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House bill seeks to protect workers’ unions from harassment   

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

LAWMAKERS from the progressive Makabayan bloc have filed a bill seeking to protect workers’ unions from harassment and labeling as communists, among other threats to their right to organize.     

“Despite the constitutionally-protected and internationally-recognized rights of workers and workers’ unions, they are subjected to all forms of harassment, intimidation, red-tagging, violent and illegal dispersal of strikes, union busting, arbitrary arrests due to false charges, and worse, killings,” the group said.    

House Bill 10201 or the Union Independence Act of 2021 seeks to prohibit any person from forcing a worker to not join or renounce their affiliations with a workers’ organization.  

It also prohibits discrimination against unionists and the obstruction of any lawful and peaceful activities of unions such as red-tagging or the practice of classifying them as supporters of the communist movement.  

The measure also prohibits any law enforcement personnel, including those from the Armed Forces of the Philippines and the Philippine National Police, to conduct information drives or seminars to discourage workers from participating in activities of workers’ organizations.    

Those who violate the proposed law will be fined with at least P100,000, a jail sentence of one to two years, and disqualification from public office if the offender works in government.    

According to Makabayan lawmakers, there have been 56 reported trade union organizers who were killed during the Duterte administration, including the Solidarity of Cavite Workers leader Emmanuel “Manny” Asuncion during the “Bloody Sunday” raids in the Calabarzon region on March 7. — Russell Louis C. Ku 

Biado beats Singaporean Yapp to win US Open Pool Championship

FILIPINO Carlo Biado is the 2021 US Open Pool Championship winner. — MATCHROOMPOOL.COM

FILIPINO Carlo Biado ruled the 2021 US Open Pool Championship, coming from behind to defeat Singaporean Aloysius Yapp, 13-8, in the final early on Sunday morning (Manila time) in Atlantic City.

The 27-year-old Mr. Biado showed unflappable grit and determination to buck being down, 3-8, at point early in the championship match and turn things around en route to the huge victory.

Mr. Biado, a native of La Union, became the first pool player from the Philippines to win the prestigious tournament since Filipino legend Efren “Bata” Reyes in 1994.

With the win, he pocketed the top prize of $50,000, or around P2.5 million.

Mr. Biado started the final strong, racing to a 2-0 lead.

He, however, was not able to sustain it and saw his opponent turn the tables on him, building first a 5-3 cushion and then extending it to 8-3.

In the 12th game, the Philippine bet was given an opening when Mr. Yapp missed the nine which could have extended the latter’s lead further.

From there, Mr. Biado steadily clawed his way back into the match, winning the 10 successive racks to claim the victory.

After sinking the winning shot in the 21st game, Mr. Biado yelled and pumped his fist then stood on the table in celebration.

“This event is one of my dreams. I dedicate this win to my family, my baby. This is one of the best days in my life,” an emotional Mr. Biado said in the trophy presentation.

He went on to thank his supporters and sponsors as well as the organizers for staging the match despite the pandemic.

Mr. Biado’s victory was also a payback of sorts for compatriot Dennis Orcollo, who lost to Mr. Yapp in the semifinals, 11-6, preventing an all-Filipino final.

“Great and sweet victory for Carlo Biado and the Philippines despite the pandemic. Hardly had Biado the time to practice during the lockdown. In 2020 because of global lockdown, he practiced by himself in his pool table at home. His triumph, after Efren in 1994, would encourage Filipinos to bring out their cue sticks again. And it’s a boost to billiard sports in the country,” the Billiard and Snooker Congress of the Philippines said in a statement of Mr. Biado’s win.

On the road to winning the 2021 US Open Pool Championship title, Mr. Biado, also a Southeast Asian Games gold medalist, edged out Spain’s David Alcaide Bermudez, 11-10, in the last 16, compatriot Johann Gonzales Chua, 11-10, in the quarterfinals and Japanese Naoyuki Oi, 11-9, in the semifinals.

The US Open Pool Championship is a nine-ball pool tournament, the longest running major pool title. The 2021 edition took place from Sept. 13 to 18 at the Harrah’s Resort in Atlantic City. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Malditas down Nepal to move a step closer to Asian Cup

THE Philippine Malditas moved a step closer to making it to the 2022 AFC Asian Women’s Cup after beating Nepal, 2-1, in their Group F qualifying match in Uzbekistan on Saturday night. — AFC

THE Philippine women’s national football team moved a step closer to making it to the 2022 Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Asian Women’s Cup after beating Nepal, 2-1, in their Group F qualifying match in Uzbekistan on Saturday night.

