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Click on the box below and get Christian News headlines from around the world. Click on the special "Talk" feature and view topics that other's are willing to share their opinions on.
United 93: Where is the Outrage?

    By Jan Markell

    I was nothing short of stunned to learn from a Gallup Poll that
only 6% of Americans consider more terror on our shores to be a
significant concern. Interesting considering the poll came out about the same
time the new, gripping film, "United 93" was released and the Zacarius
Moussaoui trial culmination.

    So, since a majority of Americans shrug off the horrors of 9/11,
the new film has NOT come out too soon as the critics say. It is long
overdue. It's no cheap disaster movie; rather, a brilliant recreation of
United Flight 93 when the passengers realized they had been taken over
by terrorists. With the cue from Todd Beamer, "Let's roll," the
passengers stopped the plane from its intended target--the U.S. Capitol--and
allowed it to crash in a Pennsylvania field. They may be some of
America's greatest heroes, though some, including the pilots and a flight
attendant, had no role because they had been brutally killed.

    Response to the film by those who love America say it should be
mandatory viewing for all Americans. The Left would have us downplay it
because some of them--but certainly not all--seem to have sympathy for
the devil, evidenced also in the Moussaoui verdict. They would rather you
rent the DVD "Brokeback Mountain" and be entertained by perversion than
view "United 93" and be encouraged by American bravery.

    As folks filed out of the theatre I was in, there was dead silence.
What can one say except that the evil-doers awakened a sleeping giant
as with Pearl Harbor in 1941? This was the first successful
counterattack on America's shores in this war on terror. I suspect the terrorists
on board and parts of the Muslim world were shocked that they had the
reaction on United 93 that they did.

    But paraphrasing many when asked about the film, some said, "I have
no desire to see it." "I go to movies to escape reality--not to be made
uncomfortable. This film moves me out of my comfort zone." Well, not
nearly as much as the comfort zone of the forty who died on United 93.

    I agree with Todd Beamer's father who said, "This is one of the
most important events in America's history. It is an accurate account of
our first counterattack in this war."

    So has it come out too soon? Are the wounds in our minds and hearts
still too sensitive? I ask, did anyone in 1946, five years after the
Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, ask whether Americans were prepared to
see a film about that attack? Or is this a different generation, more
politically correct, focusing on tolerance and diversity?

    Today many want us to believe that our enemies can be negotiated
with. We need to "give peace a chance," and say with Rodney King, "Can't
we all get along?" No. The Muslim jihadists are a greater danger to the
planet that Hitler or Communism. Followers of those leaders loved life.
The new enemy loves death, martyrdom, and looks for great rewards in
paradise.

    This film particularly needs to be seen by anyone who questions why
our government responded the way it did when 3,000 innocent Americans
were killed on 9/11. But don't expect them to be standing in line with
you. The passengers on United 93 did not have the "see no evil, speak no
evil" mentality so prevalent today. All they could think about was
sparing America a fourth plane crashing into another symbol of America.
They simply would not submit to the will of the Islamists.

    I believe you will leave the theatre with an entirely new
perspective on WWIII. It's time for a reality check. Reality isn't always a
party though believers can be comforted that sorrow and sighing will some
day come to an end. But I thought of the families of the the United 93
victims. Almost without exception, they were grateful for the film which
was recreated by cell phone calls and other messages to those on the
ground. They were proud of their loved ones, proud of America, fully
supportive of whatever we have to do in the war on terror.

    Everyone over 15 should see "United 93." It would send a message to
Hollywood to portray other angles of the events of 9/11. The film
should release outrage against the jihadists, though many Americans remain
stuck in apathy, having short memories. Not all, thankfully. But after
seeing the film, I have to ask, "Where is the outrage?" Well into 2006,
things do not look good for peace and safety but it signals that our
Lord's return is nearer than we think.

    If you did not view the the moving film and memorial to the heroes
of 9/11 the last time I invited you to do so, then visit this link
http://www.olivetreeviews.org/topics/terrorism_us.shtml to view it. It
will make you proud to be an American. I am not trying to "overkill"
this issue; rather, counter the Left who would have us forget.
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