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The
Coming Together of America
September 13, 2001
By John L.
Perry
contributor to Newsmax.com
NEWSMAX.COM
The
worst of times bring out the best in Americans. It's happening at
this moment, compatriots surging to support this nation, its values,
its president.
Nor is it altogether
a pretty picture in its magnificence.
In the first
day or so after the Eleventh of September terrorist assault on America,
the president gave the appearance of being off stride, somewhat
unsure of where he was going. There was for a short while there,
without question, a frightfully dangerous leadership vacuum at the
nation's very pinnacle.
The mantle
of leadership slipped from his shoulders
and fell onto those
of "ordinary" Americans, who stepped up to the challenge
and proved to be, to the contrary, quite extraordinary.
A Most-Uncommon
People
This spontaneous manifestation of inner quality came forth in the
most-uncommon of common men and women of New York City within seconds
after the blows fell.
Two young men
working near the top of one of the World Trade Center towers grasped
a wheel-chair-bound woman and, between them, carried her
step by agonizing step down more than 80 flights of stairs
to the safety of an ambulance. It took them an hour. It was their
finest.
Two fellow
victims, coated with the towers' gray dust-to-dust mantle and looking
more like refugees from an Egyptian-mummy horror movie, assisted
one another away from the scene. It was impossible to tell their
gender, their race, their religion, their politics. The beauty of
it was it didn't matter, to them or anyone else.
Despite their
coats of dust, it was written all over them that they were Americans.
And they were setting an example, carried around and around the
globe, of what it is to be American.
America's
New Exemplars
New Yorkers, those inimitable souls so often caricatured as brusque,
rude, arrogant, pushy, self-centered
those New Yorkers disappeared.
In their place were the same individuals, now brave, selfless, caring,
loving, self-sacrificing
those are the New Yorkers now become
the world's ineradicable image of what Americans are truly like.
This nation
owes them an irredeemable debt. They need to know their fellow Americans
are proud of them, beyond words.
Off the island
of Manhattan and from there all across this stunned land has spread
this new Americanism, which on closer examination
is nothing other than the true Americanism that has been here all
along, ever since there was an America.
These were
individual Americans asserting individual leadership, not waiting
for their mayors, their governors, their senators and representatives
or even their president to lead them. They led one another.
You Can
Tell It Where You Live
Every American has seen that on television from the terror sites,
seen it in their neighbors wherever they live, seen it in their
own families, seen it in themselves.
On the second
day, the president began to emerge as the kind of leader demanded
by the occasion. It was almost as if, overnight, George W. Bush
had come of age politically, as if he had taken his new strength,
his now-certain direction, from his people, rather than they from
him.
Is that a condemnation?
Not at all. In fact, it may just be the finest accolade any president
could ask, the most-fitting admiration that any people could earn.
What a strange,
exhilarating chemistry this has been, this coming together of America,
this coalescence of a nation and its leader.
It is not coming
about without its blemishes.
A Fallout
of Filth
As would be expected, NewsMax.com has been covered in e-mail
its own form of fallout from the terrorist explosions. Seeping into
this outpouring has been the most-sickening, most-revolting commentary
imaginable - no, it slithers beyond the imaginable.
The thrust
of those commentaries the worldwide Internet graffiti afforded
the sane and the insane alike has been to lunge upon the
nation's tragedy as a means of venting pent-up venom against George
W. Bush left over from the close presidential campaign.
Right there
among the worst were the usual suspects, led by the non-journalist
"news" anchors of network television. They were doing
their dead-level best to paint the president as a coward playing
politics at a time of national crisis.
Throughout
American history, in times of national peril, there have always
been such croakings from the gutter. George Washington was spitefully
used, accused as a traitor. Abraham Lincoln was calumniated as looking
like an ape. Franklin D. Roosevelt was slandered mercilessly even
as the outcome of World War II was still in doubt. Ronald Reagan
was ridiculed, belittled and demeaned.
