Sep 112010
 

Tom122007_Painting_Painting On September 11, 2001 I left for work right after the first airliner hit.  My job that day was to contact executives in Fortune 500 companies in New York to arrange site visits from a team of researchers for a major software development company.  I did not think it was an appropriate time to call New York, and said so, but the Account Executive had not yet arrived, and his assistant, a Republican airhead, insisted that we could not allow terrorists to stop us from doing business.  I called several companies with no answer at the switchboard or my contact unavailable, for obvious reasons.  I dialed a contact whose direct line I already had.  Someone else answered the phone.  He was in one of the twin towers, above the fire.  He asked me to call his wife and tell her he loved her, because the phones there were not working to dial out.  I did.  She cried.  I cried.  I was done.  I refused to call New York any more that day.  The airhead fumed, but a few minutes later, the Account Executive arrived, agreed with me, and called her on her insensitivity.  A few of us gathered around the TV in the lunch room.  Someone asked what it all meant.  I said that I expected Bush to use the attack as an excuse to blame and invade Iraq and as an excuse to curtail our civil liberties.  As horrific as that day was, and with respect for the victims’ families, I wish to focus today on the other 9/11, 9/11/1973, because Americans are not the only ones to have been victims of terror.

On September 11, 1973, Salvatore Allende, the democratically elected President of Chile was overthrown and murdered in a coup orchestrated by Republicans, Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger, installing Agosto Pinochet as dictator.  Allende was a Marxist, but he was a Social Democrat, not a totalitarian.  In the terror that followed, thousands died.  The following is part of the 2002 reflections of Tito Tricot, who experienced these events:

11allende Our dreams were shattered one cloudy morning when the military overthrew the democratically elected government of Salvador Allende. Twenty-nine years later, at midday, Chile’s’s firemen sounded their sirens paying tribute to thousands of men and women who lost their lives without really understanding what was happening.

It was a moment of remembrance, not for the victims of the military coup, but for those killed at the World Trade Centre in New York. Sad as that might have been, it is even sadder that Chilean firemen have never sounded their sirens to remember our own dead. And there are thousands of them, including many children, who were murdered by the military.

It is not a matter of comparing sorrow and pain, but for the past year the US media has tried to convince us that north American lives are worth more than other people’s lives. After all, we are from the third world, citizens of underdeveloped countries who deserve to be arrested, tortured and killed. How else are we interpret the fact that the military coup in our country was planned in the United States?

The truth is that no US president ever shed a tear for our dead; no US politician ever sent a flower to our widows. The US government and media use different standards to measure suffering. It is precisely this hypocrisy and these double standards that make us sick, especially when on such a symbolic day for Chileans, the president of Chile, Ricardo Lagos, attended a memorial service at the United States embassy where the ambassador, William Brownfield, stated that "people who hate the United States must be controlled, arrested or eliminated".

In what kind of a world are we living? Can we stand idly by while in the name of the fight against terrorism countries are bombed or invaded by the US war machine? I think not, especially because, irrespective of the horror of the World Trade Centre attacks, the US has no moral right to impose its will on our continent. After all, we in Latin America have ample experience with US terrorist tactics. In our continent alone 90,000 people disappeared as a direct result of the operation of the School of the Americas and US "counterinsurgency" policies – 30 times more than the victims of the World Trade Centre… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <The Guardian>

Terrorism should be opposed, but in order to have the moral standing to oppose it, the United States must stay out of the terrorism business ourselves.  If the rest of the world seems less than supportive of our war on terrorism, its because they rightly see us as the architect of more state sponsored terror than any other nation.  Republicans may accuse me of hating America for saying this, but that’s a lie.  Because I love this nation, I want us to do right, be honorable in our dealings with the rest of the world, and benefit from the standing that honor will bring.

A good start would be to keep Republicans out of power.  I readily admit that the Democrats’ track record in this area is not pure, but compared to the Republicans, we are babes in the woods.  Just since Eisenhower took office, Republican administrations have covertly overthrown, attempted to overthrow, or participated in the overthrow if the following nations: Guatemala, the Congo, Chile, Afghanistan, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Cambodia, Angola, the Philippines, Venezuela, Haiti, the Palestinian Authority, and Iran.

In memory of this day and all the victims of terror everywhere, let peace without terror be our common goal.

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  16 Responses to “Remembering 9/11… 1973”

  1. Not to take away from what happened nine years ago but I have an example of stupidity from a very close source, my middle brother.

    On September 11, 1973, Salvatore Allende, the democratically elected President of Chile was overthrown and murdered in a coup orchestrated by Republicans…

    My middle brother is a full-fledged Biblethumper and has drank more than his share of their communal Kool-Aid. Now to be fair our relationship has never been close and I carry a large portion of the blame for that but we are so different and our arguments have been so extreme it is simply best we stay apart.

    Case in point being several months after Obama took office I was introduced to Facebook but only occasionally checked out the Wall seeing what others in my friends group had written. My middle brother wrote an entry directly comparing Obama to Allende and making an indirect reference that Obama’s fate could be the same. I about flipped out but at least I did not get into any long winded and futile arguments.

    Long story short, my experience with my middle brother and others of the same “thinking” leave me no doubt that the political terror games we have played overseas more than likely will come home one day.

  2. Amen, brother, Amen.

  3. Too few people remember the story of what happened in Chile in 1973, thanks for the post. And your personal story about 9/11/01 should be an eye opener to some as well. What was that assistant (with emphasis on “ass”) thinking?

    • Thanks, Hugh. She was just another empty Bushovik. She did make me realize, though, that I had better start taking activism more seriously.

  4. Thank you for acknowledging the “other” 9/11. Our government masterminded that one, and quite possibly “our” 9/11 too. I don’t hold to any specific conspiracy theory, but the Tooth Fairy is more credible than the “news” report that 19 religious wackjobs with box cutters pulled off these incredibly precise and synchronized hijackings. No way.

    • Tom, I don’t think personally that the Bush Regime was directly involved. If they had been, their total incompetence would have screwed it up. However, I do believe that they intentionally made no move to prevent it, and profited from it by selling short on the companies hardest hit.

  5. Thanks for this TC, I always leave here a little smarter because of your postings. I believe we as a nation must stop being the worlds bully, and yes we do our share of terror, no doubt about it. We aren’t supposed to admit to it though or we’ll be called unpatriotic.

    I gave my husband 2 choices this morning if the thugs ever take power again, Australia, or Canada. I choose Nova Scotia!

    I hear ya Beach Bum, my brother is a bible thumper too, sad so sad…

    • Thanks, Sue. According to Henry David Throeau, the truest patriots serve the state with their conscience and oppose it when it is wrong.

  6. TC I love your end commentary, can I have permission to use it under my header for a while?? with linky love of course!

  7. A thoughtful and relevant post. Americans often do act as if American lives are more valuable than foreign lives, which has devastating consequences when applied to foreign policy. How much do you feel the belief in American exceptionalism contributes to this attitude?

    • Thanks, Ahab. I think it contributes greatly to the attitude. Sadly, we have forgotten that being exceptional is not a right. It has to be earned one day at a time, and we have forgotten to earn it for a while now.

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