Yesterday a tape was released of a
20-minute phone “conversation” between various people and
Betty Ong. Ms. Ong was a flight attendant on American Airline’s
ill-fated flight 11. AA11
was deliberately flown into Tower 1 of the World Trade Center in
the September 11, 2001 attack on the United States and the
modern civilized world.
I include the civilized world because too
many of us either forget or don’t know that this isn’t a war
being waged against America alone.
The USA is an obvious focal point of the modern world
culture that this Fundamental Islamic Movement wishes to over
through.
Their obsession with the international
business site called the World Trade Center; the arteries into
Manhattan, the island that commercializes and symbolizes this
culture; and the US seat of government and military, the
powerful guardian of the culture that they hate, is proof that
every country that is part of this culture is their enemy.
Personally, I’ve never been one for
subtlety, but who could miss the diversity of the people who are
American and stand up for America both a citizens, spokesmen,
and in their heroic deeds; just like Betty Ong.
One just has to look at any newscast, even Aljazeera,
to see an Hispanic or Black high ranking military officer;
the varied look of the most powerful people in our government
and military. The doctors, nurses and emergency workers, as well as the
police and firefighters, and of course our work-a-day citizens
all cover the spectrum of humanity from one end to the other.
The morning of 9/11 I was writing at my
computer when I heard the news of the first plain hitting the
one of the towers. I
ran upstairs and turned on Fox News in time to hear the
speculation and watch the second plain hit the other tower.
As soon as my wife and I got back from picking our
youngest up from their schools, we called our oldest back home
from work, with only one break, I spent the rest of the day
standing before the TV watching events unfold.
When my son got home we left the family in the living
room and went to load and safely stow some guns and ammo in
preparation for the unthinkable.
The events of 9/11 changed America.
With total disregard to the Casper-milk-toast, unisex
image of the new American, which the left had spent 40
years creating in our schools and media, Americans who’d
closeted their true selves came roaring out of their closets. They donned their reap faces, hung their flags, rolled up
their sleeves and got to work at supporting their country. And they did it immediately.
On that day I saw Americans running to, as
well as away from the site of the attack.
To me the black man who felt compelled to actually wrap
himself in our flag and travel to what would be called ground
zero was representative of what we all wished we could have
done. The three
firemen planting the flag in a mound of rubble was so
reminiscent of the Iwo Jima scene that told my generation what
is was to be an American man; there was the actor,
ex-firefighter, who reportedly joined his former comrades
digging in the rubble.
Our neighbors left their jobs and families,
put on their uniforms and patrolled our streets and
transit-ports. All the soldiers, sailors, marines and airmen – regular and
guards – went off to battle.
For a brief moment politicians became American statesmen
and acted in consort with American statesmen to insure the
ensuing battle would be fought on other than American soil.
A President and his staff stand tall in the
faces of the fearful and power/Frank/Mark/Rubble/Yen hungry, and
those who work to abolish the America identity.
Today I heard the calm clear voice of an
American hero. Betty
Ong is a woman I want my young girls to know about.
She had a job to do and she did it.
While others keeping the passengers calm and ready for
what might come next (a landing for the highjackers to negotiate
with authorities, most must have though), Betty and Amy Sweeney,
using cell phones spoke to American Airlines support and
supervisory personnel on the ground. They were passing on
crucial information, data that under different circumstances may
have been used to help authorities secure the safe release of
the passengers and crew. Betty Ong and Amy Sweeney did this right up to the end of
Flight AA11.
Copyright
January 2004 Joseph De Matteo all rights reserved.
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