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It's Wednesday, September 11.
Tonight: As we presaged last night, today is an extremely solemn day in America and in American history. It's the 23rd anniversary of the 2001 attack that happened on September 11, which resulted in the death of roughly 3000 Americans, the collapse of both of the Twin Towers that had composed the World Trade Center in Manhattan, the destruction of a small part of the Pentagon, in Washington, D.C., and the downing of a passenger jet plane over Pennsylvania. The 9/11 attacks also unleashed radical transformations of American democracy and executive power, the massive strengthening of the U.S. security state, two full-scale invasions of sovereign countries and the bombing of a dozen or so Muslim countries over the next 20 years.
When the 9/11 attack occurred, Americans were largely united in their rage and their quest for vengeance but they also, quite understandably, had one question for which they really needed and wanted an answer, namely, why do the people who perpetrated this attack and those like them hate us enough to want to kill as many of us as possible? The U.S. government instantly recognized the need to provide an answer that would satisfy Americans to make them feel elevated and, most importantly, leave them willing to sacrifice their own rights and endorse all sorts of previously taboo acts that the U.S. government planned on doing in the name of avenging the 9/11 attacks and thus was born the narrative that the reason they hate us is because they hate our freedoms. That's why they attacked us. We were told that these are radical Muslims who are enraged by our free culture, that women were allowed to wear bathing suits on our beaches and gay clubs were permitted to exist in our cities and that we're permitted to have freedom of religion. They saw this from the other side of the world. They were so enraged by these freedoms that their religious extremism simply could not tolerate the existence of our liberties and they attacked us and wanted to kill as many of us as possible in response to their rage over our freedoms. As a result, and it stood to reason, Americans decided that literally anything and everything was justified in the name of protecting our freedom and way of life from the hordes of Islamic radicals wanting to end it.
Amazingly, that simple-minded narrative continues to be the predominant narrative 23 years later. Every year on this date, we are subject to seemingly earnest and moving commemorations of that time in September 2001 when we were attacked because we are free and that everything that ensued thereafter was by definition, nothing more and nothing less than simply a war against the terrorists, the War on Terror, the people who sought to destroy us and our way of life simply because they could not abide other people are free. That has been the dominant narrative today as well, not merely because of its importance as historical lore and national mythology, but also because of the continuous need to embrace these beliefs to justify what we still do today. That is why it is so worth revisiting and reexamining what actually caused the 9/11 attack to see maybe whether other things besides our precious freedoms caused it. So that's what we're going to do.
And then: Brendan Carr is a former communications lawyer and now serves as a Trump-appointed commissioner on the Federal Communications Commission, which is the federal agency charged with regulating media and communications. Quite unusually, for an FCC commissioner, he has been quite outspoken about his opposition to things like Big Tech censorship. This censorship imposed specifically around the COVID debate and, most recently, he has spoken out against Brazil's banning of X as a result of the social media companies' failure to comply with a mountain of censorship orders. He also, however, has been one of the most outspoken supporters of the U.S. banning of TikTok. We want to explore with him his worldview, how those things can be reconciled and the role that the FCC played in it. If nothing else, he's a very thoughtful commentator on these issues where he actually plays a direct role in regulating.
And then finally: Our intrepid, ruggedly independent on-the-road reporter Michael Tracey along with our show's producer, Megan O'Rourke, were in the so-called Spin Room after last night's presidential debate between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump. They were able to interview numerous Democratic and Republican members of Congress as well as various operative and pundit types who populate these events. We have edited many of the most entertaining and illuminating highlights that we will show you.
For now, welcome to a new episode of System Update, starting right now.