I was living in Whitley Hall. Whitley is a “skyscraper” in the bustling metropolis of Commerce, Texas. I was a sophomore at Texas A&M University Commerce when the September 11 terrorist attacks happened. Commerce is a small college town of about 8,000. Whitley Hall is a 12 story residence hall. Easily the tallest structure in town. It was a co-ed building and much nicer than my previous dorm, Hubble “Rubble” Hall.
Nick
was my roommate at Whitley once again. We lived on the sixth floor.
John lived down on the fourth floor. September 11th was
on a Tuesday. On Tuesdays John and I had the same government class at
930 AM. Nick had a different class. We would meet at John's room on
the way down and took turns driving to school. Nick and I arrived
around 9am but John looked concerned. He asked if we heard the news
out of New York and we had no idea what he was talking about. John
let us in and his TV was on ABC. Peter Jennings was early in his
legendarily epic marathon coverage of the attacks and aftermath.
We
were stunned. The USA was invincible. Nobody fucks with us. One
plane could be an accident. Two planes was clearly an attack. A third plane hitting the Pentagon? A fourth plane in Pennsylvania? Oh God will this stop? We just sat there in
silence for a few minutes and had stupid looks on our faces. We
drove to class. John and I went to our government class and Nick went to
whatever class he had.
Ordinarily
this class was boring and stupid easy. John and I would write lyrics
to songs for our pretend band. But today was obviously different.
All the guys were shaken. There wasn't a gung ho “let's kick some
ass!” attitude in there. John and I listened stoically as the men
were asking about the draft. They didn't want to go to war. They
didn't want to die. I didn't either but was ashamed of them for
acting like this. I wasn't any better than them, I just kept my
mouth shut. I suffered in silence. I felt that it wasn't a good look
to publicly proclaim your self-centered cowardice. American
civilians were dying right then. Shit, there may be more attacks,
stop worrying about what might happen and think about what is
happening.
We
didn't really have class that day. More like a 90 minute therapy
session. A fellowship of the frightened coming together in a time
of great confusion, intense alarm.
After
class I went to the Performing Arts Center. This was where the Radio
and Television department was, along with Theater. I was going to
see if they needed any help in the radio station. I saw Luis Camacho
on the way, he was the News Director at KETR and my practicum
supervisor. He asked me what I thought about what was happening. I
was honest and told the truth.
“I
don't know. We go to war it's not going to be easy. These guys are
fanatics. They strongly believe in their faith. Misguided or not,
this is not about land or oil. It's about ideas. It's about
oppression. There can be more attacks. Nobody can take us on with
an army. They HAVE to hit us with numerous small attacks. They have
to count on the fears of citizens.”
He
nodded. He didn't verbally agree or disagree. Nobody knew what to
think or how to feel. We were under attack. Was it over? Was it
beginning? The receptionist, station manager and program director at
KETR were all women. All of them were at the front in tears. This
was over four hours after the attacks began. Had they been crying
the entire time? God bless them. There was nothing to be done. No
local news originated from our station for a few days. Just
broadcasting national feeds.
I
went to lunch. We had a handful of televisions in the cafeteria.
Normally the TV's would have been turned on to a channel that
broadcast music videos and other programming targeting young adults.
Not today. We had CNN on. Aaron Brown put on amazing coverage that
would win him a prestigious Edward R Murrow award.
A few years later CNN would give him the boot for an Anderson Cooper who turned heads during his often ridiculous hurricane live shots.
A few years later CNN would give him the boot for an Anderson Cooper who turned heads during his often ridiculous hurricane live shots.
Aaron
Brown gave great commentary on what was happening and informed us of
every new bit of information that came out. Nowadays CNN is a joke
in breaking spot news situations (more on CNN and how they have
become ridiculous in a future post). People that didn't give a damn
about news were glued to the sets. We all just wanted to know we
were safe.
James,
one of my pot buddies, was sitting with me in the
cafeteria. He wasn't afraid to let loose his feelings. He said,
“Fuck those towel heads.” James said we should round them all up.
