… her [Katha Politt’s] subdued and almost mournful October 8, 2001, column, in which she related her discussion with her thirteen-year-old daughter about whether to fly an American flag from their apartment window. Pollitt pointed out the flag’s historic use as a symbol of “jingoism and vengeance and war”; her daughter said she was wrong, that the flag “means standing together and honoring the dead and saying no to terrorism.” Pollitt agreed that, sadly, “The Stars and Stripes is the only available symbol right now.” She closed by lamenting the lack of “symbolic representations right now for the things the world really needs —equality and justice and humanity and solidarity and intelligence.”

  • Valbrandur@lemmygrad.ml
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    1 year ago

    people already couldn’t feel American before 9/11, but especially more afterwards.

    The US has spent its entire history priding itself as the land of freedom and opportunity yet simultaneously targeting all types of immigrants: Mexicans, Italians, Irish people, Chinese people, Japanese people, Germans, Russians, Arabs… Difficult to feel American if you weren’t born there as a white anglo-saxon protestant.