How 9/11 Defines America

William Kristol wrote about how the heroic response to 9/11 defines America in this 2004 editorial:

New York Times columnist Tom Friedman recently criticized the Bush administration for being “addicted to 9/11.” He praised John Kerry for “wanting to put terrorism back into perspective.” Friedman continued, “I want a president who can one day restore Sept. 11th to its rightful place on the calendar: as the day after Sept. 10th and before Sept. 12th. I do not want it to become a day that defines us. Because ultimately Sept. 11th is about them–the bad guys–not about us. We’re about the Fourth of July.” We at THE WEEKLY STANDARD yield to no one in our loyalty to the Fourth of July. But September 11, 2001, also cannot help but define us 21st-century Americans. And it defines us not simply in terms of those we have to fight, and defeat. For September 11 is not simply about “the bad guys,” about the attacks on America. September 11 is also about our response. It is about the police and firefighters in New York, the servicemen and women in the Pentagon, and the passengers and crew of United Flight 93. September 11 was a day of infamy. But it was also a day of bravery, and of nobility. And it could go down in history as a day that began an era in which the American people, and their leaders, rose to the challenges before them–an era in which they acted wisely, and steadfastly, and honorably. September 11 saw horrible hours. But it could also be the beginning of one of America’s finest hours. The chances of that will be greatest under President Bush.

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