[quote author=“sweet jesus”][quote author=“minijigga”]yeah, just forget about it like it was a bad dream…
50 years from now they’ll be people saying it didn’t happen, just like they do today when people talk about the Halocaust…
hope your having a safe trip hmdgrl
That’s the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard and blown way the hell out of proportion. I didn’t say that I won’t remember what happened and the lessons we learned from it. I’m saying that I don’t need endless hours of media telling me what I already know. I remember when it happened, I was in math class when I still went to college at University of Minnesota. Someone rushed in and told us what happened. The teacher said we could go home and then afternoon classes were canceled. I spent the next 2 weeks in front of the tv watching the news. Being in the midwest it’s still really hard to grasp what happened. Not that I’m trying to sound without sympathy or concern for what happened but I didn’t feel effected by what happened. Just kinda hard to get a hold on.
And I totally agree with you. I didn’t feel affected by it either. As cliche as this is going to sound, I felt as if it were a movie…so surreal. I’ve never been to NYC, so I’ve never seen the things that were destroyed. I was in Vegas when it happened though, and let me tell you, I was quite scared.
On that day, we weren’t sure what the hell was around the corner. Everybody was at Costco stocking up on supplies, everyone thought this was just the beginning of a string of more terrorist events to come. And, being in Vegas, only magnified this feeling of fear, as Vegas is a staple of American success…it can even been seen from space.
We were in the process of moving ourselves from Oregon to Arizona, and to get to Arizona, we had to cross the Hoover Dam. Well, that was closed because they didn’t want it to be attacked by terrorists (chemical weapons in the water supply, afraid that they’d somehow destroy it and didn’t want people on it…things that weren’t too far fetched right then…and still aren’t now!)...so, even though they didn’t really have much of an affect on me, I still felt fearful for what tomorrow might bring. Also, and this is just by coincidence, my long-time gf lives in NY. Every Tuesday, after school, she would goto the WTC for modeling. If you recall, it happened on a Tuesday :( That scared the #### out of me…I mean, what if they had decided to delay their plans for later flights?!
Anyway, my comment was really just off-handed…making a general statement that it seems to me that people have forgotten the significance of what happened that day. I mean, maybe I was one of the few that actually felt it despite having no emotional ties to it. That could be.
My mom balled for hours about it, not sure why…but every time they were talking about how many lives might have been lost, she’d just start crying even harder. You have to remember, on the morning of 9/11, they didn’t know exactly how many might have died. The estimates were as high as 50,000, because that is how many worked in the WTC.
What I would want, is for everyone to places themselves back in that state of fear, for just a moment every year, so that we would all make sure we don’t have something like that happen ever again.
I don’t want people to sit in front of the TV all weekend, and cry…I mean, I’ve seen some of it so far, and I can only take so much. I just don’t want people to start diminishing the significance of what that day meant to our country…because of the current political climate or for any reason. It’s just too important.
EDIT: btw, SJ, I wasn’t making a comment specifically geared towards you or the thread starter 😛 :love: So calm ‘er down with the attack words…
EDIT2: only two weeks 😛 My dad spent the better part of 6-9 in front of the TV…to be fair, we were settling in, and moving his business…so it was the downtime, not every waking second, that he spent watching the news.