It is hard to believe that ten years have passed since 9-11. On that morning, I was an assistant principal at a school in Buncombe County. While walking down the hallways, I saw teachers and students watching what looked like a movie on their televisions. At first I was upset, wondering why they hadn't started their academic day. I was a bit annoyed, so I walked into a classroom and suddenly realized it was not a movie. Totally shocked and mesmerized, I stood there is the silence for what seemed an eternity as the two towers came down, one after the other.
So much has happened since then! I often wonder what our world would like today had so many lives not been lost, had so much money not been spent on our defense, etc. Initially the day drew us all together. We Americans all had a shared sense of patriotism and a willingness to work side by side to pull our Country back together.
For a short while we all seemed in sync and in the aftermath of the terrible events of 9-11, our Country became what we people of my generation were taught we were like during the Great War. We enthusiastically supported the hunt for Usama bin Laden. After all, he was the enemy. Then came Iraq, the war we should never have supported.
During these years, under President Bush, we spent billions and billions. We reduced taxes. We even had a huge prescription medication plan put into place. On the face of it, we all wanted to support our seniors. We all wanted to fight Saddam Hussein. We all believed the reason to go to war as presented by our President.
For the sake of argument, let us say that there were weapons of mass destruction being hidden away in Iraq. The question then is, if the prescriptions were that important and the war was that critical for our Country's well being, why did we not pay for them, instead of asking future generations to do so.
After (and during) World War II, American were asked, by purchasing bonds, to pay for the war effort. We didn't ask foreign nations to finance our debt. We asked that sacrifice from our fellow Americans. Today, it is even considered by tea baggers and their Republican partners, anti-American to ask the rich to shoulder their fair share of our National debt, much of which was incurred beginning with the events of 9-11. Instead, they ask our seniors to enter their retirement years worrying about the security of social security and the safety net of Medicare.
To me, that is misguided. One can only wonder what the financial state of the United States and the world might have been had there been no terror attacks on the USA. It must have please bin Laden and his associates to see and hear our financial struggles, and our political intransigence. Bin Laden is dead. Thousands of our citizens are lost. Hundreds of thousands of our enemies and innocent bystanders are dead, too. Our economy is struggling to find a rebirth. Behind and beside us, all the nations that depend on the United States to be the engine of the world's economy are, at best, standing on shaky limbs.
Meanwhile, Al Quaeda may be falling apart, but have they achieved their goals Did their work a decade ago permanently cripple us? Or are we resilient enough to gather together again and work as one to rescue our economy and way of life? I think we are!