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Anti-War Movement
Preceded The War
Kieran Michael Lalor
July 3,
2005
The feigned
outrage over Karl Rove's criticism of the liberal response to
the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on this country forced
me to recall what liberals I encountered were saying in the days
immediately after the savage attacks.
I was then in my
first few weeks at Pace Law School with a front-row seat to the
left's post-September 11 reaction. September 11 challenged us as
individuals, as law students, and as Americans. America must
respond forcefully, I thought, and that response will be
definitive as it reverberates throughout the world for decades
to come.
The legal system
was about to face a radical upheaval in the difficult days
ahead. Our entire legal and military structure had failed to
protect us from a few men armed only with hatred, nihilism and
box-cutters. The laws must be changed, made stronger and more
flexible. How should the perpetrators, their associates and
their nations of origin be treated? What should be the U.S.
military response? How should our chaotic immigration system be
reformed? There were abundant grave questions facing a class of
aspiring lawyers that day.
Yet my
professor, the law school's former dean, entered the classroom
and framed the debate with this question: "The United States was
attacked by terrorists on Tuesday. Can you think of a time when
the United States acted as terrorists?" I was utterly
speechless, as were many of my classmates.
Answering his
own question, he mentioned the "My Lai massacre" in Vietnam,
slavery and the treatment of American Indians as examples of
American terrorism. Twenty-five miles from Ground Zero, where
rescuers struggled in hopes of finding survivors, this law
professor chose to focus on the blemishes in our history as an
introduction to our first post-September 11 class. I have to
give him credit for being on the cutting edge of liberalism
because at this point the now notorious International Freedom
Center slated to occupy Ground Zero was just a twinkle in the
left's eye.
My professor set
the stage for a round of America-bashing and a student from
Ethiopia, as if on cue, unleashed a blistering condemnation of
the United States for not doing more about the bloodshed in
Rwanda in the early 1990s.
My professor
nodded his head approvingly at the outlandish notion that
America's inability to stop Rwandans from killing each other was
somehow equal to suicide hijackers flying planes into office
buildings. My head spun. What possible correlation could exist
between the two events?
This shocking
scene became even more ridiculous when the Ethiopian student
concluded his vitriolic, anti-American remarks. Another
classmate, an Egyptian, rose to her feet and actually applauded
this death-to-America venom, and began an impassioned "don't
hate me because I am a Muslim" soliloquy.
Later that day I
caught up with my Ethiopian classmate and called him on his
rant. We had a brief exchange before he labeled me a racist for
suggesting the U.S was the greatest country on Earth and that he
was, perhaps, lucky to be here.
At a memorial
service, another law professor opined that if the inevitable war
led to the death of a single civilian, the war could not be
considered just. His colleague then expressed his fear some
Arabs would be racially profiled. Amazingly, the antiwar
movement had preceded the war.
In the weeks
after, detention of Taliban terrorists captured on the
battlefield in Afghanistan was roundly criticized. The military
tribunals the government proposed to adjudicate the unlawful
combatants were condemned as gross violations of the terrorists'
civil liberties.
A few months
later, I left law school when my Marine Corps Reserve Unit was
called to active service. We prepared for the war that had been
brought to our shores on September 11 and resolved to defeat the
enemy.
At school, some
students and the bulk of the faculty seemed markedly unconcerned
about U.S. victory or defeat. There was a reflexive, leftist
preoccupation with trying to understand, defend, and excuse al
Qaeda. The rhetorical energies of my teachers and some
classmates were focused not upon responding or defending the
country but on proving the U.S was somehow to blame.
Mr. Rove's words
are exactly correct. The liberal response to September 11, 2001,
was pathetic.
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