September 11, 2007
John Doe in
Post-9/11 America
By
Michelle Malkin
"If only."
Those are the verbal crutches America must discard in a
post-9/11 world.
If only the State Department hadn't been
so sloppy in
issuing visas to the 9/11 hijackers. If only
police and state troopers had been able to check the
immigration status of the
hijackers who were pulled over for speeding before
the attacks. If only
universities had been
more diligent in monitoring the hijackers'
whereabouts. If only the feds had listened to
alert agents' recommendations to
profile young Arab students in our flight schools.
If only someone, anyone, had
said something when they saw the suspicious behavior
of the jihadists on dry runs.
We have borne the bloody costs of
coulda-woulda-shoulda. Nearly
3,000 dead. The
World Trade Center in ruins. The Pentagon on fire.
The fields at
Shanksville, Pa., scarred.
Six years later, we can no longer afford
hindsight heavy breathing. Memory must guide action. And
action must be taken without apology.
Zogby released a poll for the sixth
anniversary of the 9/11 attacks
showing that "77 percent of those living in the
East and 46 percent of those living in the West—61
percent overall—said they think about the attacks at
least weekly. Eighty-one percent—90 percent in the East
and 75 percent in the West—said the attacks were the
most significant historical events of their lives."
That's good news. But remembrance
without resistance to jihad and its enablers is a recipe
for another 9/11.
Not every American wears a military
uniform. Every American, however, has a role to play in
protecting our homeland—not just from Muslim terrorists,
but from their financiers, their public relations
machine, their sharia-pimping activists, the anti-war
goons, the civil liberties absolutists, and the academic
apologists for our enemies.
Earlier this year, jihadist enablers
attempted to intimidate citizen whistleblowers who said
something about the suspicious behavior of
six imams on a US Airways flight in Minneapolis/St.
Paul. The legal battle to protect ordinary Americans
from such lawsuits gave rise to the
John Doe movement.
Pro bono lawyers and GOP members of
Congress stepped up to provide protection. And Americans
across the country expressed solidarity with the
airline passengers targeted by the
Council on American-Islamic Relations and its ilk.
The Left greeted the
John Doe movement with
mockery and derision, preferring instead to suck its
collective thumb, wield the grievance card and play the
blame game. But it's the John Does of the country, not
the race-hustling litigators and speech-stiflers, who
will help prevent the next terrorist attack. They are
John Does like Brian Morgenstern, the young Circuit City
employee who contacted authorities after viewing a
jihadist training video by the
Fort Dix Six Plotters.
"It was a difficult decision at
first,"
Morgenstern told Fox News. "I went home, and I talked
with my family about it. And we all came to the general
conclusion that it was the right thing to do." [Brian
Morgenstern Breaks His Silence on Blowing the Whistle on
the Ft. Dix 6, May 30, 2007]
No regrets. No apologies. And no "if
onlys."
Not everyone is willing to do the right
thing. When the FBI recently asked for the public's help
in
identifying two men acting suspiciously on Pacific
Northwest ferries, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer
newspaper
refused to run the photos—and instead held
a reader haiku contest mocking the terrorism
concerns.
When two young Muslim men were
arrested and indicted on weapons and terrorism charges
after being stopped near a naval base in Goose
Creek, S.C., Muslim civil rights groups immediately
cried racism and suggested that law enforcement
officials were bigoted and paranoid.
There are 9/10 people and there are 9/12
people. 9/10 people live in a world of make-believe,
where sensitivity trumps security and second-guessing is
their only acceptable homeland security policy. 9/12
people are the John Does in your neighborhood, on your
plane, train or bus, moving ahead with their lives but
always on alert.
We live in post-9/11 reality where
"Never forget" is not just a once-a-year slogan.
It's a 24/7 frame of mind.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."
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