Lecture will provide revisionist’s view of Sept. 11 attacks
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June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- When looked at as a single day, Sept. 11 was a horror
so clear it united a country in overwhelming support for an armed
response, for patriotism, for one president’s campaign for justice.
But when looked at as a moment in history, says author and historian
Howard Zinn, Sept. 11 has a very different meaning.
“Americans are not given any historical perspective,” Zinn said.
“Americans are treated as if they were born yesterday and, to an extent,
they were, so you have no basis for understanding a situation like this
today. Authorities can explain a situation to you, and you have no basis
for questioning and understanding what they’re telling you.”
Zinn, a revisionist historian, will apply this perspective to the
events of Sept. 11 when he speaks in Newport Beach today and Saturday.
The Mexican War, the Spanish-American War, the Persian Gulf War,
Vietnam, he said, all shed light on the U.S. response to last fall’s
terrorist attacks. Each of those conflicts, he said, provide examples of
how the U.S. government has “deceived the American public about reasons
for going to war.”
The implications for America’s current war on terrorism, he says, are
telling.
“I call it the ‘so-called war on terrorism’ because I don’t think
that’s what it is,” said Zinn, who is author of “A People’s History of
the United States” and other works.
Instead, Zinn believes that the terrorist leaders who continue to
elude the U.S. military serve as a convenient excuse to establish a
strategic presence in Afghanistan.
But perhaps more important than what has come after Sept. 11, Zinn
said, are the factors that led up to it.
“That might enable us to understand why Sept. 11 happened,” he said.
“History shows us that reacting with violence is not the way to solve
this problem. The way to react to Sept. 11 is to sit down and look at
what precipitated that horrible event.”
FYI
WHAT: Professor Howard Zinn, author and professor emeritus of
political science at Boston University, will speak at the 2002 fifth
annual Martin W. Witte Distinguished Speakers Lecture Series.
WHEN: Saturday appearance is sold out; some seats may be available for
7 p.m. today.
WHERE: Newport Beach Central Library, 1000 Avocado Ave.
COST: $55 includes dinner and live music by classical pianist Alan
Terricciano.
TICKETS: Call (800) 200-7094, or visit www.newportbeachlibrary.org.
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