Late goals by Thanai Annis and Camille Wilson towed the Malditas to the come-from-behind victory in the match held at JAR Stadium in Tashkent to earn the full three points.

The nationals played catch-up throughout the contest after going down, 0-1, in the 10th minute after Nepal’s Bimala Chaudary scored on a header.

While the 68th-ranked Malditas were seemingly heading to an upset loss at the hands of 101st-ranked Nepal going into stoppage time, the former extricated for an equalizer.

Ms. Annis found herself free in the box and converted a cross from teammate Chandler McDaniel to level the count in the 90th minute.

Two minutes later, Ms. Wilson would score the go-ahead goal on another assist from Ms. McDaniel to complete the impressive charge-back win.

“The new players played well and initiated the first goal. Our adjustments in the second half resulted in us scoring in the last five minutes,” said Malditas coach Marlon Maro after the game.

The Malditas, whose campaign is being supported by the Philippine Sports Commission and the MVP Sports Foundation, next face Hong Kong (78th) on Sept. 24 where they hope to complete a sweep of its group assignments to book their spot in the Asian Cup in India next year.

Qualifying phase format has the top teams in each of the eight groupings advancing to the AFC Women’s Asian Cup, where they get to vie for spots in the 2023 International Federation of Association Football (FIFA) Women’s World Cup. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Northport outlasts ROS in overtime to fan playoff push

GREG Slaughter (in photo) led the Northport Batang Pier to a hard-earned overtime victory over the Rain or Shine Elastopainters on Sunday. — PBA IMAGES

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

THE Northport Batang Pier outlasted the Rain or Shine (ROS) Elastopainters, 91-88, in overtime in a grind-it-out Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) Philippine Cup match on Sunday to fan their quarterfinal push.

Dealt back-to-back losses entering the contest, the Batang Pier dug deep so as not to fall for a third straight time as they try to book a spot in the playoffs of the ongoing Philippine Basketball Association tournament.

Big man Greg Slaughter towered for Northport, finishing with a game-high 25 points, to go along with 11 rebounds and six blocks, the last of his swat coming in the dying seconds of OT to preserve the win for them.

Down by three points, 91-88, with five seconds to play in overtime, Rain or Shine had a chance to tie the count after veteran James Yap was fouled by Northport rookie Jamie Malonzo from the three-point line.

Unfortunately for the Elastopainters, Mr. Yap missed all of his free throws.

Off a rebound, Mr. Malonzo was fouled with three seconds left. He, however, missed both his freebies to keep the door open for Rain or Shine.

After a time out, Rain or Shine got the ball to Gabe Norwood, who soared for a potential game-tying triple but was blocked by Mr. Slaughter as time expired.

The win improved Northport to 5-5 with one game to play in the eliminations. The Batang Pier are currently at joint sixth place with the NLEX Road Warriors.

Rain or Shine, meanwhile, closed out its elimination assignments with a 6-5 record, already assured of a spot in the next round.

Robert Bolick also had a solid game for Northport in the victory, finishing with 24 points, seven assists and six rebounds. Sean Anthony had nine points and 10 rebounds while Mr. Malonzo had eight points and 14 boards.

“We’re a group that just wants to win,” said Mr. Slaughter after the game.

For Rain or Shine, it was Jewel Ponferada who led with 17 points, followed by Beau Belga, 11 and Mr. Yap and rookie Leonard Santillan with nine points apiece.

BLACKWATER INTERIM COACH
Meanwhile, already-eliminated Blackwater Bossing named Ariel Vanguardia as interim coach, replacing Nash Racela.

The team, which lost all of its 11 matches in the 2021 PBA Philippine Cup, made the announcement on Sunday.

Including the eight straight defeats it had in last year’s bubble tournament, the Bossing set a new league record in successive losses at 19.

The Blackwater management is hoping that Mr. Vanguardia, who already had head coaching experience in the PBA in the past, would be able to turn things around for the team.

The Bossing are also set to reevaluate their roster and hope to come back more competitive in the next tournament.

Rosauro looking to continue ascent in ONE Championship

CEBU-BASED fighter Roel Rosauro will be one of three Filipinos seeing action in ONE: Revolution on Sept. 24 in Singapore. — ONE CHAMPIONSHIP

FOLLOWING a breakthrough win in ONE Championship in his last fight, Cebu-based fighter Roel “Akiyama” Rosauro is looking to build on the momentum he has generated as he further positions himself in the featherweight division.