And We Can
Do It Again
But those canards never tore apart the fabric of the nation. Instead,
the cumulative effect was to make America that much stronger, to
contribute to the coming together of the nation. The same will happen
again, for most Americans cannot abide such garbage.
To dwell on
those fulminations would be to invite being sucked into the maelstrom
of hatred, to answer in kind would be to join the madness.
It is important to know such feelings are there, like shards of
glass mingled amid the debris of terrorism, to understand them and
never to forget that hatred lives.
But they are
only a miniscule counterpoint to the overwhelming outpouring of
supportive sentiments this national tragedy has evoked. The American
people are fundamentally decent, caring people, and always have
been.
A Tolerance
So Grand
One of the exasperating, yet thrilling, attributes of this unique
democracy is that it can be so great as it is and yet accommodate
within itself the inescapable bad seed.
There will
be rough days indeed, if a prediction is in order, the worst
is yet to come. America and Americans will be tested still more.
But they will come through it, without slipping into the attributes
of those who hate America.
The president
will have days in which he is not his very best. He, too, is human.
When those inevitable slips occur, the American people are strong
and good enough to take up the slack.
And when they
stumble, this president is the kind of man who is strong enough
to reach out a hand and help his nation through its worst times.
Now Joined
at the Heart
Indeed, the two together, George W. Bush and the American people,
like the terror-dusted pair seen helping one another through the
Eleventh of September horror, will make it through whatever perils
await.
There has been
a temptation admittedly here to feel the president
did not move far enough, swiftly enough to right the terrible wrong
done America.
That is an
understandable, though not altogether flattering, human impulse
one it is well to resist.
It now is becoming
apparent that the president is moving in a steady, step-by-step
fashion, resolutely, sure-footedly. The goal has been set
an all-out war on terrorism worldwide.
One Sure
Step at a Time
A nation does not arrive at such a momentous goal by lurching. And
this president is proving himself not a lurcher.
George W. Bush
is doing what has to be done at the outset in order to do the ultimate
thing right.
It is well
worth the time it takes.
In the process,
he is helping create, while building upon, a newly come-together
America.
When the sun
rose on the Eleventh of September, this was an unhappily divided
nation, symbolized by the narrow split on Capitol Hill, a president
who barely won election and a populace absorbed in its own selfishness
and trivia. Acrimony and fear ran deeply.
What a Difference
a Disaster Makes
The terrorist attacks changed all that in a blinding flash. Suddenly,
the important things in life beginning with life, itself
came into clear focus. People, and those who love them, towered
taller than any steel skyscrapers. Loved ones, rather than love
of possessions and perquisites, became the priceless treasures.
One moment
there were Bush's political opponents cutting him up in Congress.
The next, the same were refusing to comment on anything divisive.
They could not clamber aboard fast enough. Don't demean them. They
are welcome essential if this nation is to endure.
Possibly the
oratory most eloquent in all this tragedy so far came from one of
Bush's harshest critics, Sen. Charles Schumer of New York. Without
notes, what he had to say came from the heart. He did his city,
his state and, yes, the nation proud.
There will
be more and more of this as the nation flings its arms around itself.
A long, dangerous
road twists ahead.
Care Enough
to Get the Very Worst
There needs to be certainty, dead certainty, as to who did this
to America, and with whose conniving help.
To lurch to
an easy conclusion that it is the coward in the cave in Afghanistan
and miss the larger fact that the ultimate culprit could be someone
like Saddam Hussein would be unacceptable.
If the terrorists
could find the time to contrive the Eleventh of September attacks,
the United States of America has the time, the maturity and the
resolution to bring down the hammer where it hurts most.
What you are
witnessing is America's coming together at long last.
The Unintended
Consequence
The beauty, amid all the horror, is that this was not at all what
the terrorists had in mind to accomplish as they aimed the stolen
airliners to their doom.
They never
knew that this is America, and there is nothing that Americans
come together cannot do.
John L. Perry,
a prize-winning newspaper editor and writer who served on White
House staffs of two presidents, is senior editor and a regular columnist
for NewsMax.com.
Reproduced
with the permission of NewsMax.com
. All rights reserved
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