As I sit here on
the Upper Westside of Manhattan writing, I’m buzzed suddenly by the awful sound
of a fighter jet coming so low and so loud I figure it’s 9/11-2. The jet buzz
doesn’t end in a crash as I dread. Instead it returns, reaching max-roar and
fades into the distance again.
A few minutes
later, I go outside my apartment building to catch, through the spaces between
the rooftops, what look like two C-130s, big bulky Navy gray crafts booming
overhead. I get that eerie feeling again. And then I remember. It is frigging
Fleet Week and the fleet sailed last Wednesday: 4,000 active duty service men
and women to join in the 19th annual “festivities,” ships, planes, et al. Oh
goodie. Where were they on 9/11?
Unfortunately, I
know the answer to the question. Military jets were pulled from away from New
York air space by five simultaneous terrorist hijacking drills (what a
coincidence), as far away as Canada and Alaska. Yet there remained as many as
22 planes or objects on air controllers’ screens to totally confuse them.
NORAD, in fact, consciously stood down. There was mass confusion. The CIA had
spread the word. Meanwhile, the President in Absentia was reading his goat book
in a Florida classroom for all the children left behind. It was awhile before
he got off his butt and went forward; an hour more to even get back in the air.
And then he flew off to hide in a military cave.
Dick Cheney and
Condi Rice scuttled into the basement of the White House and were later
helicoptered to some secure bunker in Pennsylvania, not far from groundhog
Punxsutawney Phil who, come rain or shine, annually makes a February appearance
to forecast whether there are six more weeks of winter or if spring is just
around the corner.
But Cheney and
Condi’s story is more like the sleazy weatherman Phil Connors, played by Bill
Murray in the film Groundhog Day.
Connors is assigned to cover the event about “a weather forecasting rat” as he
cynically calls it. But Phil finds that his relentless cynicism causes him to
live the same Groundhog Day over and over again until he gets it right, that
is, how to love the girl he meets, stop telling the same ratty jokes, stop treating
people like crap, and actually turn into a decent human being. Then he can get
on with time and his life, a profoundly meaningful message for Bush &
Company.
Since they acted so
miserably on 9/11, they have to repeat their lies, their deceptions, their
behavior over and over again, caught in the time warp of The War on Terror, sinking lower and lower into the winter of
Ground Zero, among the shadows of the dead. I am speaking here not just of the
nearly 3,000 victims of the 9/11 murder, but of the deaths of 2,700 soldiers in
the illegal Iraq War, and of the hundreds of thousands of Iraqis who have died,
and before that the untold number of Afghans who died in that first preemptive
strike.
And I speak for all
of us in America who have to live that day over and over again in our memories,
trying to figure out the cruelty of our own people being behind it, dodge and
deny it as they will. So let this Memorial Day be a commemorative to the living
as well as the dead, to the victims’ families and friends, to a nation caught
in two wars, to veterans losing their lives or health or benefits, to the
drowned and lost of New Orleans, to the elderly faced with losing health care
and Social Security, to a once great nation that lead the world and that now
lags behind like Phil Connors, looking for the light. I hope we find it soon,
before the world decides we’re the bad guys and need to be taken down soon,
real soon.
Some Quotes from the Sun
What is amazing as
well are quotes from some service people in an article, “As They Steam in,
Sailors Prepare To See ‘Everything’ During Fleet Week,” in last Thursday's
ultra right-wing New York Sun.
Well, the “everything” they need and want to see is less than a mile south
from their docking point on West Street and the Hudson River. It’s Ground Zero,
a well-paved hole in the ground consuming some 16 acres, where a memorial to
the dead will be dug even deeper, if and when everyone can agree on the final
design and spiraling construction costs. Designs for the memorial, originally
called, “Reflecting Absence” are still being considered. I’m sure the service
people will get a kick out of that.
You see, if you
simply stand at street level and stare into that giant hole where so much life
throbbed and died, if you close your eyes, you can hear and see it all again,
the joy and the tragedy of that life, the explosions not from jet fuel that
bombed the daylights out of us, the buildings falling into neat footprints, the
ashen clouds of concrete and asbestos rising into the air like nuclear
conflagrations, the ash gray crowds on the ground scuttling away for dear life.
You can hear the
cries of firemen in the hallways, saying they’ve got the fire under control,
and suddenly their voices are lost. You can see bodies falling like angels from
the windows. You can see, as Eliot wrote, “life in a handful of dust.” And
perhaps as you think, another jet will go roaring overhead, and you’re post
traumatic shock will send a shiver through you.
But then you can
read this Sun article and the comments
of Corporal Todd Meyer, among others, who recently returned from Fallujah.
Sailing on an 844-foot assault ship, he says, “I want to see everything.” Ah
but it’s gone, young man, everything’s gone. Like Fallujah. This is why
sometimes New Yorkers feel like the enemy, like we were singled out for
something by our government, and have this compulsion to speak truth to power.
But “Corporal Meyer, 22, surmised that he would be working at a fast food joint
in his hometown of Lawrence, Kan., had he not chosen to enlist in the military
shortly after the terror attacks. . . ." So, was Fallujah really a better
option than the local fast food joint? Is that how it is? Or how bad
opportunity was?
