ChileMass
Active member
Never forget this happened. Your home country was viciously attacked and 2500 of your fellow citizens were killed by religious fanatics who want to bring down our society. Your neighbors lost their Mom or Dad, son or daughter. It's a day for reflection and to think about what we stand for individually and as a nation.
Please post no flames or nasty political commentary. We all know that 9/11 was a terrible day for all of us and the subsequent war is going badly in many repsects (this coming from a Republican who still supports W). AZ.com is not about politics and we are not going to solve this problem here on this website. One thing I'd like to avoid is offending any members or visitors who may have lost loved ones by cheapening their sacrifice with political squabbling, so let's please have none of that.
How about we all post where we were when the attacks happened and any personal stories of getting out of NYC or what our friends/families went through? I sincerely hope this is not in bad taste for anyone in the NY/NJ/DC areas that lost family.
For myself, I was working in my office at home when my wife called me into the living room telling me that a jet had just crashed into one of the World Trade towers in Manhattan. I was shocked, but remembered the old stories of the B-17 bomber that flew into the Empire State building back during WWII, so I thought it must just be a terrible accident with a plane way off course. NBC was showing the video on the Today show, and shortly after I went back to work. A little while later I was getting more coffee and passing by the living room again and saw Katie Couric interviewing a woman from the streets of Manhattan by cellphone. They were talking about the debris coming down from the first plane and a TV helicopter was flying around the towers, just perfectly to catch the sight of the second plane flying into the second tower and exploding. The woman being interviewed screamed over her cellphone and the connection ended as we all watched the fireball engulf the second building. It was unreal - watching this happen on national television - it as like a bad movie, but it was actually happening. I was dumbstruck. Instantly, you realized this was not an accident and we were under attack. This was crazy! This doesn't happen in NY. For the next couple of hours my wife and I sat glued to the TV and watched the towers fall. More unreal moments. Watching the firefighters go to work on the TV and the mass exodus out of the city was something. Everyone was looking out for each other, and for several weeks after, there was a unified spirit here in the US that I have never experienced. We should always try to remember that and be extra kind to each other.
So no flames on W (you can flame Osama bin Laden all you want) or political stuff. How about your personal remembrances and what you took away from that day.
Please post no flames or nasty political commentary. We all know that 9/11 was a terrible day for all of us and the subsequent war is going badly in many repsects (this coming from a Republican who still supports W). AZ.com is not about politics and we are not going to solve this problem here on this website. One thing I'd like to avoid is offending any members or visitors who may have lost loved ones by cheapening their sacrifice with political squabbling, so let's please have none of that.
How about we all post where we were when the attacks happened and any personal stories of getting out of NYC or what our friends/families went through? I sincerely hope this is not in bad taste for anyone in the NY/NJ/DC areas that lost family.
For myself, I was working in my office at home when my wife called me into the living room telling me that a jet had just crashed into one of the World Trade towers in Manhattan. I was shocked, but remembered the old stories of the B-17 bomber that flew into the Empire State building back during WWII, so I thought it must just be a terrible accident with a plane way off course. NBC was showing the video on the Today show, and shortly after I went back to work. A little while later I was getting more coffee and passing by the living room again and saw Katie Couric interviewing a woman from the streets of Manhattan by cellphone. They were talking about the debris coming down from the first plane and a TV helicopter was flying around the towers, just perfectly to catch the sight of the second plane flying into the second tower and exploding. The woman being interviewed screamed over her cellphone and the connection ended as we all watched the fireball engulf the second building. It was unreal - watching this happen on national television - it as like a bad movie, but it was actually happening. I was dumbstruck. Instantly, you realized this was not an accident and we were under attack. This was crazy! This doesn't happen in NY. For the next couple of hours my wife and I sat glued to the TV and watched the towers fall. More unreal moments. Watching the firefighters go to work on the TV and the mass exodus out of the city was something. Everyone was looking out for each other, and for several weeks after, there was a unified spirit here in the US that I have never experienced. We should always try to remember that and be extra kind to each other.
So no flames on W (you can flame Osama bin Laden all you want) or political stuff. How about your personal remembrances and what you took away from that day.
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