Mr. Rosauro (5-3) will take on ONE-debuting James Yang of the United States in the lead card for “ONE: Revolution” on Sept. 24 at the Singapore Indoor Stadium.

It will be his first fight after finally chalking a win in the promotion in January last year. He defeated Indonesia’s Yohan Mulia Legowo by unanimous decision. Prior to the win, he opened his ONE career with back-to-back losses.

The Filipino fighter said the win was huge especially for his confidence, believing he has what it takes to compete on a bigger stage.

“It did a lot for my confidence. It made me more determined to continue improving and focusing on what I want to achieve in my career,” said Mr. Rosauro in Filipino during a virtual media conference on Friday.

The Yaw-Yan Ardigma Cebu stalwart shared that just like all fighters, the ongoing pandemic has greatly disrupted training, but he made sure that he was able to put in the work in preparation for his upcoming fight.

“Training during the pandemic has been tough. Sometimes the gym is open, sometimes it’s not because of the restrictions. So I train in the house, doing weight training and working on my game, particularly grappling,” he said.

Mr. Yang is making his debut in ONE and has trained with mixed martial arts legend Demetrious Johnson.

Mr. Rosauro is one of three Filipinos seeing action at ONE: Revolution, the others being Team Lakay’s Lito Adiwang and Joshua Pacio, the reigning world strawweight champion.

Revolution will be shown live over One Sports. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Liverpool goes top with win over Palace as City held by Saints

LIVERPOOL went top of the Premier League with a 3-0 win over Crystal Palace on Saturday, while champion Manchester City was held to a goalless draw at home to Southampton.

Arsenal picked up their second straight win with a 1-0 victory at Burnley, while promoted Brentford posted an impressive 2-0 win at Wolverhampton Wanderers.

Everton’s unbeaten start to the season came to an abrupt end as they crashed to a 3-0 defeat at Aston Villa.

With Chelsea and Manchester United not in action until Sunday, Juergen Klopp’s side moved to 13 points from five matches after goals from Sadio Mane, Mohamed Salah and Naby Keita at Anfield.

Liverpool had been well on top against Patrick Vieira’s Palace, but struggled to turn their dominance into goals until Mane turned the ball in from close range just before half time for his 100th goal for the club.

His strike followed a shocking miss by Portugal international Diogo Jota, who blazed over the bar from two yards out.

Salah added a second to kill off the contest on 78 minutes as Virgil van Dijk flicked on a corner and the forward supplied a neat finish.

City were held to a frustrating goalless draw by Southampton at the Etihad Stadium.

After an uneventful first half where City was well below par, Southampton thought they had been handed a golden chance to go in front just after the interval when they were awarded a penalty for a foul on Adam Armstrong. To make matters worse for City, Kyle Walker was sent off for the foul.

But referee Jon Moss, following a VAR intervention, overturned both the red card and the awarding of the spot kick.

Kevin De Bruyne and Phil Foden were both summoned from the bench as City pressed for a winner, which they thought they had grabbed at the death through Raheem Sterling, but his effort was ruled out for offside.

The result means City falls three points behind Liverpool, on 10 points.

Everton is fifth on 10 points although Rafa Benitez’s side was given a reality check as they conceded three times in 10 minutes after the break at Villa Park.

Matty Cash thumped in the opener in the 66th minute — his first goal for the club — before Lucas Digne’s own goal from a corner and substitute Leon Bailey’s fierce drive.

Martin Odegaard’s 30th-minute curling free kick earned Arsenal back-to-back wins although they also had some help from VAR as they hung on for the three points at Turf Moor.

The Norwegian midfielder curled the ball beautifully into the top corner of Nick Pope’s goal in the 30th minute, helping take Mikel Arteta’s side on to six points.

Burnley thought they had a chance of an equalizer when Matej Vydra went down under a challenge from Arsenal keeper Aaron Ramsdale and referee Anthony Taylor pointed to the spot. — Reuters

Teen Ostapenkov stuns Schwartzman in Davis Cup

BELARUSIAN Daniil Ostapenkov, a teenager who had not played professional-level match before, stunned world number 15 Diego Schwartzman (6-4, 6-3) in their World Group I Davis Cup match against Argentina on Saturday.

The 18-year-old became the latest young gun to cause an upset following a US Open where teenagers seized the spotlight and 18-year-old Briton Emma Raducanu became the first qualifier to win a Grand Slam title.

