Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here we are on this day.
60 Minutes streamed a good story about some surviving fire fighters and the children of those killed in the towers who then joined the fire service on continued their careers. It is a different mindset than what we see in this entitled area and worth watching for that reason alone.
Today, I remember my friend who was the co-pilot of the AA flight that went into the Pentagon and his father who until his death wrote condolence letters to parents whose children were killed in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was an absolutely beautiful day in Northern Virginia, clear blue skies, low humidity, fall around the corner. The teacher had just turned off the TV for the school morning announcements and we were working on some activity when we heard and felt a really strong BOOM. Some kids went to the window to look out at the road in front of school because it was just so loud, but we didn't see anything and went back to our seats.
Then a teacher poked her head into the classroom and told our teacher to turn the TV back on, right now.
Lots of kids had parents who worked at the pentagon and in NYC. and we truly thought we might be next, because we absolutely didn't know.
Only a few kids had cellphones and they were allowed to go to their lockers and retrieve their phones. Back then kids had to lock up their phones during school hours.
Whenever we have clear blue sky, sunny, warm, but low humidity days, I think - ah, Sept 11
You are not alone. Lots of us do. Memory is a weird thing.
I definitely do this. I'm in the NYC suburbs and the weather today was almost identical to the day of the attacks.
Anonymous wrote:In Skyline Tower that morning. A friend with a window office literally watched the plane hit the Pentagon in horror.
I have zero tolerance for the conspiracy nutjobs who try to claim “it was a missile” or an inside job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was an absolutely beautiful day in Northern Virginia, clear blue skies, low humidity, fall around the corner. The teacher had just turned off the TV for the school morning announcements and we were working on some activity when we heard and felt a really strong BOOM. Some kids went to the window to look out at the road in front of school because it was just so loud, but we didn't see anything and went back to our seats.
Then a teacher poked her head into the classroom and told our teacher to turn the TV back on, right now.
Lots of kids had parents who worked at the pentagon and in NYC. and we truly thought we might be next, because we absolutely didn't know.
Only a few kids had cellphones and they were allowed to go to their lockers and retrieve their phones. Back then kids had to lock up their phones during school hours.
Whenever we have clear blue sky, sunny, warm, but low humidity days, I think - ah, Sept 11
You are not alone. Lots of us do. Memory is a weird thing.
Anonymous wrote:Do you remember the military planes flying high above the area for many days afterwards? You couldn't see them but you could hear them.
Then we had the anthrax scare.
The following year we had the DC sniper, and gas stations put up big tarps to protect people pumping gas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was an absolutely beautiful day in Northern Virginia, clear blue skies, low humidity, fall around the corner. The teacher had just turned off the TV for the school morning announcements and we were working on some activity when we heard and felt a really strong BOOM. Some kids went to the window to look out at the road in front of school because it was just so loud, but we didn't see anything and went back to our seats.
Then a teacher poked her head into the classroom and told our teacher to turn the TV back on, right now.
Lots of kids had parents who worked at the pentagon and in NYC. and we truly thought we might be next, because we absolutely didn't know.
Only a few kids had cellphones and they were allowed to go to their lockers and retrieve their phones. Back then kids had to lock up their phones during school hours.
Whenever we have clear blue sky, sunny, warm, but low humidity days, I think - ah, Sept 11
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Over it. Moved on. Yes - I remember it like D-day but I'm not dwelling on it. I "remember" it each time it takes me an hour to get thru security at the airport.
Unamerican
Maga garbage
I lost many friends that day shut up
Anonymous wrote:Do you remember the military planes flying high above the area for many days afterwards? You couldn't see them but you could hear them.
Then we had the anthrax scare.
The following year we had the DC sniper, and gas stations put up big tarps to protect people pumping gas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Over it. Moved on. Yes - I remember it like D-day but I'm not dwelling on it. I "remember" it each time it takes me an hour to get thru security at the airport.
Just move on then. There are family members that are being mourned. You can always skip a topic that you have 'moved' on from.
Yep like every other single war - even the Iraq, Iran, Palestine, etc etc etc etc since 9/11
Move on
Does this also include the Civil War or will you keep harping about that one?
Yes, we are still fighting the Civil War
Anonymous wrote:Working at a local Maryland hospital. We assumed we would be flooded with overflow patients...and nothing.
I can still remember the sky when driving home on 495 by Tysons on that day.
Anonymous wrote:A block from the Capital...