September 10, 2005
On September 11, A Victim’s Father Notes
That 9/11 Commission’s Lee Hamilton Has
“Moved On”
[See also:
VDARE.COM on 9/11]
From
Peter Gadiel
[Previously
by Peter Gadiel:
Report From Occupied America: CT Congregational Minister
Wants Witch Hunt For Immigration Patriots]
I have a book of quotations which
attributes the following to
Winston Churchill:
"Man
will occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of
the time he will pick himself up and continue on."
Treating "continue on" and
"move on" as synonymous, let’s apply Churchill’s
observation about man’s willful ignorance to America’s
attitude toward
9/11 four years after the event.
In particular, an idea that is
being discussed more and more frequently:
"9/11
was a long time ago. It’s time to move on."
For us
families of those
murdered on 9/11, moving on or not is determined by
emotions that are beyond our control. Some have eagerly
moved on with their lives, while many never will; at
least not to the extent of regaining the happiness they
had before the person they loved was taken from them by
savages. Rational thought is not really a factor in
this sort of moving on.
For the rest of the population,
"moving on" will mean different things. If it’s
the trauma induced by the event, their sense of fear,
then by now it’s clear most Americans have recovered.
They have moved on…as they should. If it’s a matter of
remembering
our 3000 dead, then I certainly hope they have not
moved on.
But if we’re talking about
"moving on" in the sense that Churchill referred
to—the failure to
learn from experience, of acting more wisely in the
future than in the past—then moving on, remaining as
ignorant, negligent and stupid as we were before 9/11
is…well, it’s ignorant, negligent and stupid.
And it’s also dangerous. Because it
leaves us open to more terrorist attacks.
But there’s no doubt that millions
of Americans have "moved on" in Churchill’s sense
of the phrase: they’ve stumbled over the truth and
picked themselves up and moved on.
The
9/11 Commission and its staff stated a truth about
9/11 so clearly that a three year old child could
understand it:
"…terrorists cannot plan and carry out attacks in the United States if
they are unable to
enter the country. Yet prior to September 11…no
agency of the U.S. government thought of border security
as a tool in the
counterterrorism arsenal…It
is elemental to border security to know who is coming
into the country…The federal government should
set standards for the issuance of birth certificates and
sources of identification, such as drivers licenses.
Fraud in
identification documents is no longer just a
problem of theft. At…vulnerable facilities, including
gates for boarding aircraft, sources of identification
are the last opportunity to ensure that people are who
they say they are and to check whether they are
terrorists."
[9/11
AND TERRORIST TRAVEL Staff Report of the National
Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States]
That seems pretty clear.
The 9/11 Commissioners and their staff said, to
paraphrase:
"We can’t prevent more terrorism unless
we know who’s entering the country and keep out the bad
guys. We can’t continue allowing people whose true
identities we haven’t verified to get US-issued
drivers’ licenses that purport to identify people
whose real identities are unknown."
But it’s sure as shootin’
that the Commissioners "moved on" (in Churchill’s
sense) with lightning speed.
Immediately
after their public funding
ended and they became the
"Public Discourse Project,"
they forgot the lessons in their own Report and opposed
inclusion of border security and identity document
security in the "9/11
Commission Implementation Act."
That’s sure moving on.
Only a cynic would assume
that the fact that the ex-Commissioners
relied for funding of their Discourse Project from
foundations that have long supported radical open
borders lobbying—the
Ford Foundation,
Carnegie Corporation,
John S. and James L. Knight Foundation—had something
to do with their
"moving on."
And by
gosh and by golly,
former 9/11 Commission
Co-Chair Lee Hamilton, President of the
Woodrow Wilson Center, has "moved on" from
the lessons of his report in real style. He’s now part
of a
Task Force created by the
Migration Policy Institute, an
open borders think tank, to "study"
immigration issues.
His
fellow task force members include some of the most
notorious open borders sellouts in all of the USA:
Frank Sharry of the National Immigration Forum;
Jeanne A. Butterfield,
Executive Director for the American Immigration Lawyers
Association;
Lee Culpepper, Senior Vice President of the National
Restaurant Association; Ted Kennedy;
Doris Meissner;
Tamar Jacoby; John McCain;
Steven Rauschenberger of the National Conference of
State Legislatures (a wholly owned
subsidiary of La Raza).
And who funds the
Migration Policy Institute? Answer:
Carnegie Corporation, Ford
Foundation….
Some of the other financial
supporters of the MPI are: the
Government of Mexico's
Secretariat of Foreign Relations;
Open Society Institute; International Organization
for Migration; National Conference of State
Legislatures;
UN High Commissioner for Refugees; UN Office for
the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs….
Boy oh boy, that Lee
Hamilton. Ain’t he a wonder. Now there’s a guy who can
really show the rest of us how to "move on."
[Congratulate
Hamilton]
Seems like all it needs is
a grant from the Ford Foundation.
Peter Gadiel (email
him) is president of
9/11 Families for a Secure America. His son, 9/11
World Trade Center victim James Gadiel (North Tower, 103rd
floor), was 23 at the time of his murder.