🐱 It’s Time to End the 9/11 Tribute

CatParty


I thought I was going to get a break this year, but I was wrong. The 9/11 Tribute in Light will go ahead despite its initial cancellation. Backlash from nationalists and supporters of the war on terror caused a stir, and media mouth pieces of the right — like the New York Post — published ridiculous editorials calling it “outrageous” that the tribute would not proceed. Now that the lights will be turned on, I will have to avoid the sight of Lower Manhattan tomorrow, like I do every year.

The project, which was facilitated by the art nonprofit Creative Time, first appeared in 2002. At the time, it was presented as a temporary installation and seemed like a joyous gesture during a moment when the trauma of the terror attack, amplified by the mainstream media, had numbed us all. We were searching for a collective way to mourn nearly 3,000 victims and move forward.

But the Tribute in Light, which was conceived by designers John Bennett, Gustavo Boneverdi, Richard Nash Gould, Julian LaVerdiere, and Paul Myoda, and lighting consultant Paul Marantz, is a monument to nationalism now, and I don’t say that lightly.

Soon after its creation, with the registry of Middle East-born males known as the National Security Entry-Exit Registration System (NSEERS), followed by the illegal invasion of Iraq in 2003, the lights took on another meaning to many. The world had been transformed in a horrendous way, and the memorial became something similar to a symbol of irrational hate, though not only of the terrorists anymore. It became the most visible reminder that one was not allowed to criticize a war with no real purpose (remember, Iraq had nothing to do with the attacks), and of blind nationalism.

Starting in 2003, I found myself avoiding those two towers of light at all costs, and some years, I decided not to leave my apartment at all. As social media picked up speed in the late aughts, that avoidance was harder than ever, as people shared images as a form of visual solidarity, not realizing what it could mean for others.

Perhaps some people forgot the nationalist cult that developed post-9/11. Rather than use the moment to heal and correct paths, the US government, under the guidance of President George W. Bush, amplified the worst of this country. It appeared to blind most of the population and created a storm of hate towards SWANA (Southwest Asia and North Africa) people and Muslims became the focus of new waves of hatred that have never subsided, though it was always present.

I, for one, was forced to register in NSEERS, which restricted my movements, not allowing me to use LaGuardia to fly to Canada, and prevented me from using many other points of entry and exit. The program also forced me to be photographed, questioned, and fingerprinted at least three hours before every flight, and every time I returned. As if that wasn’t enough, those long, uneasy waits in airports were accompanied by a mandated visit to the Homeland Security office in Lower Manhattan within a few days of my return.

The impact was everywhere in our lives. A cousin of mine broke up with his fiancée soon after the invasion because he couldn’t stomach the racist and ignorant comments of his partner’s family at the time. It was stomach-churning. He, along with many of us, were harassed by strangers who often started their aggression with some version of “You one of those who brought down the towers?” And I noticed how many of the SWANA people I knew would apologize and play the “good American” or “good immigrant,” distancing themselves from “those people” — the bad ones. I refused to do that. Others did too. Too many didn’t, and instead joined the cult of US nationalists; its pull was and continues to be strong, and it’s most noticeable incarnation nowadays wears a red hat.

The illegal invasion of Iraq alone caused over half a million deaths and resulted in lawlessness and national schisms that fermented new and more virulent terror groups, like ISIS, which in turn drove more death and displaced people from their homes. That violence spilled over to neighboring countries, like Syria, and now we’re in the mess we’re in today. A report this week from the Watson Institute of International and Public Affairs at Brown University calculated that the War of Terror has uprooted 37 million people, including 9.2 million Iraqis (the report points out its estimates are conservative and the reality may be 48–59 million people). That’s the real cost.

The victims of 9/11 have a museum today. They are remembered, and the notion that some lights will do that more than a $700 million museum is ridiculous. Not to mention the 160,000 birds the “Tribute in Light” endangers every year.

A few years ago, I was moderating a panel on public art in New York, and one of the panelists said she thought the Tribute in Light was the greatest memorial in the city. My heart sank. This person didn’t realize how it was a thorn for many of us in a city we love. I didn’t say anything at the time because I was still scared, but I’m not any longer. I don’t love the Tribute in Light, I despise it. It’s time to mourn the 600,000+ Iraqis who have since died in a reactionary war, and turn the fucking lights off.
 
