Douglas Rushkoff on Wed, 12 Sep 2001 21:41:15 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] Life Below 14th Street |
Tuesday morning: Thanks for all the concern and well wishes. Yes, I'm fine. Thousands have perished, no doubt, and many of them, I'm sure, were friends. I live high up, on 9th Street, and watched the whole World Trade Center disaster unfold from my windows. Excruciating to witness. More on that in the coming days. I don't think it's the adrenaline of the moment leading me to believe the world is a different place, now. This is an event beyond the scale and scope of Pearl Harbor -- and one that changes everything. Most likely, it will lead to some startling escalations, particularly now that the White House is characterized more by demonstrative action than effectiveness. The dancing in the streets of Palestine isn't a particularly good public relations move, either. Brace yourselves. America is at war, and the world is a smaller place. Love and condolences to all. -- Tuesday evening: Things are strange here in lower Manhattan. Word has it the neighborhood (south of 14th street) will be sealed off by morning. I assume this means we can get out, but not in. Media reports have been sketchy, and I can't help but conclude we're not being told much. One building I know of, far from the WTC, was evacuated, and the drivers of a truck presumably carrying explosives were arrested. It hasn't been reported. No news, either, confirming earlier reports that the Pennsylvania plane that crashed had been shot down by our own missiles before it reached its target. Even denials would be nice, but no one is asking such questions. Perhaps this 'cooperation' by the media is for our own good, calculated to maintain morale. Time will tell. I'm also disturbed by the reactions of many friends to the prospect of going to work tomorrow. Some of them work at AOL/TimeWarner magazines - recently budget-slashed and overly corporatized. There's no impulse to 'hang in there,' show up at work and get the news out. I don't blame them; they've been mistreated, and the souls of these periodicals have been slowly killed over the past months. Crises like these tend (and are intended) to expose the stresses in our relationships to institutions. So far, they're not pretty. The images of the exploding and crumbling buildings, as well as the screams of onlookers on rooves, still resonate. Some neighbors who made it back describe Private-Ryan-level carnage -- falling limbs and torsos, burning bodies, people leaping out of 70-story windows. People are quite calm, but they're also in shock. I'll be doing some NPR (national public radio interviews) tonight, but I'm not really sure what I can add of value. I'll answer their questions. I received a widely-broadcast letter from John Barlow, who is very concerned that this tragedy could lead to a willful disintegration of American freedoms. He believes we will surrender precious rights that were hard-won. I hope not; nor do I believe so. I think we'll value the freedom we have all the more, now that we have a taste of how tenuous such freedoms are in a truly global reality. And what a terrible demonstration of remote high leverage points in a networked system. Sometimes people learn the hard way. It's one for all and all for one, at this point. _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold