A Sad Anniversary
Today marks the third anniversary of September 10, 2001. You may recall it, for it was a day totally unlike any since. Here are just a few of the reasons 9-10-01 will be remembered for a very long time:
* There were no armed fighter jets patrolling the skies of the United States.
* We were able to get on an airplane without eyeing the other passengers suspiciously. And once the plane took off, all we had to worry about was the quality of the food.
* The purpose of flight attendants was to hand out little bags of peanuts and fluff our pillows, not to serve as the last line of defense for homeland security.
* Homeland what?
* Terrorism was something that always happened some place else.
* We weren't afraid of our mail, and Anthrax was just a loud band.
* If we saw white powder somewhere, we automatically assumed someone had spilled creamer.
* No one gave a damn where Afghanistan was. And what's a Taliban?
* No one had ever heard of Shanksville, Pennsylvania. And no one in Shanksville expected that anyone ever would.
* If we went downtown, the only thing we worried about was getting mugged.
* The Oklahoma City bombing of 1995 was the worst act of terrorism on U.S. soil, and April 19 would always be associated with that unimaginable horror.
* If a plane had crashed on September 10, our first thought would have been, "Gee, what a horrible accident."
* The only emotion we felt when we had to pull over for a firetruck was annoyance.
* Several thousand tourists enjoyed the spectacular view from the observation deck of the World Trade Center.
* Most of all, it was a day to feel good about the future, and our place in the world. After all, this is the United States of America, and everyone in the world loved us.
Yes, September 10, 2001 was quite a day.
P.S.
This is a variation of the entry from last Sept. 10.
Friday, September 10, 2004
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