Almost to Normal
by C.J. Maloney
by C.J. Maloney
Recently by C.J. Maloney: Hubris
and the Hooker
It
is my hope that in the months and years ahead life will return almost
to normal.
~
George W. Bush (September 20, 2001)
I
don’t remember exactly which bar we were all gathered in when everybody
started to sing. I don’t recall who started it. I just remember
suddenly bursting into song along with everyone else – from the
barkeep to the bartender to every other patron without exception.
If only I were born a gay man – it would’ve been like dying and
going to heaven.
Then
again maybe not, as we were in an Irish bar along Second Avenue,
I think somewhere in the 20s maybe, but I know the sun was
still shining and that it was the American national anthem we were
all singing. It was not too long after 9-11 had taken down the Towers,
and since that day which now, to the New Yorker, separates Before
and After, drinking when the sun was still shining was par for the
course among my Smart Set.
We
were all drinkers and smokers to begin with, but after the attack
our lives took on a bit of the crazed. Just a short walk south from
us thousands of people were still entombed under a mountain of rubble;
the attack’s death toll was large enough so that everybody knew
someone. To us, the death toll was no abstract number; all the victims
were friends, co-workers, and family.
Everybody
had a story to tell about that day, and everybody told it, repeatedly.
We gathered daily and told them to one another, then gathered elsewhere
and told them again. It was an orgy of neediness, every bar doubling
as a psychiatrist couch and mating ground.
I
had just cleaned out my office. Our building was directly across
the street from the South Tower, which lay in a heap with its Twin
right under our windows. The damage we sustained was bad enough
to abandon ship. We arrived to the task after sundown, and walked
though destruction like we’d only seen in history books.
Our
path there was a street bulldozed clear of the endless debris, crushed
cars and fire trucks. The fire department alone lost 343 men that
day. Nobody talked.
A
bit later, I looked down from my office window as the 24-7 cleanup
crew went at it with a fervor pitch – they stopped working only
in the rare moments when something resembling human was come across
in the ocean of rubble. While I watched, they never stopped working.
The sound of the excavators and jackhammers from below were clearly
heard through the blown out window a few offices down, countless
sparking acetylene torches accentuated the gloom.
Always
a fan of military history, I’ve seen pictures of bombed out cities
taken from the air and as I looked down my mind kept repeating,
"Yes, that’s what it looks like." And the whole bar was
singing our national anthem.
I
was singing the national anthem along with them, as were everyone
in my circle, everyone in my line of sight, everyone wearing their
hearts on their sleeve and signing loud and unashamed. It was the
most patriotic I ever felt in my life, it was uncut, completely
pure emotion.
One
last quick shot then off we went, first stopping outside for a smoke.
It was still early fall, when New York weather will behave and allow
you to be comfortable for a change. My wife and I held hands.
In
between drags everybody’s eyes, without any comment, furtively glanced
south at the empty skyline where the Towers ought to be. The sight
was still new enough to be irresistible.
As
we walked to the subway I lagged behind and looked up to a sight
I never thought I’d in my life experience. Above the city was a
sky clear blue and devoid of any jet plane, helicopter, or blimp,
utterly empty. It had a sense of the Twilight Zone about it. I kept
looking up, searching, and about halfway to the subway entrance
I spotted them. A pair of fighter jets circled high overhead, ready
to block a blow already struck.
That
moment in that bar marked the high tide of my patriotism.
Eight Years
On
Freedom
and fear are at war. The advance of human freedom, the great achievement
of our time and the great hope of every time, now depends on us.
~
George W. Bush (September 20, 2001)
This
was before the Patriot Act, a War on Terror, spying on Americans,
torture, TSA clerks randomly picking out the To Be Strip Searched,
unprovoked war, and (particularly revolting to a New Yorker) the
political deification of 9-11 slowly sapped me of belief then enthusiasm.
