Tomorrow marks another anniversary of the terrorist attacks that took place on September 11, 2001. We now have an entire generation of people who were not even born. However, those who were living could most likely tell you where they were and what they were doing when the airplanes hit the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in New York City early that morning.
I
was in my teenage daughter’s room braiding her hair when we heard that an
airplane had hit the first tower. I naively assumed that a private pilot had lost
control of his airplane. This is a normal assumption for me because I live in a
world where there are hundreds, even thousands of privately-owned airplanes
flying around the area.
I
was standing at the doorway of my Seminary classroom welcoming my students when
two of them reported that a second airplane had hit a second tower. I knew
immediately that something intentional was happening. I later learned that
there were two additional airliners involved in the attacks on our nation. One
of them hit the Pentagon in Washington, D.C., and the other was forced down by heroic
passengers in a field in Pennsylvania.
I
returned home to learn that the skies were closed to all aircraft, and I
wondered about the whereabouts of my new daughter-in-law who had boarded an airplane
the previous night. My son told me that his wife had called to let him know that
she had arrived safely home in Salt Lake City just prior to the closing of the
air space.
My
son had remained longer in Alaska to do some hunting with his father. They were
fortunate that they had planned to drive to the hunting location rather than
fly. They spent the day preparing to leave the next morning as we anxiously
listened to the news reports. My husband needed something from the shack at the
airport, so I volunteered to go get it.
I
drove to the Lake Spenard/Lake Hood floatplane base and drove around the lakes
to our tie down spot. I did not hear a sound or see any other person in an area
that is usually busy with aircraft landing and taking off. It was totally spooky!
The
next few days were silent because the usual sounds of airplanes were absent.
With an international airport, an Air Force base, and the world’s largest floatplane
base in the Anchorage area, there are always aircraft in the air. Yet, there
were no sounds at all – except for the occasional military jet taking off to
confront moose hunters who were innocently trying to return from their moose hunting
trips.
Tomorrow
we will remember the nearly 3,000 Americans who were killed on that beautiful
September morning. Life changed after September 11 – the differences in the “before”
and “after” situations were huge. This was the first terrorist attack on
America and the first attack on American soil since Pearl Harbor (December 7,
1941).
Americans
were frightened as our leaders took actions to find the source of the attacks.
In their attempt to provide national security from future attacks, Congress and
the White House expanded “military, law enforcement and intelligence powers
aimed at rooting out and stopping terrorists, at home and abroad.” Numerous policy
changes were made with five significant changes discussed in an article published
at this site by Dave Roos. The five changes are quoted/paraphrased/summarized
below.
1. The United States began its global War
on Terror.
Less than a month after 9/11, American troops were invading Afghanistan with
the “support of the American people and the back of NATO allies.” The goal was
to “dismantle al Qaeda, crush the Taliban and kill Osama bin Laden, the
murderous mastermind of the 9/11 attacks.” American military personnel were in
Afghanistan for the next twenty years.
2. Air travel was changed to prevent
future hijackers from boarding commercial aircraft. Security lines
became a nightmare for innocent travelers. For the first time, we had to tell
our friends and family members goodbye before going through security. We now
have to remove our shoes and jackets prior to going through metal detectors or
other full-body scanners to determine if we are carrying dangerous weapons or
materials. We can no longer carry liquids or other fluids over three ounces. We
must take our laptop computers, other electronics, and even food out of our carryon
bags. Every single time that I go through security, I think about what the
terrorists did to America!
3. Anti-Muslim Violence Grew with Americans
attacking Muslims – or those they thought were Muslim. Anti-Muslim attacks
ballooned from 12 in 2000 to 93 in 2001. The number of attacks continues to
grow.
4. Surveillance Increased due to the passing
of the Patriot Act six weeks after 9/11 “as lawmakers scrambled to fix the
intelligence failures that allowed known terrorists to enter the United States
and execute the deadliest plot in American history.”
5. America Became Safer, But Altered. Since 9/11, “Americans
inspired by jihadist ideology have killed 107 people in domestic terrorist attacks
(as of September 2020) … but there have been no large-scale terrorist attacks
on U.S. cities….
“The security measures put in place after
9/11 appear to have foiled or discouraged another ambitious plot by foreign
agents on American soil. But in the process … the country has faced an 'endless' War on Terror that has indelibly altered the fabric of American life.”
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