I am awakened
by the sounds of the "Star Spangled Banner" coming from the lobby of the
hotel where we have spent the night in Flagstaff. The memorial service has
begun at the National Cathedral in Washington, DC, and it is on the TV in
the lobby. I go down to check it out.
A group of older black women
are standing there watching it, tears in their eyes. I am reminded by a
sign we saw on the way into town on a Hopi Indian store: "America Land of
the Free Home of the Brave." You probably can't find two groups more denied
the American Dream than these two and yet they grieve like everyone else
over the attack in New York.
Passing through the Indian
reservations of Arizona and New Mexico you are struck by the abject poverty
of these places, and reminded of the 500 years of state-sponsored terrorism
against these people, a virtual genocide. How many millions were killed by
the American settlers and soldiers? I can't remember now. But the living
results are brutally evident in the shacks and trailers along old Route
66.
My wife and I make our way into town and find a Catholic
church, San Francisco de Asis, where a service is being held to honor the
dead. The church itself is remarkable for its matriarchal images, with a
large mural of Mary and her mother and her family above the altar, and then
a statue of her in place of the usual crucified Jesus.
We
stand, as there is no room to sit. Minutes go by and the service does not
begin. The priest comes and takes a seat in the 7th row pew as if he were
just another mourner. After a long while, someone gets up from her pew and
reads from the bible -- but the reading is not the one about vengeance and
bloodshed. Rather, it's about beating our swords into plowshares. Oops, off
message!
We leave the church and both of us are filled with an
overwhelming despair. We still have not heard from friends in Manhattan or
from our friend Barbara who works at the Pentagon. We pass by a store --
"Guns and Groceries," the sign proclaims. On the way out of town, the cell
phone rings. It is Barbara and her husband Sam calling from outside the
Pentagon. She tells me she is OK and that there is a large airplane wheel
sticking out of the side of the building where she works as a clerical. The
morning of the crash she was late for work because she was taking Sam to
the airport. I start to cry again. She says thanks and "Don't worry I'm
OK," and I hear Sam cracking in the background "That's debatable" and they
both laugh.
I pull off the road in Winslow, Arizona, and tell
Kathleen I want to get a picture of her on a corner. She doesn't know why
and, knowing her intense dislike of The Eagles, I tell her it's a song by
Jackson Browne (which is technically true; he co-wrote it). She obliges,
but when she reads this I'll be in big trouble.
I continue to
be amazed at the large number of people -- both on the radio and those we
run into -- who are completely opposed to some half-cocked military
response to what has happened. No matter what the media tells you or shows
you, I am convinced there is a majority of Americans who, though they want
justice and want to be protected from further attacks, do not want George
W. Bush to start sounding like Dr. Strangelove.
Speaking of
Strangelove, this past week began with one of the most powerful pieces on
"60 Minutes" in a long time. They laid it all out: How the United States --
and specifically Henry Kissinger -- plotted to overthrow
the democratically-elected president of Chile in the early 1970s. The
plot succeeded, President Allende was assassinated, and thousands of
other Chileans were brutally tortured and murdered. Today, many within the
new government of Chile would like to put Kissinger on trial for these acts
of terrorism. Do you think the United States will give him
up?
Well, that story was forgotten, 48 hours later, as quickly as
it had been forgotten 30 years ago.
No one wants
to talk about politics right now -- except our installed leaders
in Washington. Trust me, they are talking politics night and day, and
those discussions involve sending our kids off to fight some invisible
enemy and to indiscriminately bomb Afghans or whoever they think will make
us Americans feel good.
I feel I have a responsibility as one
of those Americans who doesn't feel good right now to speak out and say
what needs to be said: That we, the United States of America, are culpable
in committing so many acts of terror and bloodshed that we had better get a
clue about the culture of violence in which we have been active
participants. I know it's a hard thing to hear right now, but if I and
others don't say it, I fear we will soon be in a war that will do NOTHING
to protect us from the next terrorist attack.
We pass over the
Continental Divide and Rush Limbaugh babbles on about whom we must bomb. He
signs off, and I am sure he is on his way down to the nearest recruiting
station to sign up -- for surely he would not expect your son or daughter
to risk their lives for freedom while he just sits back and enjoys his new
half-billion dollar contract.
Coming into Albuquerque, Kathleen is
leafing through the Frommer's travel guide for a place to spend the night.
She finds what seems like a nice spot near the White Sands national park,
but then reads this passage:
"Occasionally the road to the hotel is
closed for nearby missile tests."
Yes, welcome to New Mexico, the
"Land of Enchantment," just one big testing ground brought to you by the
originators of every single weapon of mass destruction known to man. We opt
for the downtown Hyatt.
The hotel is like a ghost town. "Every
convention cancelled," the lady at the counter tells us. I ask the bellman
how many people are actually here tonight.
"9.9 percent
occupancy," he tells me. Hmmm. Why not just say 10%?
I guess that
would be asking for too much optimism on a night like this...
I
will write again when we get to our next stop, Oklahoma City.
Yours,
Michael Moore
mmflint@aol.com
www.michaelmoore.com
PS. Three days ago, I learned from
someone at ABC News that ABC had videotape -- an angle of the second plane
crashing into the tower -- that showed an F-16 fighter jet trailing the
plane at a distance.
I have not shared this with you as I had not
personally witnessed that tape myself and did not want to contribute to all
the unsubstantiated rumors. It just came across on the TV that the
government admitted they did dispatch fighter jets when they knew the
planes were off course.
Is it becoming more clear now that the plane that
went down in Pennsylvania was shot down to prevent it from attacking its
destination?
The truth is harrowing, unbearable -- but it must be
told to us. A free people cannot make an informed decision if they are kept
in the dark. Let's hear ALL the truth
NOW.