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PRND
09-11-2017, 01:04 AM
As of 9/11 2002, there began a grassroots movement in the US to make 9/11 into a day for public service, volunteerism, and good deeds. The concept is simple. It's 9/11 (or 11/9 in the UK), we know what happened in order to make that day significant, now let's do some good things. In 2009, this was made more official by an act of Congress that makes it a National Day of Service and Remembrance, and the Corporation for National and Community Service is charged with making opportunities available to act on, and with publicizing the nature of the event- which amounts to the largest day of charitable service in an average year. https://www.serve.gov/site-page/sept...nd-remembrance

Additionally, it's been a few years now, and there were over 13,000 babies born in the US on September 11, 2001. They all turn 16 tomorrow (as of the time of this post), and some of them have been brought on to a PR campaign in which they ask people to do good things, be kind to each other, and don't be a hateful bigot because of the day that happens to be their specific day of birth. (Paraphrasing).

This is the official site of the thing in question. https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&sour...EXkdXSbDIsnx_g

And this is how the US, in the medium to long term, is choosing to interact with and remember the date. This is our official-capacity response, at any rate, and this is what our youngest generation is being brought up with. There is much variation in terms of the individual decisions that people decide to make and the views they express, but this is the overall directionality of mass media, of the government, and of educators in general. It took a little while to take form as an official, concerted effort, but it's become something that we can all be proud of.

....

Provided that we are all sane and rational and not at all likely to spin conspiracy theories while claiming it was an inside job, and of course let's find a way to blame the Jews for no apparent reason. But we can't be completely free of that, can we?

At any rate. For most of us, this is a pretty nice thing that seems to have moved in the right sort of direction. It's been well publicized here in the US, it's on TV and radio and it's being linked to the hurricane damage to Houston and Florida. It may not be all that well publicized globally though, so if you weren't aware of what's being done here, those are some of the details.
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Singularity
09-12-2017, 12:37 AM
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opini...=.c9a8c0f3e2dc
Opinions
Time to leave 9/11 behind


By E.J. Dionne Jr. Opinion writer September 7, 2011
After we honor the 10th anniversary of the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, we need to leave the day behind. As a nation we have looked back for too long. We learned lessons from the attacks, but so many of them were wrong. The last decade was a detour that left our nation weaker, more divided and less certain of itself.


Reflections on the meaning of the horror and the years that followed are inevitably inflected by our own political or philosophical leanings. It’s a critique that no doubt applies to my thoughts as well. We see what we choose to see and use the event as we want to use it.


This does nothing to honor those who died and those who sacrificed to prevent even more suffering. In the future, the anniversary will best be reserved as a simple day of remembrance in which all of us humbly offer our respect for the anguish and the heroism of those individuals and their families.


But if we continue to place 9/11 at the center of our national consciousness, we will keep making the same mistakes. Our nation’s future depended on far more than the outcome of a vaguely defined “war on terrorism,” and it still does. Al-Qaeda is a dangerous enemy. But our country and the world were never threatened by the caliphate of its mad fantasies.




We asked for great sacrifice over the past decade from the very small portion of our population who wear the country’s uniform, particularly the men and women of the Army and the Marine Corps. We should honor them, too. And, yes, we should pay tribute to those in the intelligence services, the FBI and our police forces who have done such painstaking work to thwart another attack.


It was often said that terrorism could not be dealt with through “police work,” as if the difficult and unheralded labor involved was not grand or bold enough to satisfy our longing for clarity in what was largely a struggle in the shadows.


Forgive me, but I find it hard to forget former president George W. Bush’s 2004 response to Sen. John Kerry’s comment that “the war on terror is less of a military operation and far more of an intelligence-gathering and law-enforcement operation.”


Bush retorted: “I disagree — strongly disagree. . . . After the chaos and carnage of September the 11th, it is not enough to serve our enemies with legal papers. With those attacks, the terrorists and their supporters declared war on the United States of America, and war is what they got.” What The Washington Post called “an era of endless war” is what we got, too.




Bush, of course, understood the importance of “intelligence gathering” and “law enforcement.” His administration presided over a great deal of both, and his supporters spoke, with justice, of his success in staving off further acts of terror. Yet he could not resist the temptation to turn on Kerry’s statement of the obvious. Thus was an event that initially united the nation used, over and over, to aggravate our political disharmony. This is also why we must put it behind us.


In the flood of anniversary commentary, notice how often the term “the lost decade” has been invoked. We know now, as we should have known all along, that American strength always depends first on our strength at home — on a vibrant, innovative and sensibly regulated economy, on levelheaded fiscal policies, on the ability of our citizens to find useful work, on the justice of our social arrangements.


This is not “isolationism.” It is a common sense that was pushed aside by the talk of “glory” and “honor,” by utopian schemes to transform the world by abruptly reordering the Middle East — and by our fears. While we worried that we would be destroyed by terrorists, we ignored the larger danger of weakening ourselves by forgetting what made us great.




We have no alternative from now on but to look forward and not back. This does not dishonor the fallen heroes, and Lincoln explained why at Gettysburg. “We can not dedicate — we can not consecrate — we can not hallow this ground,” he said. “The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract.” The best we could do, Lincoln declared, was to commit ourselves to “a new birth of freedom.” This is still our calling.


ejdionne@washpost.com
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happymuslim
09-12-2017, 11:56 PM
I cant even comprehend how horrible 911 was. A supposed inside job of the government which had got more then millions killed for something they didnt do. Any sane person would do evidence and understand what really happened on 911 in my opinion. Never forget the innocent lives stolen for doing nothing at all, and having nothing to do with this. [emoji21]
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Mustafa16
09-14-2017, 01:09 AM
format_quote Originally Posted by happymuslim
I cant even comprehend how horrible 911 was. A supposed inside job of the government which had got more then millions killed for something they didnt do. Any sane person would do evidence and understand what really happened on 911 in my opinion. Never forget the innocent lives stolen for doing nothing at all, and having nothing to do with this. [emoji21]
are you serious? then why did al-qaeda admit to the crime?
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happymuslim
10-05-2017, 07:57 PM
format_quote Originally Posted by Mustafa16
are you serious? then why did al-qaeda admit to the crime?
Anyone who murders for an unjust cause is horrible point blank and the period
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