ZGram - 9/11/2001 - "The end of a world that we knew"

Ingrid Rimland irimland@zundelsite.org
Tue, 11 Sep 2001 22:23:39 -0700


Copyright (c) 2001 - Ingrid A. Rimland

ZGram - Where Truth is Destiny

September 11, 2001

Good Morning from the Zundelsite:

This is not the end of the world - but it is the end of the world as we
have known it in America.  Today's terrorist attack not only buried
thousands of Americans in a fiery grave of twisted metal, concrete, wires
and debris - it buried America's innocence.

This horrific attack will signal an erosion of freedom as Americans have
enjoyed it for 225 years.  It will usher in a curtailment of the rights to
privacy, to personal freedom, to the freedom of association, freedom of
speech, freedom to travel etc.  This day will be the beginning of an
Orwellian world of surveillance, wire tappings, letter openings, fax
interceptions and computer hacking by all manner of "security" agencies the
likes of which the world has never seen before.

It will all be done ". . . in the interest of national security."

America, the last bastion of freedom, took a direct hit to its core, its
nerve center, this morning.  Will the America of yesterday survive this
direct attack on its cherished traditions - hitherto constitutionally
protected and taken for granted for so long?

The shrill and emotional voices for new restrictions, draconian laws
allowing all manner of internal and advocating external spying are already
being heard.  Huge budget increases are already being demanded for hiring
an army of "human sources" which can infiltrate any and all organizations,
coupled with vastly increased numbers of intelligence analysts to process
this avalanche of information gathered.  An orgy of paranoia, fanned by an
irresponsible press, will end in a witch hunt that will pale the McCarthy
era into insignificance.

Emergency will be the cloak the tyrant will be wearing.  State power will
increase in direct proportion to the decrease in personal freedom.

Who was behind today's attack?  The culprit may well be found - and
punished.  The policies which created the culprit, however, will not be
examined - and thus will not be addressed.  Take Communist East Germany.
It had the most sophisticated, all-pervasive internal and external spy
system in Europe.  One out of seven East Germans had Stasi (Secret Police)
connections.  They knew the most intimate details of the lives of their
citizens.  And yet, in the end, it was their faulty policies - and the
terrible results of these policies - which swept the regime away.  All the
intelligence gathered by all these spies, analyzed by all their
intelligence analysts, could not save the East German regime - because the
political leaders refused to correct the problems caused by their faulty
policies.

Here is a personal note:

Both Ernst and I were children in a war and at a time when planes careened
down from the clouds, sent from America, death tucked beneath their wings,
to bury our loved ones, our friends and family and neighbors, in fiery
graves of twisted metal, concrete, wires and debris.  I still remember
playing in the ruins of a small village near Berlin in 1945 all summer long
that had little crosses on practically every heap and along the rims of
many, many craters.  In a strange and eerie way, that made me shiver all
day long, a circle has come to a close.

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