Whoa. I told him that's bullshit. This isn't the 1940s. Doing that
crap is not going to make anything better at all. All of the sudden
there were dozens of experts on Al Qaeda around me and James was one
of them. I won't go into everything that was said because I don't
remember most of it. What I do remember wasn't pleasant, and in the
heat of the moment and with all the fear going through his head, I'll
forgive him for making statements that were ugly. Everybody was
upset. I mean everybody. Despite what Trump believes, there were no
huge crowds of Muslims chanting death to America or cheering in
victory. We had Muslim classmates and Muslim instructors. They were horrified of the actions against fellow Americans and what consequences they themselves may have to pay. I refused
to villanize them for what a couple dozen assholes did. They showed no outward hatred for me or our country. I wasn't going to hate them
for what they COULD be, what they probably weren't.
The local gas stations had oppressive lines. Every time there was a tragedy there are lines to outflank the imminent gas price surge and adjoining shortage. Self preservation is the most basic animal instinct. It trumps empathy and love of country.
The local gas stations had oppressive lines. Every time there was a tragedy there are lines to outflank the imminent gas price surge and adjoining shortage. Self preservation is the most basic animal instinct. It trumps empathy and love of country.
Fear
had turned to anger and rage. There were a handful of people who
enlisted after the attacks. Mostly though people just got mad. And
patriotic. John and I saw Disturbed in Dallas on September 28 and
lead singer David Draimen introduced Dimebag and Vinnie Paul from Pantera by
saying, “we should send these guys over there to kick some ass”
before playing the heavy metal classic “Walk” with the Dallas
legends. This got a cheap and easy cheer from the audience. Yay
patriotism and tough guys. I cheered too, so I'm not hating a metal
front man for seeking an easy pop from the crowd.
Ever
the empathetic one, I always “play the devil's advocate” and try to
understand why. People don't want to hear why. Good and evil are
black and white. We are always good and the other side is bad.
There were bullshit slogans like, “They hate us for our freedom”
and also, “If we change who we are then they win.” What the fuck
ever. Philosophies like that get you nowhere. It solves nothing and
promotes ignorance and prevents nothing. I was for sure never going
to degrade a class of people because of the actions of a miniscule
amount of them.
George W. Bush did one of the few good things during his administration on Friday the 14th. He grabbed a bullhorn at ground zero.
George W. Bush did one of the few good things during his administration on Friday the 14th. He grabbed a bullhorn at ground zero.
Rescue worker: I can't hear you. Bush: I can hear you. I can hear you. The rest of the world can hear you! And the people who knocked these buildings down will hear all of us soon.
Al
Gore should have been president but there is no way he would have had
it in him to rally us to tears of optimism like Bush did. I doubt
Gore would have prevented the attacks so that doesn't play into this
at all. Gore would have gone about the war a lot differently though.
And the Iraq invasion and subsequent formation of ISIS would probably
never have happened.
Iraq's
invasion did not get very much support from our allies. Nor should
it have. Bush squandered the good will he got for bringing the
nation together and sold a bogus war to Congress. I had a CCCP
(USSR) hockey jersey that I had out of irony. It was a Vladimir
Konstantinov 16 jersey. I wore it in March of 2003 to school one
day, over a year after 9/11. The US was poised to invade Iraq
without the broad coalition it enjoyed with Afghanistan. A theater
major who also took some television classes with me saw me in the
jersey and screamed in disgust, “Fuck every country that's not the
US!” I told him that that is exactly what the problem is. He
wasn't unbiased either. In the winter after the 2000 presidential
election he had the nerve to tell me that Al Gore was tearing the
country apart. What the fuck ever man.
My
brother graduated high school in 2008 and within a month joined the
Army. He knew he'd eventually get sent to Iraq or Afghanistan.
Sometime in late 2009 he was seriously wounded in Afghanistan (I will
write a little about this in a future post). I was livid. Obama was
president, but I placed the blame on Bush. I still do think Bush's
and Donald Rumsfeld's handling of the war led to so many unnecessary
casualties, but some shareholders enjoyed massive profits (at least
until the fall of 2008) why the hell was this war still going on
after so many years?
September
11 may not have affected me directly or any of my family or friends
at the time, but it shook us all. I drove all the way home that
afternoon just to hold my mother and talk to her face to face. I
cried. I was scared. The mighty impenetrable United States of
America had been punched in the face. An unconventional war had
begun. The enemy may hit stealthily and with small numbers anywhere. We
wouldn't know when or where. But we had to be vigilant. We had to
trust our government to keep us safe and to tell us the truth. Many
of us who had no faith said a prayer to whoever would listen.
###
If I had to pick a single song to be the soundtrack for this post it would be...
My nephew Jakob and me. 2001 |
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