But he said Fleet
Week “would not only provide him some much needed leisure time, but would
reinforce his decision to join the Armed Forces.” In his words, “It gives us a
chance to see what happened here . . . It’s one of the reasons why we do what
we do.” Well, my son, don’t do it for us. Your action is brave but misguided.
Get your crew and go to Washington, DC, and ask your Commander in Chief, the
one who showed up on the aircraft carrier in his tailor-made jump suit on May
2, 2003, to declare the war was over . . . ask him and his administration to
resign for murderous incompetence or face a firing squad. The war isn’t over
and it won’t be for awhile; in fact no one knows when. And you may soon be in
some other desperate straits. It’s not all about this week’s “Galas, military
demonstrations, concerts, and parades . . ." The war is about people dying
at your and others’ well-meaning hands, just as they died on the steel blue
morning of 9/11. So be it.
Arriving also for
Fleet Week, which was “a homecoming of sorts,” was Lieutenant Mike Lucrezio, a
36-year old Queens native. He said he had spent the last few days dispensing
advice about New York attractions to his fellow servicemen and -women, many of
whom would be visiting the Big Apple for the first time.” He said, “They want
to know where to get good pizza, how to get to the Empire State Building, and
if it’s really safe to get on the subway.” Yeah, Mike, it’s safe. Why not take
them on the famous A train up to Harlem or the Lexington Avenue line to El
Barrio, and show your buddies some of the hard core poverty that gives those
communities their Third World look and flavor. The kids will love your
uniforms. Probably join after dropping out of high school. They’re havens for
recruiters.
And a Special Treat for All
But Mike, bless his
Italian soul, wanted to go out to Forest Hills to see his 89-year-old Italian
grandmother. “She always wanted to see me in my Dress Whites,” he said,
pointing to his Navy uniform. But, thank god, she never had to see him in
pieces, like the thousands of parents of the dead or wounded. But hey, I’m
getting dark here. To cheer everybody up, and promote the new movie, X Men: The Last Stand, actors Hallie
Berry, Hugh Jackman and Kelsey Grammer paid a visit to Fleet Week.
The X-Men action movie (also a Play Station 2 game) was described by critic
Jeanne Aufmuth of the Palo Alto
weekly this way: “ . . . Not to mention
the perfect excuse for malicious mutant supremacist Magneto (Ian McKellen), who
believes in survival of the fittest at all costs (‘we are the cure!’), to stage war on those who preach tolerance and
acceptance, among the telekinetic Professor Charles Xavier (Patrick Stewart)
and Secretary of Mutant Affairs Dr. Henry McCoy, aka Beast (played with
rock-solid warmth and intelligence by Kelsey Grammer).
“The stage is set for a catastrophic showdown between man and mutant,
ripe with atmosphere and pregnant with the ramifications of contemporary bias
(think homosexuality, immigration, etc.). Unfortunately playboy director Brett
Ratner (“Rush Hour,” “Red Dragon”) sacrifices socio-political relevance for
flashy pyrotechnics and visceral pleasures galore . . ."
How 'bout that. Art imitates life or is it life imitating the movie and
the video game to pass the time between battles. I guess Charley
Sheen wasn’t available to tell them about his view of 9/11.
Of course, “the [X-Men] stars expressed their gratitude to the Armed
Forces; the troops cheered and snapped photographs of the famous visitors, who
arrived on the ship via helicopter late yesterday morning.” How very well spun.
“Later in the day, Mr. Grammar and his wife, Camille, spent several hours
chatting with the servicemen and –women, taking down some of their e-mail
addresses and vowing to stay in touch [uh huh]. Asked about the widespread
anti-war sentiment in New York and Hollywood, he [Grammar] said, ‘I chalk it up
to lack of thought, and lack of thoughtfulness.’” That’s a line good enough to
be written by Bush himself.
“Marine Corps Sergeant Anthony Nagle of Struthers, Ohio, said he didn’t
think Fleet Week should be about politics,” the Sun reported. “Even though the war’s unpopular, I’ve realized that
there’s a lot of support for the troops,” the 22-year old Sergeant said,
recently returned from Iraq. “I joined the military because I felt that I would
die for my country. I just hope people here will appreciate that.” On behalf of
the people of New York City, sergeant, we hope you and all your fellow service
people live for America, a long time,
and in peace. And not have your innocent devotion exploited by a murderous
government, which brings me back to the resignation of the members of this
cabal who participated in the creation and execution of 9/11 and subsequent
illegal wars . . .
Therefore, we the people of New York City and America, will offer Mr.
Bush and his cohorts the privilege of life in a super-max prison and not the
heartless death by poison injection they gleefully favor for others, just so
long as their departure is swift, complete, and a full confession is made
before an international court of justice. Let the death and destruction and its
daily repetition end. Let life begin and go forward again, as it did for Phil
Connors. And let Punxsutawney
Phil and the forces of nature return us to spring, summer and the blessings of
light and life.
Jerry Mazza,
freelance writer, is a life-long resident of New York City. gvmaz@verizon.net.