Friday, September 30, 2011

9/22/2001 e-mail exchange

Jean Fallow
09/22/2001 09:11 PM

Hi Julia,

Thanks for your message. That is encouraging to hear
about your family members being more enlightened this
time around.

There was an antiwar rally here in Seattle today
attended by, I would estimate, at least 1000 people.
It was really good to see all those people out there
-- I left feeling less hopeless, as there are really a
lot of good, thoughtful people in the world, and maybe
we can make a difference. I just wish we could stop
the bombs BEFORE they start falling, but I fear that a
lot of people are going to die before the movement
here gets big enough to have an impact.

Take care, and thanks for keeping in touch!

Froggie


--- Julia@___ wrote:
>
> Great job! I'm so glad you responded to that
> editorial.
>
> The other day on NPR, I heard Juan Williams call for
> retaliation,
> saying that "unreasonable times call for
> unreasonable responses" and
> that "the time for understanding [Arab/Muslim
> grievances] will come
> later." (You might be able to find the RealAudio on
> NPR's website; I
> think it was on the 14th or 15th.) I didn't expect
> that kind of
> scary, irrational rant from someone like him.
>
> On the other hand, I had the chance to go to the
> Oprah Winfrey show on
> Monday and was pleasantly surprised by the
> thoughtful -- even dovish
> -- sentiments of the white, middle-class, well-off
> women there. My
> comment (about the U.S. support of the Taliban and
> other repressive
> regimes) didn't make it onto the air, but got quite
> a bit of applause
> and a couple people coming up to thank me afterward.
> And the audience
> was unanimous in deploring racist attacks on Arabs
> and Muslims.
>
> Oprah Winfrey herself wasn't a lot of use; she
> started out calling for
> the media to tell us less (about Bush's whereabouts
> on the 11th, for
> instance) and later was outraged that they hadn't
> told us what we
> needed to know (about a germ warfare attack in the
> Northwest awhile
> back.) But she did ask how many more times
> Americans wanted to see
> this kind of destruction and killing, here or
> elsewhere, and she
> agreed strongly with the comment that these events
> "held a mirror up
> to ourselves and should make us think about our own
> actions." That
> was as close as she got -- as she ever gets -- to
> discussing politics.
>
> But I've also been pleasantly surprised by how much
> more receptive my
> family has been to my arguments this time around
> than they were during
> the Gulf War. I'm not watching much network news so
> maybe my
> perceptions are distorted, but I'm getting the
> impression that a lot
> of people realize at least that a war like this
> could get very, very
> ugly very fast. I think maybe Americans don't need
> a lot of
> persuading that the U.S. shouldn't be in the
> business of running other
> people's countries -- especially if it means their
> sons getting
> killed. My younger sister, who is not a radical by
> any stretch of the
> imagination and who usually reacts to my arguments
> very angrily, has
> actually been making them to me!
>
> Of course, the threat is so great that I'm nowhere
> close to being
> complacent. The media won't help our side so we all
> have to keep
> speaking out the way you're doing. If only we could
> all do it so
> well! Keep up the great work, Froggie.
>
>
>
>
> ______________________________ Reply Separator
> _________________________________
> Subject: Back in the USA, and letter to editor
> Author: Jean Fallow at internet
> Date: 9/21/2001 10:47 AM
>
>
> Dear All:
>
> I made it back to the US safely the day before
> yesterday. Being on a plane was incredibly scary --
> I
> kept thinking about how awful it would be to die the
>
> way all those people did in the planes that crashed
> into the World Trade Center and Pentagon. I thought
>
> about how random it is that the people who died
> died,
> while I am safe, and how I or anyone I know could
> just
> as easily have been one of them.
>
> At the same time, I have been really disgusted by
> the
> aggressive, militaristic reaction of Bush and the
> Congress' slobbering approval, with only one
> dissenting vote in the House, of his proposal to
> react
> with even more violence.
>
> Below is an editorial that especially bothered me,
> and
> a letter I wrote in response. The writer basically
> rejects the idea of critical thinking in favor of a
> more facile conclusion: "We are right and they are
> evil. End of story." I think if Americans can't
> think more clearly than this, we're all doomed. I
> hope we can all speak up and take action to put the
> brakes on our insane government, even though it
> seems
> like what's being put in motion will be very hard to
>
> stop.
>
> Love,
> Froggie
>
>
>
-----------------------------------------------------
>
> Editorials & Opinion : Thursday, September 20, 2001
>
> Leonard Pitts Jr. / Syndicated columnist
> Don't dignify these terrorists by beating yourselves
>
> up
>
> Let's get something straight.
>
> The events of Sept. 11 did not happen because we did
>
> something wrong. Or because we somehow "deserved"
> them.
>
> In recent days, I've heard that argument or
> variations
> thereof from several friends and dozens of e-mail
> correspondents. This must be what "they" feel like
> when we bomb "them," says one. Perhaps they acted
> out
> of deep hurt, says another. Maybe this is necessary
> payback for American arrogance, says yet another.
> And
> then, of course, there's the ever-reliable Jerry
> Falwell, who said on "The 700 Club" last week that
> the
> attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon
> represent God's verdict on gay rights, feminism,
> abortion and the ACLU.
>
> In a word, no. To all of the above, to all the
> tortured reflection and moral distress: no. Hell no.
>
>
> I'm not naive. I understand that my government has
> sometimes dirtied its hands in foreign affairs. For
> that matter, it has done the same in domestic
> affairs.
> So I recognize and accept that some people might
> have
> legitimate reason for animosity toward this country.
>
>
> But guess what? For all our faults, we don't drive
> planeloads of noncombatants into buildings filled
> with
> same. We don't willfully rain carnage upon
> civilians.
> And we don't dance in the street when innocents die.
>
>
> When forced to take up arms, we attempt to limit our
>
> military actions to military targets. Yes, innocents
>
> sometimes die regardless of our best intentions. But
>
> for all our transgressions, we don't sanction the
> murder of those who have neither the capacity nor
> the
> intention to harm us.
>
> That's what our enemies did. And no matter how
> righteous your cause, when you support it by means
> of
> wanton slaughter, you forfeit any claim to the moral
>
>
=== message truncated ===


=====
"The choice today is no longer between violence and nonviolence. It is either nonviolence or nonexistence."

-- Martin Luther King Jr., 1960

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1 Comments:

Blogger Julia said...

I posted this just now because several pieces of information from 9/11/2001 seem to have gone down the memory hole. I have looked in vain for any record of Juan Williams' frightening comment, and I have repeatedly had to remind people that, no, most Americans did NOT respond to the events of 9/11/2001 with a call for revenge. Most people were sad rather than angry. They wondered why it happened. Juan Williams's brand of hatred did not come naturally to many. It "had to be carefully taught."

10:13 AM

 

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