Dear Roger…
Read with interest your remembrance of things past, 9/11-style:
No doubt it was nuclear Armageddon he had chiefly in mind. But his words captured some deep truth. Ten years ago. it was the perverted dreamers of Al Qaeda who loosed the lightning. New York shuddered; the world changed.
This is no doubt a quixotic request, doomed to go unheeded, but please, oh please, do us all the favor of spending some time at this technical, rather than polemic, website, by architects and engineers, concerning the matters of 9/11/2001. Were you to wrap your mind around the topic (and I agree with you that “It’s treacherous to reread,” I don’t think, hopefully, that you’d have typed a line like “the perverted dreamers of Al Qaeda who loosed the [fateful] lightning [of His terrible swift sword?--sorry; reminded me of the Battle Hymn of the Once-Upon-A-Time Republic].
At any rate, the more I read about this stuff, the more clearly it looks like “the 19” were little more than more numerous and more expensive versions of Lee Harvey Oswald — “a patsy,” he called himself.
Perhaps it’s the skies of a 9/11 blue, perhaps it’s the passage of a decade, perhaps it’s the thought of all the articles and reflections and memorial services now just weeks away, I can’t help seeing the city as a kaleidoscope of now and then, jagged images of molten steel and lost ones alternating with scenes of careless summer laughter.
I take some hope from the line in bold (my emphasis) that you still can see images of molten steel. If you do indeed still see them, then I’d ask you to look into the metallurgy of structural steel, the melting point thereof, the chemistry and physics of fire, the temperature of kerosene fires, etc. And compare the fate of #1, #2 --and #7, its collapse known only to Manhattan residents, it seems--to the fates of other burning, steel-framed skyscrapers before and after 9/11.
As I may gather from your thumb-print, you’re of an age where perhaps your grandchildren are playing with the wooden blocks you had as a child, then passed along to your own children. If you do have access to such blocks, I’d ask you to perform this simple exercise: Build a tower of blocks on their sides, two by two, with each course perpendicular to the previous one. Stop when you reach desk height--about 30 inches. Then quickly pull out one block from the 2nd course.
I think you’ll notice that the tower topples over, toward the missing block. Just as a tree falls toward the lowest notch the woodsman has chopped.
Now recall how the top of (tower #1 or #2, I can’t remember which) started to topple over. One could see it going sideways, toward the corner with the molten, dripping iron. And then, poof, it disappeared into clouds and clouds of dust and smithereens.
My profound disquiet is that we will indeed be inundated with “all the articles and reflections and memorial services now just weeks away,” but that none of it will bend back one single finger of the hands of propaganda strangling our body politic, our once Constitutional Republic.
We’ve seen our Bill of Rights gutted by the profoundly mendaciously labeled U.S.A.P.A.T.R.I.O.T. Act (I pronounce it, “The Youzapat Riot Act”.) Guantánamo is not closed. Our government officials who sanctioned (and watched, for all I know) the torture of POWs, who violated the US War Crimes Act (18 USCode §2441), who I’ve no doubt continue daily to illegally eavesdrop on every American citizen and copy (via “splitter boxes”) every binary digit of their information passing through the fiber-optic cables of all our telecommunications companies — as they have done, according to James Bamford (The Shadow Factory) and others (Jane Mayer, The Secret Sharer, May 13, New Yorker) since Jan-Feb 2002 (That means the illegal, warrantless wiretapping, in violation of the FISAct, has been transpiring for nigh onto a decade, representing perhaps billions of individual crimes by the National Surveillance Agency, et al.).
Bamford writes that the copies are piped into a huge disk farm (a.k.a. “Data Center” or “Cloud”) in Texas; Mayer writes that there’s also one in Utah. FYI: I was watching Steve Jobs’ June 6 World Wide Developer Conference last night, where he intro’d Mac OS Ten Seven “Lion” and “iCloud,” and at the tail end of the two-hour presentation, he showed a couple of slides, introduced by, “In case you don’t think we’re serious about iCloud, this is our third data center.” [Drag the “play-head” trapezoid to minute 116:33 and look/listen from there, to see what a disk farm looks like. It’s mammoth. One should perhaps be able to spot them in Google Earth.
Our troops and mercenaries are still occupying Iraq and Afghanistan, where the opium poppies once again are flourishing. (Bill Casey must be sporting a rictus of supreme satisfaction at that development). And (Simon/Garfunkel come to mind) “We’re bombing them in Libya/we’re saber-rattling Iran/...”
And increasingly it’s looking like 9/11 was our recent government’s version of the Gulf of Tonkin “incident,” the “Old” Pearl Harbor (Washington knew it was coming but didn’t alert Hawaii), Hitler’s Reichstag fire, Remember the Maine, Polk’s lie about where the Mexicans first skirmished w/US troops (and Rep. Lincoln’s “Spot” resolution(s)--“show us the spot where US blood was spilled”, the Lusitania--I can’t remember them all--seems like about one every year since 1945.
It’s difficult for a senescing Viet vet w/ 4 children & 2 grandchildren to countenance the wrack and ruin we’ve been subjected to in the name of, what? Mammon? (“We’re doing God’s work,” saith Lloyd Blankfein. I assume he meant Mammon)? I’ll send you a copy of my note (after comments closed) to Maureen on Sir Thomas More, whom she referenced re: the Cuomo’s, père et fils, art collection. And this was 1516, in Latin. Utopia on the Hudson was her column head.
The late Howard Zinn pointed out this Adam Smith quote to a batch of folks crowded into a Kennedy School conference room a couple of years ago:
Laws and government may be considered in this and indeed in every case as a combination of the rich to oppress the poor, and preserve to themselves the inequality of the goods which would otherwise be soon destroyed by the attacks of the poor, who if not hindered by the government would soon reduce the others to an equality with themselves by open violence.Adam Smith—Tuesday, Feb. 22, 1763;lecture series on Laws & Jurisprudence.Page 208, facsimile (PDF) version, vol 5.