally told to go shopping. They weren’t asked to buy war bonds, collect up scrap metal, or pay higher taxes. In fact, they demanded and received lower taxes. And then the debates over war devolved into bitterness, were washed away by Hurricane Katrina, and devolved into instinctive finger-pointing and double-edged vilification by both sides.

By 2008, it looked like most average Americans had had enough.

Whatever you think of President Obama, remember that one of his big campaign promises was to end the culture of divisive partisanship that had taken over Washington, D.C., like a cancer. That, more than anything else, was the reason he won the election and explains why, on the world stage, he was awarded a premature Nobel Peace Prize.

The nation and the world were beyond eager for a moment of unity not unlike the ones we felt amid the tragedy of 9/11.

But the “hope” and “change” campaign has proven no match for the forces of division. If you blame the president or you blame the Tea Party or something else, then let’s face it, you’re part of that very divisiveness you don’t want.

On Sept. 11, 2011, let us remember those whose lives were lost. And let’s think for a moment about giving them a legacy by getting back the unity we had for a few fleeting moments.

Today, there is another big enemy: economic despair.

The American Dream is under attack. And that affects each and every one of us, rich and poor, black and white, business and labor, people of all religions.

Let that be our common cause. We can disagree about how we attack it, but we shouldn’t spend all our energy attacking one another. The disagreements are big ones, but they’re only about strategy. We all have the same goal.

Let’s pull this country together in a way we haven’t seen for 10 long, painful years.

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5 thoughts on “Remembering 9-11

  1. Thank you for sharing this, It is a great article and it is so true, I hope you dont mind, I posted this on my facebook page for my friends to read and share. I think it is worth more people reading this.

    I was at home getting ready for work, I was watching ABC Good Morning America when the first plane hit, and then watched in horror as I saw that second plane hit the World Trade Center, I couldn’t believe that someone actually attacked us, and when the buildings collapsed, I was in disbelief. I didn’t have to go to work til later that afternoon, so I sat there and watched and was fixated on the TV. When I got to work, our communication system was down, we found out the main relay was on top of the World Trade Center, so we all sat at work watching the news. In a place that is normally loud with chatter and people walking around making noise, nothing was said that whole week. It was a ghost town with people in it. I know several people who lost family members there, and most of them were firefighters who were some of the first people on the scene,

    That day, the word Hero, had a new meaning.

    Thanks for your hard work.

    Howard Stone

    Fort Worth, TX

  2. Drew–

    I was a little over 28 miles away from Ground Zero, in NJ. I remember the smoke from the Twin Towers drifting over the site where I worked, and knowing where it came from. All the high-rise buildings in Philadelphia were being evacuated, including the one where my husband worked. And one of my in-laws, who had recently retired from military service in the Pentagon, was waiting to her if her friends and co-workers were OK or not.

    It was one of the most horrible days of my life.

  3. Drew,

    Well said, and well drawn. M.E. is right on target. We all know this day was going to come back, like it does every year. Ten years since our country was attacked. It is so hard to believe. As with most, and hopefully all, Americans, I’ve been trying to find clarity in my thoughts about the past ten years, and that fateful day. All that you and your Debbie were going through at that time, brings a certain sense of parallelism to light. The victims of 9/11 fighting for their lives, just as you and Debbie were fighting for her life. I can’t even begin to imagine what that must have been like for you, Debbie, and your family.

    I was working as a hospital (and hospice) social worker at a small hospital in rural North Dakota. Myself, the doctors, and nurses were having morning report, and making patient rounds. Across from the nurses station, we always had the television on in the nursery/pediatric patient room (when it wasn’t occupied). The health unit coordinator called out that a plane had just flown into the World Trade Center. Soon, the second one hit. At that moment, one of our doctors stopped what he was doing, and we all went to view the television. The doctor said that he daughter and her husband lived and worked in lower Manhattan…very close to the Twin Towers. His face and demeanor became wrought with anxiety, as did that of his wife, who was the Home Care Nurse Manager. She took off to her office and began making calls to New York, and to their other children, looking for any kind of news, any sign of hope that their daughter and her husband were okay. As hard as it was, we needed to get back to our tasks at hand…taking care of patients. Not a word was spoken, as we silently prayed under our breaths, and worked. Doc saw his patients, did his charting, and carried on. About thirty minutes later, his wife came running down the breezeway with the news: their daughter and son-in-law were okay. I swear that you could feel the winds blow as we all let out a huge, collective sigh.

    I went home that day, to my spacious apartment, and called my family and boyfriend. Two and a half months later, I moved back to Minnesota.

    As I read M.E.’s wonderfully-written editorial, I asked the same question I’ve been asking for several years now: “Why can’t we all just get along?” Why do people – why has our nation – become so divisive? Just the other day, I posted a video of The Youngbloods singing one of my all-time favorite songs, “Get Together” (found on You Tube). It has become my prayer this week…that the people of this great nation can, and will, “come together and love one another, right now.” Our very survival as a country depends upon it.

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