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| Michael H Goldhaber on Sat, 22 Jan 2005 17:59:14 +0100 (CET) |
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| <nettime> Oh! "Freedom!" (27 times) and al Qaeda |
According to NPR, Pres. Bush said the word "freedom" 27 times in his
21-minute inaugural speech yesterday ? an excellent example of
misleading framing (in the sense recently popularized by George
Lakoff).
Even worse, Bush spoke again of the 9/11 attack as being an attack on
"freedom." This is utterly absurd.
What was attacked were two of the world's largest office buildings,
both, incidentally, built by government, not "free" enterprise. (The
Pentagon is obvious, and the WTC was built by the NY Port Authority.)
We are usually told the fourth plane was to be aimed at the White House
or the Capitol, but for all I know one of the huge office buildings in
Washington could have been the target --or maybe another side of the
Pentagon was. The previous major al Qaeda attacks were also on
government office buildings, at the US embassies in Nairobi and Dar es
Salaam.
The other attacks were on US military targets.
I don't know why bin Laden has it in for office buildings, but since
he cut his teeth in the guerilla war against the soviets in
Afghanistan, and since he has made it clear he believes he brought down
the USSR through that, it's quite clear he has now focussed on the
remaining "western" superpower. Would Bush say bin Laden attacked the
USSR because of opposition to freedom? As for the office-building
fetish, possibly bin Laden and his group did attack Soviet office
buildings in Kabul or elsewhere in Afghanistan; maybe that even stuck
in his mind as a source of success.
Of course 9/11 was heinous, but it was an evil attack on office
buildings, or perhaps on office workers, bureaucrats, or bureaucracy,
not freedom. Let's reclaim that important fact.
( I have previously speculated that al Qaeda was interested in
attacking the World Trade Center because they were confused by the
name, and thought that, rather than being rented out with difficulty
mainly as back offices for Wall Street, it was, indeed, the center of
world trade. If so, this again shows that we should be careful what we
name things.)
Best,
Michael
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