Rise and Shine, Park Cities (5-2-11)
- 10 years ago today, on May 2, 2001, our community was stunned by news that John Battaglia had shot and killed his daughters, Faith (9) and Liberty (6). Former Bradfield Elementary classmates will no doubt remember their sweet friends and wonder what the girls would be like today at ages 16 and 19. I’ll be thinking about their mother, Mary Jean Pearle.
- This dark and rainy day seems the perfect backdrop to announce that Pamela Martin Duarte, the smack talkin’, middle finger usin’, parasol wielding cast member of Dallas Divas and Daughters, has a book coming out this month. The kind with words and a plot, I think. It just goes to show, anything can happen.
- As parents we teach our children to “do unto others” and all that. So how do we explain, no matter how justified, why Americans are seen on every channel cheering in the streets over news that Osama bin Laden has been killed? My 7 year old son understands that bin Laden is a really bad man, responsible for 9/11 and more but said, “They shouldn’t kill people or cheer because he died.” And I’m speechless.
By Merritt Patterson
May. 2, 2011 | 8:59 am | 20 Comments | Comments RSS







20 comments to "Rise and Shine, Park Cities (5-2-11)"
I would prefer more sober crowds gathering in NYC and DC, but the people’s emotions were genuine. I don’t fault them.
Three HPISD children were murdered by their fathers that year. About a month after 9-11, on October 5, an Armstrong second grader was shot and killed. His mother was also killed, his brother was injured, and then his father killed himself.
Evan Loss would be a senior next year. Bonnie Loss Murphy was a beautiful person inside and out. Her family, including Evan’s stepdad, were exemplary in understanding the gunman to be mentally ill, forgiving him, and consoling his family.
2001 was a scary year.
Or even that the exact day for the US to go for Bin Laden was chosen to allow the Royal Wedding to finish without adding additional security burdens to it?
You are quite the conspiracy theorist, @DemBones, I’d like to think that Obama didn’t give Kate & Wills a single thought when he had the opportunity to extinguish Bin Laden.
Merritt: My kids asked the same question. Tough answer.
It’s real easy for me to armchair quarterback and say no one should cheer, but I didn’t lose someone on 9/11 or in any other bin laden-backed terror atrocity. Of course, looking at some of the people cheering on tv, I’m hard pressed to believe they did either.
Geez, and I thought answering Easter Bunny questions was hard last week.
Violence is a cycle. It has to stop somewhere. I don’t deny the crimes of the evil and I’d like these people taken out of society. But, I am against killing. I am against the death penalty. For cycles of violence to stop, the cycle must stop.
It took my years to realize why God said, Thou Shalt Not Kill. Humans don’t have a right to kill anyone else. It is wrong. Killing just continues the cycle of violence.
Teaching that murder is wrong by killing continues the killing.
Sorry for the hyper-technical diversion, but this has been a pet peeve of mine for years.
I will eventually feel safer because OBL is dead, but for the immediate future I expect retaliation and feel the world is a little less safe.
I noticed that the majority of the folks out on the streets appeared to be college kids. There was even a photo on MSNBC from my favorite bar in Austin, right by the campus. These kids were just looking for a reason to party on a Sunday night (they were, what, 8-12 years old on 9/11/01?).
I understand the significance and don’t want to make light of these events (and I also understand the cowboyishness of the American people). But I’m not sure I understand how this will permanently cripple the entire organization. Am I relieved? Yes. Jubilant? Hardly.
If there is a poisonous snake in my house killing my children, and Animal Control is unable to locate and catch it, and the only way to stop it is to kill it when there is a rare chance, I think I’d be celebrating that I’m safe again once it was dead. I think most people would.
Or, you can look at it this way: On Sunday night, and in 1945, we were celebrating a victory. This weekend it was a small celebration for a small but important victory. In 1945 it was a huge celebration for a pair of huge victories. I doubt the millions of people in Times Square in 1945 were celebrating specifically because we had just blasted Berlin, Munich, Hamburg, Cologne, Dresden, Nuremberg, Tokyo, Hiroshima and Nagasaki and many hundreds of thousands of their inhabitants off the face of the planet (which we did, and with gusto). They were celebrating because we won. Killing Osama didn’t win a war, but it was still a win.
Well put.
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