9/11 anniversary

There’s is an awful lot of rather pre­dictable tosh going on on the other side of the pond and syco­phan­tic empa­thy on this. A lot of self pity for an iconic event in which Amer­ica gets to por­tray itself as a Vic­tim of Ter­ror with thou­sands of inno­cent lives lost.

Geeklawyer was work­ing as in-house lawyer at a start up when the Intar­web went down and mobile phones ser­vices gave “over-capacity” mes­sages. We man­aged to get a browser going and saw the now famous images of the worst case of plane park­ing ever. My reac­tion was “Meh, what goes around comes around. You kinda had it com­ing to you: his­tor­i­cally.” Yea shame about the dead, may of them were inno­cent, many weren’t. Shame about the inno­cent dead in Iraq; shame about the deaths of Afghanistan civil­ians; shame about the deaths of those inno­cent detainees in Guan­tanamo tor­tured to death by SS/US-Marine guards.

Whin­ing self-pity may make you feel good but it doesn’t address the under­ly­ing causes that pro­voked these ret­ri­bu­tional acts by some stu­pid arabs; ones every bit as evil as the the Neo-cons who started the war decades before, for cyn­i­cal polit­i­cal ends.

No addi­tional packs of Kleenex tis­sues have been pur­chased in the Geeklawyer house­hold today. But at least Geeklawyer didn’t buy a cake and throw a party.

10 Responses to “9/11 anniversary”


  • GL, you have such a suc­cinct way with words, no doubt the Bar Coun­cil and your Inn are ever so proud. How­ever, you have a point. Work­ing in an Amer­i­can firm we nat­u­rally had 2 min­utes silence (that was cocked up and went on for about 5 with every­one shuf­fling their feet look­ing con­fused) yet all I could think of was the good friend who on Mon­day I go and bury. As you know he was killed in Afghanistan (I’m not look­ing for pity, he knew what he was get­ting in to) and for what? Revenge? As I’ve said on my blog, as I watched the planes slam into the build­ings my first thought was ‘Shit, we’re going to war.’

    I think I am cor­rect in think­ing this is the first real attack on the main­land US. We’ve had it for years funded by Ted Kennedy and his friends at Noraid. I’m not an Amer­i­can hater how­ever I find very lit­tle that is pos­i­tive, bar WW2 (and that should never be under­stated), in US for­eign pol­icy since the coun­try became a coun­try and not a colony.

    I com­pare the dif­fer­ing atti­tudes of 9/11 to 7/7. The gen­eral feel­ing from the US was ‘Who did that? let’s bomb em’ in the UK it was ‘Why did they do that? What did we do?’

    This is obvi­ously a raw wound for most Amer­i­cans and I do pity the fam­ilys of those killed. But I also pity the fam­i­lies of the Iraqis, Afghans and of Paul McAleese.

  • I should say also that I regards British troops as inno­cent vic­tims in this. My mantra remains: “Sup­port our troops — con­demn our politi­cians”. Some fights WW2 the Falk­lands were right to fight & were good wars — I’m no paci­fist, but not this

  • I was in Man­hat­tan that day; lost two friends who were work­ing for Can­tors, but I did not then, and do not now, have the remotest sym­pa­thy for the USA. As a nation, the sep­tics got to expe­ri­ence what the rest of us, esp­cially those who grew up in Lon­don, Brim­ing­ham etc., in the 1970s, had expe­ri­enced cour­tesy of the sep­tics and their dodgy for­eign plociy. Just a shame Kennedy didn’t last until today, espe­cially if it meant that those extra few days would have pro­longed an ago­nis­ing death.

    There are very few heroes involoved in the sorry mess; no ordi­nary man would begrudge the NYC fire­men the tor­rent of top totty that came their way in return for the immense brav­ery and self­less sac­ri­fice they dis­played that day. Every­one else then and since, armed forces included, are vic­tims of a fucked up oil grab.

  • It’s been pretty bad here on this side of the pond, with the annual pity-party below Canada. The planes dive bomb­ing into the tow­ers, I agree, were the act of ret­ri­bu­tion … for the ham­fisted, arro­gant swag­ger that the US has with regards to for­eign policy.

    I am wait­ing for the day, though it will pro­lly never come, when it’s no longer a pity-party and more of a case of self-examination.

  • I remem­ber where I was when I got the call telling me to turn on the TV. I gasped, and felt sorry for the vic­tims, but I almost punched the air in delight that a) revenge had FINALLY been exacted by poten­tially any one of dozens of wronged coun­tries b) the aver­age Amer­i­can Joe would actu­ally start pay­ing atten­tion to their coun­tries’ 200 year pol­icy of being the worlds’ Mafia God­fa­ther, and per­haps do a lit­tle some­thing towards putting a stop to it.
    Unfor­tu­nately, what actu­ally hap­pened was they started watch­ing Fox News. That’s the biggest atroc­ity the ter­ror­ists committed.

  • Do you think Britain got what was com­ing in the 7 July bomb­ings? Spain in the Madrid bomb­ings? Your atti­tude about the US bomb­ings is dis­gust­ing. While it may be true that the anniver­sary is remem­bered rather too melo­dra­mat­i­cally, the peo­ple who died were in fact inno­cent of any wrong­do­ing. They didn’t deserve to die that way as you sug­gest. I’m shocked at your lack of com­pas­sion and your bit­ter­ness toward the Amer­i­can public.

    • Yea, I do kind of think we got what was com­ing to us. We cre­ated part of the prob­lem those peo­ple were fight­ing against. By we I mean Tony Blair and Neo-Labour.

      As for the Amer­i­can civil­ians: some were inno­cent, some were financiers ben­e­fit­ing from the ‘War on Ter­ror’ hardly inno­cent. And as for the Amer­i­can peo­ple gen­er­ally: I think a great many are dumb, but that’s because they are iso­lated xeno­pho­bic and arro­gant: as a Brit I recog­nise the con­se­quences of empire. It doesn’t make me bit­ter; just unsym­pa­thetic. And right.

    • Do YOU think that Britain got what was com­ing to it when the IRA was bomb­ing all over the place and the US was helping?

      I think Britain was incred­i­bly stu­pid to pitch its lot in with the US. Addi­tion­ally, Spain is less impli­cated in recent stu­pid­ity, but has its own his­tory with Islam, rather dis­tinct from ours.

      Com­pas­sion is due to the indi­vid­ual fam­i­lies, rather than to the Amer­i­can nation as a whole, I think.

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