Part 3 of 3

http://bigpeace.com/dladams/2010/09/01/crisis-of-commemoration-part-3-collis
ion-of-past-present-and-future/#more-22533

Crisis of Commemoration Part 3: Collision of Past, Present, and Future


Posted by D.L. Adams <http://bigpeace.com/author/dladams/>  Sep 1st 2010 at
5:06 pm in History <http://bigpeace.com/category/history/> , Islamic
extremism <http://bigpeace.com/category/islamic-extremism/> , ground zero
mosque <http://bigpeace.com/category/ground-zero-mosque/>  | Comments (11)
<http://bigpeace.com/dladams/2010/09/01/crisis-of-commemoration-part-3-colli
sion-of-past-present-and-future/#idc-container> 

See part 1 here
<http://bigpeace.com/dladams/2010/08/30/crisis-of-commemoration-part-1-histo
ry-returns-with-a-vengeance/>  and part 2 here
<http://bigpeace.com/dladams/2010/08/31/crisis-of-commemoration-part-2-the-g
ettysburg-casino-and-the-ground-zero-mosque/> .

American character has not significantly changed since the 1830s and de
Tocqueville's travels. As we look to the future we sometimes inadvertently
leave things and people behind to our later regret.

The fundamental purpose of commemoration is to remember. There is a purpose
to memory - we're supposed to honor our past and our heroes and learn from
their deeds and their character.

De Tocqueville noted that we are a forward looking people; we are always
advancing, improving. These are among the qualities of our people that make
this a great country admired throughout the world.

A united country: The determination of the battleground decided the issue of
Confederate independence. The compassion and mutual respect of these
veterans was fundamentally important in re-uniting the sections after the
horror of the war. Now we are engaged in another great war, a long-running
war that is now ramping up. A united country only can stand against an old
civilizational enemy now resurgent once again. Have we learned the lessons
of our history?

A united country: The determination of the battleground decided the issue of
Confederate independence. The compassion and mutual respect of these
veterans was fundamentally important in re-uniting the sections after the
horror of the war. Now we are engaged in another great war, a long-running
war that is now ramping up. A united country only can stand against an old
civilizational enemy now resurgent. Our heroes and our hallowed grounds are
more important now than ever before.

But we should also be learning, and remembering. We are all made greater by
our heroes and the great things that they did. If they and their sacrifices
are forgotten we have learned nothing.

By what logic can it be appropriate for a casino to be sited on the
battleground of Gettysburg? What other than political correctness,
ignorance, and a failure of national will can be behind our allowing the
construction a mosque on the Ground Zero site where adherents of Islam,
slaves of Allah, committed atrocities and the mass murder of Americans - all
in the name of Allah and Islam?

What does it say about us that we would forever forge a link between a
casino with the site of the great battle (so far) of American history or
link our American innocents with their killers at Ground Zero? What it says
is that since the heroes of Gettysburg and the avengers of Pearl Harbor we
have lost a great deal - we must get it back.

This is the foundation of our great history - we cannot advance if we erase
our past as a "sacrifice" to "progress." How can our civilization survive if
the great heroes of the past are tossed aside for a construction project, or
for a casino, or for some politically correct trope that tolerance for
intolerance must be the order of the day? The greatest error to be seen in
these often contentious debates about the mosque and the casino is that some
in a vocal minority, and some in positions of high honor and responsibility
do not appear to believe that this civilization is worthy of saving.

We are a forward moving people, we are not obsessed with the past. It is
only ten years since 9/11. Since that time we have forgotten that Ground
Zero is the epicenter
<http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.6800/pub_detail.asp>
of American life. We forgot how important our American innocents are, forgot
the heroes of Flight 93 and their bravery - we pretended that 9/11 was not
about Islam at all, but about "hijacking radical extremists who did not
understand their Islamic doctrine of peace." In the years since we have
challenged the jihadists in their understanding of their own ideology and
held to the absurd position that we know more than they do about Islam - no
longer. We wanted Islam to be something that it is not, a "religion of
peace."

Prior to September 11, 2001 most Americans knew nothing about Islam, its
doctrine, its history, and the actions of its adherents around the world -
this <http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/LH17Ak01.html>  is no longer
true. Ours is the first society in history to have a comprehensive and still
growing understanding of Islam, what we do or don't do with this knowledge
will determine the fate of the world.

September 11th was a staggering shock for the United States and signaled a
complete shift in how the world works or doesn't. The mosque controversy at
Ground Zero is important in the extreme because it reminds us of these
things, things that we never should have forgotten.

