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The Truth
vs Political Correctness
By Allen
Huang
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Essay author
Allen Huang, age 14 is an outstanding student at Pioneer Middle
School, in Orange
County, California.
Allen's essay
was first published in the March 28 issue of California Junior Scholarship
Federation, Vol. I Edition I.
Students at
Tustin High School and at one of Pioneer Middle School's Social
Study Classes used the essay as the subject of a debate forum on
April 27, 2002.
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To say the tragic events of
September 11th have inspired numerous acts of courage is an understatement.
One of the groups of people on the front lines that day were the firefighters.
In the midst of terror and
confusion, three firefighters took the time to hoist up an American flag.
An alert journalist was there, as they usually are, to capture the timeless
moment.
Now, the Fire Department of
New York wants to honor all the firefighters that went into danger on
that fateful day. Well, there's nothing wrong with that. Or is there?
This spring the Fire Department's
Brooklyn headquarters is expected to put up a $180,000 sculpture depicting
the three firefighters who put up the American flag among the sea of rubble.
The picture is often
paralleled with the Marines raising the US flag over Iwo Jima in World
War Two.
The controversial aspect is
that while the three firefighters in the picture were all white, the Department
plans to portray the statue with one white firefighter, one black firefighter
and one Hispanic firefighter. Some say it's an attempt to rewrite history,
others say it's the only way to honor all 343 heroes who perished that
day.
This attempt to distort a picture
that will live in the hearts of Americans will not stand.
On that day when everything
changed, nothing mattered. The only thing that mattered was saving lives.
As Tony Marden, a firefighter based in Queens said, "It's not a racial
thing. That shouldn't even be an issue."
First of all, to change the
race of these men does not represent the best of America. It shows that
all we care about is, in the words of one person, "who did what and what
color they were."
It shows this country is preoccupied
to make every single person happy and make no one offended at the expense
of accuracy.
Those who support the statue
may say that they wish to represent everyone, but the truth is race is
not the way to do it. Bill Kelly, the attorney of the three firefighters
in the photograph stated, "Moments such as this should not be used to
make political statements."
The people who are for the
statue may state that the statue better shows all the people that were
in the rescue effort that day. The fact is race is not what motivated
these people to give up their lives for someone else.
We are missing the point if
that statue goes up the way it is.
Of the 343 firefighters
who died that day, 12 were black and 12 were Hispanic.
Supporters point out that it
would be unusual that the sacrifices of a multiethnic department would
only be represented by white men. They're missing the big point.
We need to focus on why they
did what they did. As the Washington Post's Donna Britt wrote, "It's the
Actions, Not the Actors, We Will Remember."
After the terrorist attacks,
we heard countless stories of people who performed selfless acts of courage.
Selfless. Nobody put
into consideration who
they were or who they were helping.
America became one that day.
The preceeding essay is the opinion of the author, and
does not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of the Tustin Unified
School District or Pioneer Middle School.
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