Ostapenkov fired down three aces and saved seven break points to defeat Schwartzman on his home turf at the Buenos Aires Lawn Tennis Club, although Guido Pella leveled the tie at 1-1 with a convincing win over Erik Arutiunian.

Slovakia completed a 3-1 victory over Chile with Norbert Gombos thrashing world number 17 Cristian Garin (6-0, 6-1) for his second win of the tie in Bratislava. The Slovaks must now wait to see whether they are automatically into the February qualifiers to reach the 2022 Finals.

Norway were also triumphant with Casper Ruud’s (6-3, 6-1) victory over Sanjar Fayziev handing them a 3-1 lead and keeping alive their hopes of reaching the 2022 Finals.

The eight highest ranked winners from the World Group I ties will go into the Davis Cup qualifiers next February where they will attempt to qualify for the 2022 Finals.

The other four nations will contest an additional knockout round in November with the winners entering the qualifiers.

South Korea guaranteed a place in the qualifiers as they overcame New Zealand (3-1). Finland completed a victory over India although they must wait to find out whether they are automatically through to the qualifiers. — Reuters

Jim Knous, Maverick McNealy tied for lead in Napa

JIM Knous fired a seven-under 65 on Saturday to vault up the leaderboard and into a first-place tie with Maverick McNealy after 56 holes of the Fortinet Championship in Napa, CA.

The pair are tied at 14-under 202, sitting two strokes ahead of five players tied for third at the Silverado Resort and Spa North Course.

McNealy birdied his final three holes to climb back into the lead after a rough front nine. McNealy, who owned the 18-hole lead, carded four bogeys for a 38 going out.

Knous, on the other hand, recorded six birdies on the front nine en route to eight overall, moving nine spots up the leaderboard. He had just one bogey for his round.

“It was a great day, putter got hot there late on the back nine, on the front nine, stayed hot pretty much most of the round,” Knous said. “Especially a nice putt on the last, that was a bonus. Just played solid, just stayed patient, kind of let the course come to me.”

Max Homa also shot 65 on moving day, shooting up into a five-way tie for third with Beau Hossler (70), Troy Merritt (69), Mito Pereira (70) and Scott Stallings (67).

“I played really well yesterday so it was cool to be able to go into today, even though the score wasn’t great yesterday, to go in with some momentum,” said Homa, who shot 72 on Friday. “Made a lot of good swings yesterday on the back nine and made some birdies coming in, so felt good. Played honestly better yesterday than I did on Thursday I felt like tee to green, just didn’t hole any putts.”

Talor Gooch shot 66 to sit alone in eighth place, three shots back.

Ten players are T9 at 10 under, four shots back. Webb Simpson also tallied a 65 on Saturday to be a part of that group, and Phil Mickelson jumped 15 spots after a 67.

“Yeah, it was a good way to finish,” Mickelson said. “I hit some good shots, I had a lot of chances early on and made a couple of putts that I haven’t been making throughout the week, or poor strokes. And then the back nine I made a lot.” — Reuters

K.J. Choi has two-shot lead at Sanford International

SOUTH Korea’s K.J. Choi shot a 4-under 66 on Saturday and holds a two-shot lead at 11-under 129 after two rounds of the Sanford International at Sioux Falls, SD.

Paul Stankowski, Germany’s Alex Čejka and Australia’s Rod Pampling are tied for second after two trips around Minnehaha Country Club.

Stankowski fired a round-best 63, Čejka shot 64 and Pampling recorded a 67. Steve Flesch (65) and Mario Tiziani (67) are tied for fifth at 8 under.

Darren Clarke, who shared the first-round lead with Choi, shot even-par 70 and is four shots off the pace. The Northern Ireland product is in a four-way tie for seventh.

Choi had five birdies and one bogey, but was particularly strong on the back nine, when he carded four birdies while posting a 32.

Stankowski registered eight birdies and one bogey in his strong round. He carded seven birdies in an 11-hole stretch before a bogey on the par-3 17th and finished with a birdie on 18.

Čejka had two eagles, four birdies and two bogeys. His eagles came on two par-5s — Nos. 12 and 16.

Pampling made six birdies and three bogeys. All three of his bogeys came on par-4 holes — Nos. 7, 11 and 13.

Clarke’s round got off to a poor start when he double-bogeyed the first hole. He made birdies on Nos. 3 and 4, but soon bogeyed Nos. 6 and 7 and finished the front nine at 2-over 36.