And
once a year I watch how our day has become a political commodity,
pushed by every huckster with a microphone. The memory of that day,
of the victims, became mass produced and cheapened.
Non-stop
mentions of 9-11 quickly became a required sound bite in every political
speech. Now reluctant to watch any televised political campaign,
if I risked it anyway I’d sit artificially fortified, ready to wince,
waiting for the pre-requisite "9-11" to come chanting
off their lips. And most embarrassing to a New Yorker, it was one
of our guys, Rudy Giuliani, who was hands down the worst
offender.
It
was so bad he became a parody, the "9-11 Guy," Joe Biden’s
quip that "there’s only three things he mentions in a sentence:
a noun, a verb, and 9-11" was dead on. Yet, I will give Rudy
Giuliani complete hosannas for his public leadership in the weeks
after 9-11 – we couldn’t have asked for more.
When
someone needed to step up and be The Man, he represented us well.
When the New York Mets played the first ball game in our city after
the Towers came down Rudy (a noted, brazen Yankees fan) was in attendance.
Instead of his customary boos and curses when introduced, the usually
hostile Mets crowd gave him a standing ovation. I was giving him
a standing ovation. He deserved it.
But
outside of his admittedly brilliant public persona during the weeks
after the attack, he had always been a bumbling, self-righteous
mediocrity. And now he was like the fat kid who inexplicably wins
the 100-yard dash then won’t shut up about it: his presidential
campaign’s theme song should have been Springsteen’s Glory
Days.
It’s
been an odd thing to watch this and the other changes that began
after the attack. Having read Orwell’s 1984, it was disconcerting
and insulting how the TV shows and advertising ads went to such
lengths to remove any visual reminder of the Towers, because apparently
seeing the Towers post-9-11 would reduce a New Yorker to tears.
Even the Law and Order series, the quintessential New York
program, hastily deleted the Towers from the opening credits and
threw them down the memory hole.
9-11
did change everything; I see it in the small daily humiliations
that a security state constantly uses to monitor compliance. I’m
old enough to notice a difference in my city and, eight years of
constant warfare later, it’s not for the better.
I now live
in a New York that, among other things, sees you walk disarmed by
a small knot of machine gun toting police, all standing at the subway
entrance. You hope that they won’t pick you for a random search
because you don’t want to miss the train, but knowing that if picked
you’ll submit has its doleful effect – even if you hurry past them
unhorsed, now humiliated, you’ve lost.
When
my ancestors first came here from across the ocean, they would have
shot a man, uniformed or not, who tried such a thing as rooting
through their person and things on a whim. Later, having been disarmed
by the Sullivan Act, my grandfather would still have punched him
across the face. My father would have engaged him in a rigorous,
ineffective debate, while I just turn, walk out, and use another
subway entrance.
It's
been a long, slow rot, and most New Yorkers submit eagerly to the
searches, and all of us born after 9-11 will know of no other world,
my son will know of no other world. They won’t feel any anger, shame,
or humiliation, won’t feel any strangeness about it at all as they
stand politely still while armed strangers go through their persons
and property, on a whim.
And
they’ll think it normal and necessary that uniformed strangers may,
as is their pleasure, go through their bank records, listen in on
their phone calls, declare them an "enemy combatant,"
strip search them at will, or demand to see their papers. That’s
the new America; this is the world of almost to normal.
So
now each anniversary of 9-11, I honor the dead without flags, faith,
or fury; I’m done with all that. Instead, I quietly pray that our
memories of the lost don’t turn from heartbroken wishes that they
were still here with us into bittersweet thanks that they were spared
the sadness of seeing just how things were going to turn out.
September
19, 2009
C.J. Maloney
[send him mail] lives
and works in New York City. He is currently writing a book on Arthurdale,
West Virginia during the New Deal. He blogs
for Liberty & Power on the History News Network website. He
will be speaking at Columbia University on October 10th
for the New York/Ivy League Alliance Conference, details
here.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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