That's a really roundabout way of saying that you hate the United States.
Imagine how much better the country would have turned out if Lowtax had actually shut down Something Awful after 9/11 like he was thinking if doing. Imagine the horrors that would have prevented, and how much saner he probably would have been if he had gotten a real job and been normal. The terrorists almost saved us from all of the terrible things that placed spawned starting in about 2003.
 
People are already allowed to ignore it...
I dunno, man. I got 2 emails from my company and a few from various other places reminding me how sincere they are about their sorrow about 9/11. So you’re right. Basically I ‘m just sick of moral pandering from companies, in general.

Anyway, I fucked up what I was trying to say in my original post, and I’m not sure I can say it better, so I’ll leave it with this.
 
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To go with the "Fucked Up Shit Overseas" stories, my step-bro who was deployed to Afghanistan in the later years told me about how kids would literally play in the streets with Soviet-era butterfly bombs, bouncing them off the ground and throwing them at walls, and if it goes off in your hand, sucks to be you. What was really shitty is the kids would also like to play games with soldiers and drop these still live bombs in their hands, and the GI's hand squeezing around it might be the last straw for it and kaboom, free trip back to the US.
 
lol look at this LITERAL faggot

Ninjaed.

I initially thought he was a jew but.

Apparently he is a Armenian Canadian and got butthurt at Ilhan Omar for not recognizing the Armenian Genocide. Lives in Brooklyn, NY and is from Ontario, Canada.

Some of his websites that I could find.













 
Ninjaed.

I initially thought he was a jew but.

Apparently he is a Armenian Canadian and got butthurt at Ilhan Omar for not recognizing the Armenian Genocide. Lives in Brooklyn, NY and is from Ontario, Canada.
Honestly for things to be a faggot over (and the bar is very low considering this thread), a large number of people in your ethnicity being killed and constantly being denied or forgotten is not the stupidest.

Still a faggot though.
 
I dunno, man. I got 2 emails from my company and a few from various other places reminding me how sincere they are about their sorrow about 9/11. So you’re right. Basically I ‘m just sick of moral pandering from companies, in general.

Anyway, I fucked up what I was trying to say in my original post, and I’m not sure I can say it better, so I’ll leave it with this.
That's tame as fuck compared to what we're bombarded with daily these days about "tHe dAiLy HorRoR oF BeInG bLaCk In aMeRiKKKa."
 
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I agree.

Let's start with ending the tribute by immediately rendering legally defunct and burning any and all copies of the PATRIOT Act. After that, let's play it by ear.
 
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Cool, with this we can also stop talk about reperations for slavery and the horror the jews went through in ww2. No? Then go suck the barrel of a loaded rifle.
 
a monument to nationalism now

I'll have to check it out in that case.

It became the most visible reminder that one was not allowed to criticize a war with no real purpose (remember, Iraq had nothing to do with the attacks), and of blind nationalism.

Freedom of speech isn't freedom from social consequences!

As social media picked up speed in the late aughts, that avoidance was harder than ever, as people shared images as a form of visual solidarity, not realizing what it could mean for others.

Mourning the most horrific terrorist attack on US soil hurts your feelings? Talk about being self centered and hating America.

Perhaps some people forgot the nationalist cult that developed post-9/11. Rather than use the moment to heal and correct paths, the US government, under the guidance of President George W. Bush, amplified the worst of this country. It appeared to blind most of the population and created a storm of hate towards SWANA (Southwest Asia and North Africa) people and Muslims became the focus of new waves of hatred that have never subsided, though it was always present.

It swapped from hatred of blacks to hatred of muslims for a long while, fortunately the needle have swung back with great force since then.

I, for one, was forced to register in NSEERS, which restricted my movements, not allowing me to use LaGuardia to fly to Canada, and prevented me from using many other points of entry and exit. The program also forced me to be photographed, questioned, and fingerprinted at least three hours before every flight, and every time I returned. As if that wasn’t enough, those long, uneasy waits in airports were accompanied by a mandated visit to the Homeland Security office in Lower Manhattan within a few days of my return.

"Big Government is bad but only in this particular case, otherwise it's good!"

And I noticed how many of the SWANA people I knew would apologize and play the “good American” or “good immigrant,” distancing themselves from “those people” — the bad ones. I refused to do that.