He lost another shot with a bogey on 10, but steadied himself and made birdies at Nos. 12, 15 and 16.

Tom Byrum (67), Australia’s David McKenzie (65) and South African Retief Goosen (68) were tied with Clarke in seventh. — Reuters

James Kaprielian, Athletics shut down Angels

JAMES Kaprielian allowed two hits over six shutout innings to lead the Oakland A’s to a 3-1 victory over the Los Angeles Angels on Saturday night in Anaheim, CA.

Kaprielian had been bumped from the start in favor of Daulton Jefferies, an effort by A’s manager Bob Melvin to get a “fresh arm” on the mound in place of a struggling Kaprielian.

Jefferies, however, was placed on the injured list before the game with nerve irritation in his elbow, allowing Kaprielian a chance to get on the mound. And he made the most of it.

He retired the first six batters of the game until Jose Rojas singled to lead off the third. But Kaprielian responded by retiring the next 10 Angels hitters in a row until Jack Mayfield doubled with one out in the sixth.

Kaprielian (8-5) got out of the inning and was finished after six, having made 90 pitches, striking out five and walking nobody.

The Angels (72-76) threatened after Kaprielian was gone, putting together a rally against A’s reliever Deolis Guerra in the seventh. It appeared Guerra got out of the inning when Luis Rengifo ground into a double play, Guerra covering first to get out of the inning.

However, the play was overturned when the umpires ruled the ball popped out of Guerra’s glove, giving the Angels runners on first and third with two out. Melvin was tossed for arguing and the Angels immediately took advantage when Rojas singled to drive in Shohei Ohtani from third.

Guerra, though, escaped when he struck out Max Stassi.

Andrew Chafin pitched the ninth for Oakland and earned his fifth save, getting out of a bases-loaded jam when second baseman Josh Harrison made a leaping catch of Stassi’s line drive to end the game.

The win moved the A’s (81-67) to within two games of Toronto for the second wild card spot in the American League.

Angels starter Jose Suarez (7-8) got the first two outs in the first inning before yielding a home run to Matt Olson. After a walk by Mark Canha, Chad Pinder doubled in one run and Matt Chapman followed with another RBI double for a 3-0 Oakland lead.

Suarez, though, settled in from there and didn’t give up another run before leaving with two out in the sixth. In all, he gave up three runs and six hits in 5 2/3 innings, striking out three and walking two. — Reuters

Reality

There was a time when John Wall rubbed elbows with the best of the best at the point. Chosen first overall in the 2010 National Basketball Association draft following a one-and-done All-American showing with the Wildcats, he promptly made the All-Rookie Team en route to claiming five consecutive All-Star berths. And so good was he that the Wizards practically lived on his playmaking savvy, the presence of Bradley Beal notwithstanding. Which was why few dared question the four-year, $171-million supermax extension he received in 2017. The duration of the contract projected him to be tied to the franchise until 2023, seemingly covering his peak.

Unfortunately, reality often gets in the way of even the best-laid plans. In Wall’s case, his relatively brittle legs handicapped him to the point where he was either unable to suit up due to injury or far from effective on the court. Multiple trips to the operating table cost him his speed, the single biggest factor underpinning his skill set. Without it, he wasn’t otherworldly; without it, he was simply ordinary. In fact, advanced metrics deemed him below average; borne of a high usage rate on a squad with few options, his gaudy numbers underscored his inefficiency.

Little wonder, then, that the Wizards grew tired of paying him megabucks just to stay the sidelines or, in the few times he did burn rubber, engage in ultimately useless stat stuffing. They dealt him to the Rockets (who were as willing to start fresh), getting Russell Westbrook in return. That he became in the eyes of his previous employers an even bigger headache than the league’s most traded marquee name in recent memory speaks volumes of how much stock he has lost. And that he now finds himself looking for another landing spot is no surprise.

Heading into the weekend, the biggest news in hoops circles focused on the Rockets agreeing to work with him to “find [him] a new home.” According to The Athletic’s Shams Charania, the plan “is for him to be present at training camp, but not play in Rockets games this season.” In other words, the red and white will be forking over $44.3 million for him to stay away; they prefer to hand over the minutes to the likes of Kevin Porter, Jr. and Jalen Green instead. Imagine that.