Since the general acceptance of multiculturalism
<http://www.newenglishreview.org/custpage.cfm/frm/52227/sec_id/52227>  in
our culture within the last several decades, a concept that assumes an
equivalence in morality, ethics, and quality across cultures and societies
that is not supported by any evidence the idea of "offending" one group with
criticism, or even the suggestion that one group or idea is better than
another have become anathema in the United States. The ridiculous suggestion
is even made by some of the more less-informed that awareness of Islam
<http://www.wnd.com/index.php?pageId=194997>  and Sharia law is a symptom of
bigotry and intolerance. The supporters of the mosque stake out the high
moral ground with ignorance, political correctness and fantasies of how they
wish Islam to be rather than what it is. Moral and ethical inversions are
the mainstream in our adrift culture.

Hand in hand with multiculturalism is the rise of moral and ethical
relativism. This is the failure (and often now the inability) to
discriminate between right and wrong, good and evil. Such dichotomies are
considered by adherents of this intellectually empty belief system to be
outmoded and obsolete and merely the tools of intolerance, discrimination,
and social and economic disparity. The advance then of an oppositional and
intolerant ideology into our land of freedom and tolerance, even after
repeated atrocities against us by adherents of that ideology (following it
to the letter), is understandable.

Many Americans are no longer able to tell the good from the bad
<http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.6649/pub_detail.asp> .
This then makes our heroes and their surety all the more important. Their
example of bravery, sacrifice, and honor will always stand as testimony to
the core nature of American character while some of us today go far astray.

Though common sense and history both definitively show that not all groups
or ideas are equal and that some are better than others we are now bizarrely
reluctant to oppose an ideology whose purpose
<http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/244545/inventing-moderate-islam-andr
ew-c-mccarthy>  is our destruction. Multiculturalism then is national
suicide.

A monument to the ideology of the killers
<http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=38673>  of 9/11 is not only
inappropriate and disrespectful to the victims and their families and our
national sensibilities it also sends a message of national weakness to those
who continue to desire to strike us our death blow. Tolerance for such
ideologies is self-destructive.

Unlimited tolerance must lead to the disappearance of tolerance. If we
extend unlimited tolerance even to those who are intolerant, if we are not
prepared to defend a tolerant society against the onslaught of the
intolerant, then the tolerant will be destroyed, and tolerance with them. We
should therefore claim, in the name of tolerance, the right not to tolerate
the intolerant.  (Karl Popper, The Open Society and Its Enemies)

Our heroes, once acknowledged and commemorated, should linger with us in
perpetuity.

The copse of trees at Gettysburg. This is the climax point of Pickett's
Charge, near where Armistead was shot down crossing the stone wall and the
20th Massachusetts flanked the attacking Confederates. The book in bronze in
front of the copse if symbolic of The copse of trees at Gettysburg. This is
the climax point of the battle, Pickett's Charge, July 3, 1863. The bronze
book in front of the copse is symbolic of indefinite, endless remembrance.
Can we forget our heroes of Gettysburg or our innocent fellow Americans of
9/11, Fort Hood, and so many other places? Our heroes and our murdered
innocents are meant to linger with us forever - this is one of the lessons
of the silent, brooding, impressive monuments on our Civil War
battlegrounds. (Image source
<http://www.gettysburg.stonesentinels.com/Places/Copse.php> .)

The challenges that every generation face make the soldiers of Gettysburg
and the victims of 9/11 all the more important to our country, and
vulnerable. Challenges never end, but our rare and special heroes do if we
don't keep them close - commemoration and emulation of them are the
foundations of our future. Our difficulty in appreciating them and learning
their lessons signals a significant cultural crisis.

The construction of a casino on the battleground of Gettysburg will dishonor
the site and sully the hallowed memory of the men who fought there. The
construction of a monument to the ideology behind 9/11 on the site of Ground
Zero is a symbolic act of conquest and national submission. If we permit our
national sites of bravery, sacrifice, and of violation be confused with the
economic, moral, and ethical challenges and failures of today our timeless
history will be muddled and lost and our future deconstructed.

There can be no mosque on the site of Ground Zero where adherents of Islam
committed mass murder against innocent Americans because of Islam.There can
be no mosque on the site of Ground Zero where adherents of Islam committed
mass murder against innocent Americans because of Islam.

We have an obligation to remember and to commemorate so that the continuity
of our society is built upon solid ground and truth and not wisps of
confusion, and myth. If we fail the admirable example of our heroes and our
righteous anger at the cruel losses we have suffered will pass away forever
from our memory and we will be the worse for it all.






 



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