The people who like to manipulate us by creating and preserving anger
like to give us slogans. Remember the Maine, Remember the Alamo,
Remember Pearl Harbor, Remember the Raisin! Never Forget!!
All
these things are inevitably forgotten despite the slogan advertising
campaigns and sooner or later we'll get tired of remembering 9/11.
Sloganeers will get tired of milking the faded fear and self-pity and
choreographed mourning. The people who were born too late to remember it
will eventually need to be told to remember something else that some
party needs to cultivate anger about, so as to pass some kind of horror
like the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 or the Patriot Act.
9/11 will be forgotten by most everyone but historians and those who
remember will remember it in context of the things we did and the laws
we passed and the freedom we gave up while we were whipped into a
passion.
Think calls to 'always remember' are genuine and untainted by politics? Wonder why we shouted Remember Hoover! in 1936 but nobody remembers to Remember Bush?
Remember Katrina and at least 1800 fatalities? Why not? We spent
billions and billions on a the Largest government agency in history and
abridged the Bill of Rights in 2001, but we didn't do a damned thing to
improve reactions to natural disasters which you can be sure will occur
more often than a repeat of 9/11.
I suspect that calls to
remember are calls to preserve a mental state in which we can be
manipulated, tricked and sold some unsavory product. Stay angry, stay
afraid and obey.
Remember the Raisin - who could forget?
ReplyDeleteRight up there with FoxNews campaign to Remember
Benghazi (and forget WMDs)
One generation's passion is the next one's "who gives a shit" even when it is actually worth remembering. It's not that I don't think we should remember the attacks, it's that I'd like to stop using it in vain.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking about being urged to remember things which didn't happen or happened differently, Fox will soon enough begin their Christmas war with (among other things) "remember the reason for the season" which of course brings out my lectures on European pagan holidays: things which devout foxers and Sunday School graduates love to forget and hate to hear about.