Distance yourself from terrorists? Why would you want to do that? This is the writer by the way.
Hrag Vartanian.jpg

A few years ago, I was moderating a panel on public art in New York, and one of the panelists said she thought the Tribute in Light was the greatest memorial in the city. My heart sank. This person didn’t realize how it was a thorn for many of us in a city we love. I didn’t say anything at the time because I was still scared, but I’m not any longer. I don’t love the Tribute in Light, I despise it. It’s time to mourn the 600,000+ Iraqis who have since died in a reactionary war, and turn the fucking lights off.

Why can't it be both? Iraq was a retarded war, of course, but that doesn't negate people flying planes into buildings. It's almost as if big government is bad for everyone included, Americans and Iraqis.
 
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SWANA (Southwest Asia and North Africa) people
SWANA? Is "Arab" considered offensive now? This is some "Latinx" bullshit.

And I noticed how many of the SWANA people I knew would apologize and play the “good American” or “good immigrant,” distancing themselves from “those people” — the bad ones. I refused to do that.
So you refuse to distance yourself from terrorists who have murdered lots of people, not just in America and Europe, but in the Middle East, North Africa, and around the world as well? Stunning and brave. I mean not really in the current climate, but it would have been brave during the first few years of the Bush era, in much the same way as being an out and proud pedophile in Nazi Germany would have been brave. Not exactly noble, but brave.

Distance yourself from terrorists? Why would you want to do that? This is the writer by the way.
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I remember an episode of 24 back in the day (which was totally far right anti-Muslim propaganda, except for all the soft pedaling it did and all the good Muslim characters it had as a counter to the bad ones, often in a very heavy handed way) where a noble Egyptian agent got beaten by a bunch of racist rednecks and later died of his injuries. What made it absolutely fucking retarded was that this was a very fair skinned Egyptian man with blue eyes, who wasn't wearing any distinctively Islamic clothing. The racists attacked him when they had exchanged no words with him, and called him a "goddamn towel head." Even back when I first saw it I thought the scene was ridiculous because there's no way these ebil rednecks would have assumed this guy was Muslim, or even Egyptian just from looking at him.
 
Nothing can stop the inevitable passage of time. Contemporary national tragedies eventually become historical footnotes to make room for the national tragedies that will almost certainly happen in the future. Pearl Harbour was originally "a day that will live in infamy," but it's been almost eighty years since then. Several generations of Americans were born and raised since then, presidents have come and gone, and we now have senators and congressional representatives who weren't even born when Pearl Harbour happened. I don't doubt that the US government still honours Pearl Harbour because we still have living WW2 veterans, but I doubt that the memorial ceremonies that are held nowadays match the fervour that they once had like 30-some odd years ago.

At some point, the USA needs to move on from 9/11. However, that point certainly isn't in the foreseeable future. So many policies that the USA enacted stem directly from 9/11, like the PATRIOT Act, the TSA, the contemporary military industrial complex, and mass surveillance. ISIL, the Taliban, and al-Qaeda are all direct results of post-9/11 military action that failed horribly and now have dire consequential impact on countless countries all across the world. If 9/11 were to fade away from memory so quickly, it would mean that we didn't learn a damn thing from what happened 19 years ago.
 
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ISIL, the Taliban, and al-Qaeda are all direct results of post-9/11 military action that failed horribly and now have dire consequential impact on countless countries all across the world.
Not to be that guy, but the Taliban and Al-Qaeda were both very much in existence and doing their thing before 9-11.
 
Not to be that guy, but the Taliban and Al-Qaeda were both very much in existence and doing their thing before 9-11.

Perhaps I should've clarified. I'm aware that the mujahideen existed in the 1980s and that the USA funded them during the Soviet invasion. However, they specifically became most-wanted targets after 9/11.
 
Perhaps I should've clarified. I'm aware that the mujahideen existed in the 1980s and that the USA funded them during the Soviet invasion. However, they specifically became most-wanted targets after 9/11.
Not just the Mujahideen. The Taliban were one faction of the Mujihideen who distinguished themselves from others by focusing on radical Islamic fundamentalism instead of being the personal fiefdom of some warlord, and thus ended up kicking the asses of all the other factions and taking over the country after the Soviet backed coup and subsequent failed invasion of Afghanistan left a power vacuum. Yes they became most-wanted targets after 9-11 but I don't see how that makes them "a direct result of 9-11."
 
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