My Journal Entry from September 11, 2001 said:
right off the bat, i'm fine, and so is everyone in my family. i hope you and your family are fine too.
the first news of today's tragedy came from a friend of mine, who was making light of it. the news spread quickly across campus, but we really didnt know anything about it. there were just murmers about the world trade center. when i got to chem at 10 am Mr. Berghoff told us that two planes had crashed into the two towers of the world trade center. we then went to an impromptu school meeting. the headmaster delivered the news to a stunned and quiet student body. when he told us that the buildings had collapsed, we all gasped. people began crying. at first i really didnt understand the severity of the situation. it still hasnt completely hit me. at choate, you feel disconnected from the world, as if you were in a small private bubble.
after the meeting i called my mom, to find out more information. then she told me that my uncle (her brother) works on the 79th floor of the world trade center. thats the exact floor where one of the planes crashed. i didnt even know my uncle worked at the world trade center. i knew he worked for some foreign bank, but i didnt think he worked there. up until this point i had only been worried that my friends who had family in NYC, along with my friends who live there. But now my mom just told me that my uncle worked on the 79 floor. my world practically crashed right there.
but by some twist of fate, be it karma or whatever, my uncle is still alive.
you see, recently we have been worried about the health of my mom's father, who might have cancer. today, my grandfather was scheduled to have a biopsy. my mom wanted my grandfather to just go with my grandmother, but my uncle wanted to take him instead. so he did. and he was with my grandfather at the doctors, instead of his office, when the tragedy occured. so my grandfather's illness is really a blessing in disguise. my uncle is still alive.
i am glad to know he is safe, but i cant get rid of this heavy feeling in my chest, the knife in my guts, knowing that those loved ones that my friends have lost, and those thousands of other people who are now gone. i feel almost guilty, sharing this miraculous event, knowing that maybe, someone who might read this will not have been so lucky.
my uncle is distraught, all his friends worked with him, and he recently hired a very young man to work for him. it was his first day of work.
i dont understand how anyone could do this.
our entire school is praying for everyone involved.
Tracer Bullet said:You too huh?
Mostly they seem ridiculously stupid.
Tracer Bullet said:Maybe its because people thought:
I've never understood why people makes such a big deal out of this.
Tracer Bullet said:Be unsurprised but I'd hope still saddened... No Tracer, you weren't alone but considering that the majority here was truly children at the time its no wonder that they view this in a totally different light.
I guess I was alone in being unimpressed and unsurprised by the events five years ago.
Move on.suck a dick, frenchy.
Addicted to Morphine said:I know, Man. I'm just being overly abrasive, as usual. Sorry.
I was just hazarding a guess at why some people were so shocked, although I'm sure there were others who expected something far worse to happen sooner than it did.
French Toast said:Speaking as someone who is constantly on the wrong side of things, I hope you brought plenty of paint and enjoy being on your own cause you are burning bridges and/or painting yourself into a corner faster than anyone I have ever seen here.
I stand by every word of my post, and now leave the thread.
Tracer Bullet said:It's cool. I actually agreed with your last post, but I wanted to try and think about what other people may have been feeling right after 9/11.
I know, Man. I'm just being overly abrasive, as usual. Sorry.
JFK said:Not saying that I necessarily agree with what Frenchy is saying, but it seems like this quote applies, in a way.
Whenever we stand against the flow of opinion on strongly contested issues... a man does what he must. In spite of personal consequences, in spite of obstacles and dangers and pressures. And that is the basis of all human morality.
Baron von Snickers said:Yes.
Is mainstream America really this f**king stupid/out of touch?
Baron von Snickers said:I never owned one in the first place.
In closing:
Smash your TV.
Mr. Lif said:
Here's what your history books won't show: You're a dead man for f**king with American dough. They're killing several birds with one stone, while you're at home with anti-terrorism up in your dome. But my eyes are wide open and my TV is off. Great, because I save on my electricity cost. And you can wave that piece of s**t flag if you dare, but they killed us because we've been killing them for years.
Baron von Snickers said:Done. TV sucks. Internet's not much better. Islam is the worst of all three.
Smash your TV.
What three? TV, Internet, Islam? Yeah, I much rather spend my time with internet than with Islam or TV.Baron von Snickers said:Done. TV sucks. Internet's not much better. Islam is the worst of all three.
Smash your TV.
Nickelplate said:Done. TV sucks. Internet's not much better. Islam is the worst of all three.</div></div>
<DIV class=quote>
<DIV class=quotetitle>? quoting Baron von Snickers</DIV>
<DIV class=quotetext>Smash your TV.
Nickelplate said:Done. TV sucks. Internet's not much better. Islam is the worst of all three.</div></div>I'd take Islam, personally. Also, I'm Snarkpit's most spiritual member.
<DIV class=quote>
<DIV class=quotetitle>? quoting Baron von Snickers</DIV>
<DIV class=quotetext>Smash your TV.
I've never understood why people makes such a big deal out of this. 3,000 people, 0.001% of the American population... about 16 times that number die every year in traffic accidents. It was somewhat surreal given that I'd recently read Debt of Honor (in which a crazed pilot crashes a 747 into the capitol dome), but aside from that, I wasn't really surprised. It was only a matter of time before a terrorist group managed to find it's own ass. Mostly they seem ridiculously stupid.i agree wholely with what you said, but on that fact, if the terrorists were acting on their own, they were not after lives most likely, they were after the symbol of the trade centers
People say the world is different now, that 9/11 changed everything. That's s**t. Nothing has changed, it's merely that the American people are now slightly more aware of what the world is really like... and we as a nation have over reacted horribly. Terrorism is not really such a big deal, and it's been around for a long, long time.
fishy said:Done. TV sucks. Internet's not much better. Islam is the worst of all three.
<DIV class=quote>
<DIV class=quotetitle>? quoting Nickelplate</DIV>
<DIV class=quotetext>
<DIV class=quote>
<DIV class=quotetitle>? quoting Baron von Snickers</DIV>
<DIV class=quotetext>Smash your TV.
Addicted to Morphine said:That is very good, and part of my point. Just as Islam should not be synonymous with terrorism because a FEW Muslims chose to be terrorists, the USA should not be automatically identified with the acts of a president a few decades in the past (not to mention that other countries were involved, not just USA). The thing is that every time something happens to an islamic country, they demand we apologize and they burn our flags and our embassies and whatnot. But when they do something to us like the 9/11 attacks, they say, "too bad," and even US citizens stick up for them with this crap!
I think I see what you're saying, but Islam and terrorism shouldn't be synonymous.