Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My senior child at BCC HS was upset that none of the teachers even acknowledged the day at all. She's in 5 AP classes and 1 IB class so clearly the students can handle the material for a few minutes. It is such a sad day in my memory that I'm surprised it is not acknowledged by the school system to speak about the need to discuss a recent historical even that happened 23 years ago. And the aftermath is still being dealt with.
Same. Though the flag was at half mast at the DoD facility where I work
I work for a DOD agency, and it wasn't mentioned either. Seems like they only do it on milestone dates.
Anonymous wrote:The graduating class was just born when 09/11 occurred. It’s just another day in history for them. I’m glad schools are starting to treat it as such for the students. The moment of silence and lessons each year were getting to be ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:The graduating class was just born when 09/11 occurred. It’s just another day in history for them. I’m glad schools are starting to treat it as such for the students. The moment of silence and lessons each year were getting to be ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:My senior child at BCC HS was upset that none of the teachers even acknowledged the day at all. She's in 5 AP classes and 1 IB class so clearly the students can handle the material for a few minutes. It is such a sad day in my memory that I'm surprised it is not acknowledged by the school system to speak about the need to discuss a recent historical even that happened 23 years ago. And the aftermath is still being dealt with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree completely OP. At a minimum, there should have been a moment of silence for the lives lost on that day -- the largest attack and death toll on American soil since Pearl Harbor.
Our kids lives and the world they live in were indelibly shaped by 9/11 and its aftermath, from omnipresent security to America's role in the world. Yet they learn very little about it in school, and apparently don't even see it acknowledged barely 20 years later.
Honestly, I think you're exaggerating the practical impact. A lot of changes likely would have still happened for other reasons had 9/11 not happened. Security was increasing before 9/11 due to other domestic and foreign terrorist attacks. The US was already involved militarily around the world, including the middle east. Domestic surveillance was already ramping up, with most of the Patriot Act written before 9/11.
☝️☝️☝️☝️Why it needs to be remembered. Already idiots think it wasn’t important.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree completely OP. At a minimum, there should have been a moment of silence for the lives lost on that day -- the largest attack and death toll on American soil since Pearl Harbor.
Our kids lives and the world they live in were indelibly shaped by 9/11 and its aftermath, from omnipresent security to America's role in the world. Yet they learn very little about it in school, and apparently don't even see it acknowledged barely 20 years later.
Honestly, I think you're exaggerating the practical impact. A lot of changes likely would have still happened for other reasons had 9/11 not happened. Security was increasing before 9/11 due to other domestic and foreign terrorist attacks. The US was already involved militarily around the world, including the middle east. Domestic surveillance was already ramping up, with most of the Patriot Act written before 9/11.
☝️☝️☝️☝️Why it needs to be remembered. Already idiots think it wasn’t important.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree completely OP. At a minimum, there should have been a moment of silence for the lives lost on that day -- the largest attack and death toll on American soil since Pearl Harbor.
Our kids lives and the world they live in were indelibly shaped by 9/11 and its aftermath, from omnipresent security to America's role in the world. Yet they learn very little about it in school, and apparently don't even see it acknowledged barely 20 years later.
Honestly, I think you're exaggerating the practical impact. A lot of changes likely would have still happened for other reasons had 9/11 not happened. Security was increasing before 9/11 due to other domestic and foreign terrorist attacks. The US was already involved militarily around the world, including the middle east. Domestic surveillance was already ramping up, with most of the Patriot Act written before 9/11.