Journalist and writer Spencer Ackerman says that since the rebels invaded the US Capitol, it was reported that last January 6 ended a chapter in American history, and America's most threatening enemies should no longer be understood as foreigners, which is a euphemism for Muslims, and instead looked at them as local, which is also a euphemism for white Americans of the far right.

But last January 6 - as the writer says in his article in the New York Times - is not the end of the era of September 11, 2001 as much as it is an embodiment of it.

Ackerman explained that the war on terror has made white Americans accustomed to seeing themselves as anti-terrorists, and that right-wing extremists among them can gather in militias and face little in the way of retaliation from law enforcement.

This impunity has led to cases like the one in 2016, recounted in a relatively rare criminal complaint, when members of the Kansas militia calling itself the Crusaders conspired to kill their Somali-American neighbors.

One said, "Make sure that if you start using your bow on these cockroaches, be sure to dip it in pig's blood before throwing it at them."

They considered themselves doing what America has been doing all this time, which is to fight terrorism because as patriots they cannot be terrorists.

And when foreign wars turned into disasters, the far-right faction that became part of President Donald Trump's "Make America Great Again" coalition found it;

He himself is less concerned with wars themselves than with civilized violence.

The most enduring terrorism in the United States is white terrorism, and no war can defeat it, but constant struggle can.

Ackerman believes that the era of "September 11" was also manifested in the Biden administration's reaction to the "Sixth of January", as his administration, Democratic lawmakers and security services are working to determine how to authorize the FBI in a war against "domestic extremism."

In February, a senior Justice Department official said the lack of a domestic terrorism law should not be seen as an obstacle to widespread surveillance and prosecution, because other legal definitions of terrorism "expand a lot of the powers we can use."

At the end of his article, the writer referred to what a former US Marine who stormed the Capitol said, "I am not a terrorist," and commented that the war on terrorism made this person and his ilk believe that he could not be a terrorist by nature.

He added that the most enduring terrorism in the United States is white terrorism, and no war can defeat it, but a continuous struggle can do it.

He added that the country needs organized mass action to remove rebel allies from office and bring down structural acts of white racism, such as voter suppression laws and abolishing the institutional architecture of the War on Terror, before they threaten the lives and liberties of more Americans.

He concluded his article by saying that this is the only way, and not empty decisive statements, to end the "September 11" era.