Didion
Posted on August 18, 2010 by lucasja6
The last reading, Fixed Opinions or The Hinge of History by Joan Didion was certainly interesting. The short essay goes over the immediate American response on the September 11th incident in New York. The author basically talks about how the government starts using the fear of 9/11 as a smoke screen for their hidden agendas. For example, putting religion back in school or making people say the “under God” portion in the pledge of allegiance even though it wasn’t in the original version to begin with. As Didion implies, American’s slowly start losing their freedom of speech, not being able to even debate the real happenings of the attack. People start becoming anti-Islamic and such. The word terrorist inspires the image of people from the Middle East and people start blaming the entire Middle East for not having a democratic government and for letting evil spread so far. Anything that causes people to really think about the attack is labeled as insensitive or out of line.
For me, 9/11 happened when I was in the sixth grade and so I had no idea of the political happenings and had very little insight on the social backlash that came from the event. Reading the essay did not necessarily open my eyes to the reality of the situation because by the time I reached my mid teenage years I had realized that we as Americans had lost our freedom of speech on all things terrorist because Americans had developed this sense of if you’re not with us then you’re against us attitude. It is scary to realize that after 9/11 the U.S. went through another McCarthy era of “witch hunts.” The racism towards people of Islamic or Middle Eastern origin was and still is disturbing. In my opinion, September 11, set us back a decade or so in social equality and tolerance. If there is one thing I truly lament about, it is the how people were stonewalled from reasoning about the attack and how the event escalated into a war. If anything, the time after September 11th should have been a time where we as Americans should have turned the looking glass on ourselves and tried to truly understand the happenings of the world outside of our continent.
Even now, there is debate about Muslims building an Islamic church near ground zero; it shouldn’t even be a debate, there are polygamy camps all over but no one does much about them so why should we bat an eyelash at someone building a church for their religion? The essay basically summed up my feelings about the terrorist attack. It was tragic, but was even more tragic was the injustice done to my civil rights and others civil rights by the government after the attack.