Daniel Greenfield September 11, 2023 @ Sultan Knish Blog
As another 9/11 anniversary arrives, we are not in 9/10, a world before the fall of the towers, nor 9/12, the world that was born in the aftermath of the attacks, rather we are in 9/13.In 9/13, the attacks of September 11 are not considered especially significant.
In 9/13, concern about Islamic terrorism ranks in the low single digits behind everything else.In 9/13, a thousand trending concerns, some vital and some completely unimportant, have vastly eclipsed not only the barbaric mass murder of thousands, but the recognition that we are at war.
And that war is far from over.
In 9/13, the people who once specialized in talking about the threat of Islam have increasingly moved on. And it's hard to blame them. No one really wants to hear it anymore. It's yesterday's news.
America's
Islamic population is growing. The open border doesn't just bring in
drug dealers and gang members, but massive numbers of people from the
Muslim world. The Afghan airlift and visas will probably end up
importing at least a quarter of a million as family reunification kicks
in. Our national demographics are being transformed with the same
eventual outcome as Europe.
But it's 9/13. When I write articles
about Islam, they perform worse than anything else. And I don't have the
same raw feeling toward the day that I used to. The ash used to haunt
my nightmares. I snuck past the law enforcement and military presence
downtown to make it to the site, the twisted mess of what was left,
because I needed to know up close that what I had seen was real. But
it's not the same.
I hope it is for you. But I don't think it is for most of us.
Back
then, afterward, I wondered how it was possible to move on and to
forget. I was still young then and I concluded that the answer had to be
time. With time, pain dulls, what seems fresh grows stale. Such things
were abstractions then. I hadn't lived through phases of history or seen
generations change.
That's no longer true. I've seen how people can change. How they can go mad. And how they can forget.
9/13 is all about forgetting.
9/13
means we've done it. We fought in Afghanistan and Iraq. It's time to
move on now. Maybe take a day to remember the people who died in the
towers, in a field, bow our heads and go on with what really matters
today.
What's the alternative? Fighting a forever war?
After
WWI, most people were done with world wars. But world wars weren't done
with them. That's a poor analogy because the Jihad isn't some
nationalistic European grudge match. It's a thousand-year assault on the
rest of the world that will not stop just because we've decided to move
on.
Early on WW2, wags joked that it was the Bore War because
nothing seemed to be happening on the western front. The jokes made
sense at the time. But they stopped being funny really fast.
We're in the Bore War now. But thousand-year-old wars don't remain boring forever.
Americans
recalibrate quickly. We believe that the world is always changing.
TikTok, AI, lazy girls, this week's trend. The past is... past. We
quickly forgot about the airline hijackings once they became yesterday's
news. We're more than ready to forget Islamic terrorism all over again.
But Islam does not forget.
Reality
is what exists even when you stop paying attention to it. Ideology and
opinion don't matter. Marxist ideologies claim to know the future and
believe it will be dramatically different from the past. But the only
reliable way to predict history, as Patrick Henry told a bunch of men
long since dead, is with the lamp of experience. The best way to know
the future is to know the past.
And sometimes that may even mean living in the past.
Living
in the nanosecond has not served our sanity, our reality or our culture
very well. But it means that we are always leaving things behind.
History keeps vanishing in the rearview mirror. The outrage of the
moment fills our minds. And then the next and the one after that. And
all the others to come.
September 11 is not just a day. It was a
wake- up call. And many of us woke up. But it's easier to wake up then
it is to stay awake. And yet the war we're in isn't going anywhere. It's
only getting worse.
Islamists and Islamic terrorists
accomplished their main purposes which were to drag America into
political and military engagements with them, ones that they were bound
to win through sheer staying power, while they infiltrated our political
system and spurred massive immigration into our country.
Islamic
terrorism became a partisan issue. And then it ceased to be even that.
Democrats have embraced Islam and Republicans, as usual, are tagging
along for the ride. Even the conservative landscape is dotted with
apologists, truthers, conspiracists and other sympathizers. Meanwhile
we're losing.
The demographic conditions are coming into place
for a next wave of Islamic terrorism which will depend not on
internationally coordinated attacks, but domestic terror cells following
up on the 'lone wolves' like the Boston Marathon bomber and the Pulse
nightclub shooter.
Every few weeks another Islamic terror plot is
broken up. I wrote about them sometimes. Sometimes someone even reads
the article.
It's 9/13 after all.
Before 9/11, I had a sense of a dimly understood future rushing toward us. I still have that sense now.
Islamic
terrorism is not the only thing that matters. It's not the only thing
that will determine our survival. But it is one of those things. And
it's the one that we've forgotten. And one of these days we will once
again wake up to blood and horror and mass death. Let us hope that this
time we stay awake.
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