A few thoughts on 9/11, and our current moment. Thread:
1/ I grew up in the NYC suburbs in the 1980s. I wasn't living there in 2001, but still had lots of friends and family in the area.
2/ A good family friend was on flight 93. He was, among other things a pilot. We'd like to believe he had some heroic role in those final moments given his training.
3/ I was working in MA at the time and was in the process of training a new sale rep when we were interupted with news that "a small plane" hit one of the towers. It seemed insignificant, in the way that breaking news sometimes does.
4/ Of course, the news moved quickly and (by completely random coincidence) the power went out in our office. Caused by a line worker in our office park, but felt like the beginning of a national disaster. We sent everyone home.
5/ I called my wife who was on her way to grad school and told her I had no idea what was going on, but to get home. We met and watched TV for the rest of the day.
6/ There is nothing heroic in my story, but for the universality of it. Our day was like everyone else's in the country - and the world. We were panicked, heartbroken, confused, saddened, angry... and yet united by our common humanity.
7/ And the day was a mix of almost absurd specificity (my friend on flight 93) and global generality (who did this? Why?)
8/ Even if you didn't know anyone who died on 9/11, the nature of the event made it personal. This story from Esquire captures that vibe almost perfectly: esquire.com/news-politics/…
9/ Now to the current moment. We've lost more Americans to COVID-19 this week than we lost on 9/11.
10/ Each of the 192,000+ we have lost is also a very specific person with friends, neighbors and loved ones who had plans. Who may or may not have been heroic in their final moments. But who did nothing to deserve their fate.
11/ We can't afford to lose sight of that. I'll leave psychologists to explain why an individual friend's death is more of a gut punch than the deaths of 3,000 (or 192,000) strangers. But the tragedy is greater, not smaller for the larger loss.
12/ George W Bush, for all his flaws, understood that on 9/11. He reminded us we were all Americans. He reminded us this wasn't about a religion.

Most Americans, and the best of our elected officials still do.
13/ So be strong today. Celebrate our shared humanity. Don't sink to the level of those who can't do that; model the behavior you'd like them to follow. #leadwithlove. /fin

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Sean Casten

Sean Casten Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @SeanCasten

8 Sep
OK #energytwitter: This week's nerd thread.

Why climate change is real, and man made. And why you should treat anyone who insists otherwise with the same respect you treat someone who insists that gravity is also a left-wing conspiracy. (Warning: this thread contains science.)
1/ First, you gotta understand the 1st law of thermodynamics. Energy can neither be created nor destroyed. If you put 5 1 lb weights in a bag, the bag will weigh 5 lbs. If you put 500 1 Btu pieces of energy in a bag, the bag will contain 500 Btus.
2/ Energy can however be converted. You can take electric energy, put it through a resistor and make heat. You can take chemical energy from gasoline and turn it into mechanical power in your car engine. But the energy that comes out = the energy you put in.
Read 26 tweets
1 Sep
This week's energy wonk-thread: Why discussions about "when renewables will reach cost parity?" and levelized cost of electricity (LCOE) calculations are nothing but - per Antonin Scalia - "interpretive jiggery-pokery" #energytwitter
1/ First, for those not familiar with the term, google it. Lots of academics & think tanks who write lots of stuff about if/when renewable sources will reach cost-parity with existing, dirty power sources. google.com/search?q=renew…
2/ It sounds like a really helpful metric. It's not. And it's irrelevant to people who actually build, own and operate power plants.
Read 26 tweets
27 Aug
What do you do when you see a bully on the street, beating up on the less fortunate? You take on the bully.

Today's bully is the NRA, and the right-wing hate they throw at anyone who fights to put preserving American lives over the Wayne LaPierre's slush fund. Thread:
1/ First, it's true I said right-wing hate. I don't want this to be partisan. I don't want to be partisan. But just because a bully is partisan doesn't mean you shouldn't take them on.
2/ As @LeadershipNP has shown, the NRA overwhelmingly dominates all right-wing political giving. No one else on the right comes close, and no group on the left matches their scale.
Read 39 tweets
25 Aug
Well, I promised to do one of these a week. And my mother raised me never to lie to Twitter. Or something like that.

Today's energy nerd thread: Green Jobs. What's true. What we want to be true. And what we should be talking about.
1/ First, what's true: there are a lot of green jobs being created. Renewables, energy efficiency, EVs. Way more jobs were created there in the last decade than in dirtier sectors.
2/ And moreover, significant parts of the fossil sector haven't been major employers for a LOONG time. America has long employed more bakers than coal miners. Why we don't have politicians shooting ads in front of a row of flour-caked pastry chefs will always be a mystery.
Read 27 tweets
13 Aug
In light of the surprising popularity of last week's hydrogen economy rant, I'm going to try and make this a thing. Today's deep dive: why carbon capture and sequestration is a boondoggle that will never play a meaningful role in carbon-constrained electricity markets. Thread:
1/ For the uninitiated: carbon capture & sequestration (CCS) is the technology to capture CO2 from combustion tailgases, purify it then store it permanently (typically underground), enabling fossil-fueled sources to be CO2 free.
2/ It is distinct from direct air capture (DAC) that pulls CO2 out of the air and while it can be used in non-power applications (e.g., in cement plants) the useless boondoggle is in power generation applications.
Read 25 tweets
9 Aug
Let's chat a bit about how economically illiterate and incapable of leadership you have to be to propose a payroll tax deferral by Executive Order as Trump did yesterday. Thread:
1/ First, to state the blindingly obvious to all who aren't named Trump or sycophants to him, the economy and future employment prospects are not good.
2/ Job growth is slowed. We are at >10% unemployment. And we aren't going to turn the corner until we get the public health crisis under control. Other countries have shown us how to do that, but Trump is incapable of learning from their experience.
Read 19 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!