Tuesday, September 12, 2006

Fall Fashion Statement: Fear is the new black

Finally, it's September 12.

I've been avoiding the bullshit about September 11 all weekend. By bullshit I mean the false mourning of the Media and the politicalization of our sorrow over that horrible day by the President. Oh, and the out-right lies by ABC/Disney.

Sickening. And a slap in the face to those who died that day - to all who lived through it and all who lost someone they loved.

So, I avoided all contact with it.

It is beyond shameful"


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Global Media Abhors US Response to 9/11


September 11, Permanent Fear

"Humanity now is under the impression of living in a state of permanent insecurity, where fears of violent death and of a nasty, brutish, and short life dominate," political scientist Pierre Hassner explained already in 2003. "The issue therefore, has become that, in order to eliminate fear of the other - by definition a mysterious, multiform, and more or less anonymous other - further risks are taken that give birth to other fears: the risks of outrages to personal freedom and the fear of violence coming from those same states or empires that we had charged with protecting us."



Dedicating September 11th to Bush

George W. Bush is an ordinary human being, in fact a quite stupid one. So are all of his handlers. They are ordinary people, and we have the power, should we choose to use it, to throw them out of our public housing.



Gaping Holes in the 9/11 Narrative

After five years of official deceit, it is not too difficult to believe that the isolation of those prisoners was done less for reasons of learning the truth about 9/11 and more in an effort to politically manage the narrative released to the public.



The Day That Changed Everything Wasn't 9/11

A recent poll tells us that only 14% of Americans feel safer now than they did five years ago. Seventy-nine percent expect another attack on U.S. soil within the next year, and 60% think it's likely in the next few months. Four out of five say that "we will always have to live with the threat of terrorism," though only one in five admits to being "personally very concerned about an attack" in his or her own area. A Florida woman captured the prevailing mood when she told a reporter: "When I stop to think about it, I don't feel very safe. But then again, on a day-to-day basis, I feel fine." As Rep. Peter King, chair of the House Homeland Security Committee, put it: "It's like we live in two parallel existences."



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The Monsters Are Due On Maple Street.


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Do you want to stop living in fear? Impeach Bush. It's that simple.

Impeach Bush.

Impeach Bush.

Impeach Bush.

Impeach Bush.

Impeach Bush.

3 comments:

eyes_only4him said...

I thought I was the only one avoiding talking about that day..

maybe it makes me a bad amreican, but I am so sick of hearing about it..it happend, it sucks, our presddient is a dick face and is killing innocnet people in the wrong damn conuntry..

anyhoo...thanks for stopping by..I hope to see you again;)

Laura Elizabeth said...

From what I've been reading lots of people tried to ignore yesterday.

No problem on stopping by your blog - I love it!

TrappedInColorado said...

I avoided it also. Americans like to wallow in that day. Use it to try and say "Look.. we don't have it so good." not realizing that tens of thousands of Iraq people are dead,, more American soldiers dead than the number killed on that day. The terrorist's greatest weapon by far? Apathy.