The attack spawned endless wars that we were told would export democracy abroad, with the result of degrading it at home.
Over the past 16 years, war has imperiled American ideals by becoming about dominance. Our military actions have reflected increased investments in imperialism, accompanied by diminished attention to political change, economic development and institution-building — the essential prerequisites for democratic freedoms.
Fear of terrorism (and seeing it as a military problem) has justified excessive and habitual suspension of good governance, ultimately creating a more fertile seedbed for terrorists.
Abandoning freedom abroad has consequences at home. Dominance has emerged as the driver of domestic politics, as well. Demands for “border security” are used by the president and his core supporters to justify racism and domestic violence aimed at protecting white male dominance.
Our leaders have nurtured what the Justice Department calls a crisis of “domestic terrorism” within U.S. borders, perpetrated by U.S. citizens, not foreigners.
From the first days after Sept. 11, 2001, we have missed a historical opportunity to turn our gravest challenges into sources of unity, creativity and self-improvement. Rather than encouraging a collective mentality with high income taxes and war bond campaigns, our tax policies now exacerbate differences between rich and poor.
Our criminal policies have stigmatized groups in the name of safety, rather than offering opportunities for rehabilitation, hope and a new beginning.
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