Sept 15, 2011 - Issue 441 |
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At a Time of Anniversary
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The past few weeks have been filled with remembrances of the attacks of September 11, 2001, and rightly so. Horrific events such as those, which occurred on that day, stay in the mind. This is especially true for the families of those who died on that day, affecting the lives of the next generation and the next. And,
it is difficult to forget, when both politicians and the press keep up
a drumbeat of recollections and programming that present images of the
day and of the following days, usually culminating with video shots of
the implosion of the Politicians
speak of We
remember the nearly 3,000 men, women, and children who were killed 10
years ago, but it is never in the context of what this nation did to other
peoples, as a result of that day. In the heat of the national impulse
to revenge, government officials in charge plunged the There
are former What
kind of society could send its young men and women into a country where
they could declare the City of There might be a clue to what kind of society we might be. In the 19th Century, Dostoyevsky, a Russian writer and novelist, said: “The degree of civilization can be judged by entering its prisons.” Today,
the Forty
years ago, New York Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller gave the order to attack
the yard in Early press reports were that hostages had had their throats slit, but that proved to be a rumor and far off the mark. The hostages had been shot. The inmates did not have firearms. Later, it was shown through testimony that many of the hostages were protected by some of the inmates, who had rebelled because of the prison conditions and were stirred to action by the killing of George Jackson, a young Black Panther, who was shot in the back in a prison in far-off California. Why
did the governor order an assault, instead of going to the prison to determine
what the inmates were demanding, as the corrections commissioner, Russell
Oswald, had asked him repeatedly to do? While no one can know what was
in Rockefeller’s mind at the time, it became clear later that he wanted
to become president of the He
also was the push behind the so-called Rockefeller drug laws, which were
some of the toughest in the nation. Those laws were responsible, in part,
for the explosion in the population of These two tragic and important events do indeed tell us what kind of society we have. The tragedy of 9/11 was cynically used by Americans in power to initiate two wars of choice that, so far, have cost more than 4,000 American dead and tens of thousands wounded. The wars have inflicted untold damage to two countries and caused the deaths and disruption of millions of lives. The
endless wars that Those are two significant events in American history, one observed with all of the ceremony that a national government can muster and the other, an event that most Americans would wish to ignore or forget because it involves people we would like to put out of mind. The question remains: What kind of society are we? BlackCommentator.com
Columnist,
John
Funiciello, is a
labor organizer and former union organizer. His union work started when
he became a local president of The Newspaper Guild in the early 1970s.
He was a reporter for 14 years for newspapers in
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