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Letters | Wednesday, 16 September 2009

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Serving to remember

The impact of a bill signed back in April hit home this week as Americans paused to remember 9/11.
When President Obama signed the Edward M. Kennedy Serve America Act into law it was noted that, "there isn't a better or more fitting way to remember 9/11 than for all of us as Americans to voluntarily set aside time on the anniversary of the September 11 attacks to help others in need."
The thousands of Americans who serve in harm's way on far-off battlefields waging war against Islamic terrorism might beg to differ on that particular point.
Over the previous seven years since the attacks on the World Trade Centre and the Pentagon and the demise of United Airlines Flight 93 in rural Pennsylvania, liberals complained that remembering the events of that fateful Tuesday morning served only to benefit President Bush and Republicans by whipping up a pro-war, hyperpatriotic frenzy. They whined about the 9/11 hangover affecting the midterm elections in 2002 and keeping President Bush in office after 2004. Even with the continuing refusal of television networks to rebroadcast footage of the attacks, once Democrats gained control of the levers of government they sought to further erase the memory of tragedy and give the day a different significance – hence the language in the national service act.
On the other hand, no one needed to create a day of remembrance for the previous infamous attack on America. Just like the events almost 60 years later, a generation of Americans knew exactly where they were when they heard the Japanese had attacked Pearl Harbour and, as their grandchildren would, thousands volunteered to take on the enemies who attacked us. Our steady resolve held through the dark days immediately after Pearl Harbour and victory was attained nearly four years later.
No politician in his right mind would ask that December 7th be declared a day of service, yet that's what Democrats have achieved in just eight years after a similar dastardly attack we solemnly recalled last week. Community service is an admirable goal, of course, but here's a case of the pot calling the kettle black.
Most people still recall the terror they felt on September 11th, 2001, and there was nothing overtly political about wondering where the next attack would be. Nor were there political considerations in questioning what else in our everyday lives could change, and that feeling was especially true when stricter security measures were put into place at airports and elsewhere to prevent a similar tragic incident. Yet those Democrats who accused their opposite number of exploiting events for political gain are now trying to shift the message in their favour for those very same reasons, even while there is still work to do in eliminating the threat of Islamic terror which led to 9/11 in the first place.
In essence, Democrats are making yet another attempt to return to a 9/10 mentality. The problem for them is that, aside from their liberal ilk, very few buy into the new Era of Good Feeling that Obama and his supporters would like us to believe is on the verge of beginning now that the evil George W. Bush has departed the scene. They can pick any other day on the calendar to ask us to serve our fellow man, but for most Americans September 11th will remain as it should – a sacred day of remembrance for those who have fallen and renewal of support for those who volunteered to fight and avenge what was taken from us.

 

 


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