To be sure, not all is lost for Wall. The ball, as the cliché goes, is round, and, at 31, he still has enough time, if barely, to make the kind of career renaissance that, say, Kyle Lowry did. Again, however, there’s a difference between thinking it and actually doing it. And where he will be when his albatross of a deal expires in two years is anybody’s guess.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and Human Resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Terrorists didn’t change the world, we did

UNSPLASH

THE WORLD changed on 9/11 — this sentiment was expressed again during the recent commemorations of the World Trade Center attacks. But the world did not change on Sept. 11, 2001. Nor did the mass-murderers of al-Qaeda ever possess the power to change the world.

This small band of fanatics certainly “hated our freedoms,” as President George W. Bush claimed in September 2001, “our freedom of religion, our freedom of speech, our freedom to vote and assemble and disagree with each other.” The most vicious assaults on these freedoms, however, were launched by their supposed defenders — politicians, bureaucrats, lawyers, and journalists — in the weeks, months, and years after 9/11.

That’s when the world truly changed, leading to the traumatic present where the Taliban are back in power and the rest of us, whether in India or the United States, are besieged by what Bush last weekend called the “violence that gathers within.”

In the US, racial injustice and white supremacism came to flourish on the scorched ground where a bonfire of laws was fed by successive administrations, pursuing an endless war on terror with the help of extrajudicial executions, torture, indefinite detentions, and intrusive surveillance.

Much of our bleak world today, where once-celebrated democracies such as the United Kingdom, India, and Israel are dominated by far-right personalities and movements, and Russia and China seem condemned to authoritarian rule, was also forged in the days after 9/11, when the global war on terror endowed violence and brutality with unprecedented global sanction.

A younger generation today probably doesn’t remember how quickly an insecure young Russian leader named Vladimir Putin moved in 2001 to link Russia’s long battle against separatists in Chechnya to Bush’s war on terror. The first foreign leader to call the White House after 9/11, Putin accelerated his brutal suppression of the Chechens with support from Bush, who claimed to have looked into the Russian leader’s “soul” and found him “very straightforward and trustworthy.” It was in the weeks and months after 9/11 that Putin’s autocracy was consolidated.

In Israel, right-wing Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, who had been complicit in the massacre of hundreds of civilians in Beirut in 1982 and had found his way back to power by undermining peace talks with the Palestinians, moved as fast as Putin to subsume decades-old Palestinian resistance to Israeli military occupation under the war on terror. Describing Yasser Arafat, leader of Palestinian Authority, as Israel’s Bin Laden, Sharon launched in March 2002, with the support of the Bush administration, Israel’s biggest military operation in Gaza and the West Bank since its original occupation of these territories in 1967 — an assault that irreparably damaged fledgling Palestinian institutions.

India’s Hindu nationalist leaders claimed that India had suffered its own 9/11 in December 2001, when militants driving a car with a sticker that proclaimed “India is a very bad country” opened fire at the Indian parliament building in New Delhi. Putting the Indian army on high alert on the border with Pakistan, they introduced anti-terrorist legislation which put the onus on the accused to prove his or her innocence, laws which were later disproportionately deployed against India’s Muslim minority.

It was in this toxic climate of jingoism and Islamophobia that more than 2,000 Muslims were massacred in Gujarat state, six months after 9/11, under the watch of Narendra Modi, now prime minister of India.

The most malign legacy of 9/11 was an extensive dissolution of norms and values as well as laws. It is hard to imagine China’s large-scale detention of Uyghur Muslims without the superpower culture of impunity defiantly proclaimed by the still-open prison in Guantanamo Bay.

The ongoing descent of Britain, the original home of liberty, into a libertarian’s nightmare can be dated back to Prime Minister Tony Blair’s involvement in the US-led invasion and occupation of Muslim countries — what brought, as widely predicted, terrorism to the streets of London, a state crackdown on civil liberties, and a virulent media culture of Muslim-baiting and xenophobia in general.

More damagingly, the mainstream intelligentsia in advanced democracies chose to participate in their self-mutilation. Those marveling today at how once-respectable media organizations, from the UK’s Spectator to the Times of India, became eager hosts to far-right trolls and culture warriors must examine their post-9/11 record of warmongering and Islamophobia, of marginalizing and stigmatizing dissent.

No wonder the violence that gathers within today is fueled by a profound and universal collapse of public confidence in political elites and the media.

“Never forget” — the imperative resonates 20 years after the unconscionable attacks that killed thousands of men, women and children. But nor should we forget that, though terrorists brought down the Twin Towers on 9/11, the older and sturdier edifices of democratic institutions were devastated by those sworn to protect them.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

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