Friday, March 18, 2022

WILLIAM HURT: Where was the ritual of mutual care when something massively terrible happens?

From Ginny Garner @ Lew Rockwell:

Writes Ginny Garner:

Lew,

Reading about the passing of actor William Hurt (Body Heat, Broadcast News, Altered States, Gorky Park), I learned about the 9-11 documentary “The Unspeakable.”  [William Hurt is the Executive Producer of the documentary.]  The actor was also a general aviation pilot and he questioned the official 9-11 narrative. He learned about Architects and Engineers for 9-11 Truth and in 2021, he was executive producer of the documentary. The world was focused on the global Covid coup and many missed this powerful film. The biggest criticism of anyone doubting the official narrative was that family members of the deceased were distraught by anyone asking questions. The documentary makes its point by presenting 5 stories of family members whose loved ones were killed in the buildings. The survivors all believe the Twin Towers were taken down by explosives. 

By William Hurt (1950-2022)

 

 

I was born in 1950. Mom moved back to New York City with my two brothers and me in 1955, and we became New Yorkers.  
                  
I watched the South Tower “top off” in ’71. Mom had worked close to the Empire State Building during the War and would mention when we were growing up how, on a foggy July day in 1945, a B-25 had flown right into it. In ’78, I was watching the antenna being attached to the North Tower and remarked to my first-grade buddy that somebody “sure could run into those big things.”                            

 

Many veteran New Yorkers were rubbed the wrong way by their design. Manhattan is actually a small piece of real estate. Interwoven neighborhoods. People walk there. Shoulder to shoulder. I tended to stay far away from them even though I worked in a little theatre only 15 or so blocks away for 12 years.                                                                          
At age 51, I permanently moved away with my younger sons two weeks before September 11, 2001. The towers were indelible reference points to me by then. To all of us.                                                                       
On the day of the attack, I was in Boston with my eldest in a cafĂ© having breakfast, with the pickup parked and packed, ready to go to Montreal for a gig. There was a little TV hung to the molding of a wall. Someone said, “Look.”                                                                                                                                            Being a general aviation pilot, my first thought was, “That’s no small plane. And no accident.” My next thought was of family and close friends. We called and, thank goodness, they were all okay. My third thought was about the borders. I assumed the borders would be closed immediately. I had a contract in Montreal to get to that day. I prayed that they would stay closed so that my contract wouldn’t force me to go to Canada only for the borders to be closed again, leaving me stranded from my kids.                                            
Then the second plane hit. I started thinking about those lost. The massiveness. A completely new kind of shock entered my life. I hoped with all my heart that the first responders would be okay. Then the towers fell. And the world changed.                                                                                                Unbelievably, the border did open up again the very next day. I was floored. The contract said I had to go. I hugged my kid and drove, shattered.                                                                                                              In my case, the journey toward understanding started with an unusual emotional experience. Ten days later, on the film set in Montreal, it seemed a nightmare that no one was stopping, even on their own, let alone as a group, to absorb this paradigm shift. Where was the ritual of mutual care when something massively terrible happens? I felt alone. A catastrophe of infinite meaning had taken place, and we were routinely going about our professional duties, saying nothing about it. Maybe it was just too big. Moviemaking is myopic like that. But it seemed wrong. Deep emotional turmoil filled me. Worry for my children.                                                                                    It was a busy scene involving over a hundred people. As I returned to what they call “start marks” for another “master shot” (of the whole scene before tighter “coverage” setups begin), I stopped. And I suddenly couldn’t remember where I was. What city was I in? 

 

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