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We
all remember where we were on 9/11/01. Here's my reminiscence, which I began
writing on Sept. 12, 2001, and updated in the weeks and months that followed
before publication in the October 2001 edition of this magazine.
The world has changed, but the bad
times will be shorter than most people fear.
A few blocks from our office sits
a Westin Hotel that on Sept. 10-11 hosted the Forecast 2002 Conference of the
Steel Service Center Institute. A couple of the programs addressed construction
and tubular goods prospects relevant to the PVF sector, so I dropped in for a
few hours with a mind toward reporting on those predictions.
Right after
the tubular panel on the morning of 9/11/01, the moderator told of stupefying
events unfolding in New York and announced the rest of the conference had been
canceled. Everyone headed toward a TV set in the lobby, some breaking into a
half-trot. About every fifth or sixth person whipped out a cell phone. They
were the only ones talking. The rest of us stood in somber silence with eyes
fixed on the TV screen looking at what resembled a clip from one of those Bruce
Willis cop flicks, except the airplane and familiar building were sickeningly real.
A woman in the group started sobbing. This was bad. This was unprecedented.
This was like Pearl Harbor, I thought, as did
so many others.
I stayed just
a couple of minutes before heading back to the office to be with friends and
colleagues. I was in a hurry to tell them the news if they had not yet heard
it. The hotel parking lot attendant commented about it as I exited, and I
marveled at how fast news travels in this wondrous age of ours. Of course my
co-workers already knew. When I arrived a couple of minutes later, several of
them were chatting in our building's parking lot, having been told that our
office would be closed the rest of the day. My first reaction was this was a
silly thing to do. Even though we are just a runway's distance away from O'Hare
Airport, our unassuming little facility was in no particular danger. Then it
dawned on me. The shutdown wasn't about security. It was about humanity.
Business took a back seat to sharing America's grief on one of the worst
days of American history.
This American
went home and spent most of the rest of the day watching the tube with my
family. Despite constant goading from the TV reporters, none of the authorities
wanted to speculate about the casualty toll. The word "thousands"
passed from a few lips, including the President's. Our family discussed the
potential for the death toll to surpass 10,000. I tried to put it in
perspective for my daughters. Upwards of 2,400 lost their lives at Pearl Harbor, I told them. This was shaping up worse,
made all the more horrific by the victims being noncombatants. By the time this
gets into print, you'll know the terrible tally, but as I write it on Sept. 12,
the body count had barely begun.
As the horror
magnified throughout the day, anger tugged with compassion for possession of
this soul. How sorry I felt for all those innocents killed and injured, which
I've since found out includes a PHCC staff member and, it seems, members of a
UA maintenance crew at the World
Trade Center.
I shuddered thinking about the final desperate moments in the airplanes and
buildings, and about how none of us have any control over meeting such a fate.
How I yearned for retaliation. After our last big salvo against Iraq, news came
out of our running low on cruise missiles. I hoped our production lines had
been running full speed since then. I cheered when CNN showed an ammo dump
blowing up in Kabul,
and felt a bit deflated when it turned out to be the work of Afghan rebels.
Thoughts
veered spiritual contemplating how awful life would be if our universe really
were governed by the monster god worshipped by the suicidal maniacs. Imagine a
deity taking pleasure in random death and destruction, and rewarding those who
carry it out. Islam itself is not the source of this monster god. Islam's message
is one of universal brotherhood and has resounded to the overall benefit of
mankind. It's hardly unprecedented that today's terrorists have twisted that
message into a cult of death. Through the ages, people acting in the name of
various religions have sought salvation in acts of atrocity. It escapes me how
the barrier between good and evil can be so transparent.
Back on earth,
there are the economic questions. It verges on obscene to focus on money
matters in the immediate aftermath, which is why the stock market closed in the
days that followed. But life soon will return to normal for most of us, and the
economic impact will surely add to our burden.
Which brings
me back to that economic forecast conference I attended on 9/11. I could report
the outlooks expressed, but think it would be meaningless. In the space of an
hour, the speakers' suppositions were rendered obsolete. The world had changed.
We are at war.
At this
writing it is unclear exactly how our leaders will conduct this war, but of this
I am sure - the American people will demand more than the diplomatic and
military half-measures taken after the bombings of our embassies and military
targets. This was different. This hit us where we live. This was more revolting
than the attacks on our military forces half a world away, even more disgusting
than Pearl Harbor, where our forces were at least able to fight back a little
bit. One can feel it among our population, among our political leadership,
among our allies, and even among our adversaries.
In the days
following the attacks, partisanship is completely missing from Washington, even
more so than in the first Bush administration when there was significant
opposition to its Persian Gulf initiatives. Liberals and conservatives are all
talking tough and united in support of this administration. Congress just
passed an emergency $22 billion spending bill targeted at cleanup and
intelligence gathering. It was just a first installment.
Internationally,
an unprecedented agreement was reached with mind-numbing swiftness to invoke
the NATO treaty for concerted action against the terrorists. Moreover, it is
revealing to monitor worldwide reaction to the lunacy of Sept. 11. Even those
who worship the monster god felt compelled to suck up to America. Only
Saddam Hussein, who has nothing left to lose, gloated over America's pain.
Vile characters such as Arafat, Ghadafi and the Taliban leaders expressed what
are surely insincere regrets, even while thousands of their demented followers
celebrated the news. Islamic Jihad, Hamas and even bin Laden went to the
trouble of denying responsibility.
When people
who delight in provoking America take care not to provoke us, one senses that
they sense they may have gone too far. Perhaps they recall the famous lament of
Admiral Yamamoto, who said after the attack on Pearl
Harbor that his nation had "awakened a sleeping giant and
filled him with terrible resolve."
I think so. I
think we are through trying to reason with people who regard death as
preferable to life. I think we're fed up with the legalisms of trying to prove
exactly which terrorist has his fingerprints on precisely which bomb. What does
it matter if bin Laden did the World
Trade Center
when we still owe him for the African embassy bombings? Why tie ourselves in
knots trying to prosecute shadowy terrorist cells when our enemies are all too
willing to identify themselves shouting "death to America"
at every opportunity?
I think
President Bush felt the spirit of America in declaring war not only
on the terrorists, but the nations that shelter them. I think our society is
ready to ditch its silly infatuation with cultural relativism and weigh in on
the side of civilization over the world order of medieval superstition favored
by the monster god worshippers. And I think watching those massive towers
collapse rid Americans of any illusions that this war can be fought without
casualties on our part.
So, back to
economics, what's ahead? In the short term, it's hard to see anything but bad
news resulting from this blow against our nation and our people. But keep in
mind that economics is a social science driven by peoples' confidence in the
future. America
is passing into something resembling a wartime economy. This will surely entail
hardships, but it also has united us with a sense of purpose that has been
missing from American life for a long time.
History offers
plenty of evidence of what happens when America grows resolute to assert
its values in this world. The two world wars and the Gulf War resulted in the thorough
defeat of vicious enemies, followed by lengthy periods of unprecedented
prosperity for our nation and its allies. Nobody knows whether the bad times
will last for months or years, but I think it will be shorter than most people
fear. The darkest hours are before the dawn, and on September 11 we passed
through that time.
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