I really wanted to know this. I was never into getting really emotional with remembering 9/11. When you look over it 3,000 people died, that is not a whole lot compared to the 150,000 that die daily. I'm not trying to act non-American, but I try to just look over it to get the thought out of my head. The day was tragic, but from my view I don't tend to look over that much on the rememberance of it. We shouldn't forget it, but us Americans should loosen up and move on from the tragic day.
So, how do you remember it, if you do at all?
2007-09-09
14:00:31
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18 answers
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asked by
Andrew
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in
Politics & Government
➔ Other - Politics & Government
I'm not so sure on the section..
2007-09-09
14:00:57 ·
update #1
It's just another day on the Gregorian calendar. By the measure of any other calendar, it's some other day.
Every day people die by violence, stupidity, war, hate, illness, obesity, smoking.
The only difference was back in 2001, for one moment the rate of death became very transparent and very directed for very political reasons.
As for me? It's just another day.
Giving yourself an ulcer, cultivating any kind of absurd emotions over this event or date will not raise the dead nor change history. So why do it? Aren't there far more productive and useful things in the world or even in life that need to be attended to?
BTW, you DO know that the towers were bombed unsuccessfully once before?
2007-09-09 15:15:33
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Sad as it may seem to some but it is a day we celebrate here in our home as it was before and will be after wards my husbands birthday. We didn't celebrate on the year that 9/11 happened as so many people were affected and we had a family member living in downtown New York at that time. We always take the time to say a prayer for those who gave and lost their lives for our freedom. But I also thank the Lord that I have had yet another year with my soul-mate and best friend my husband.
2007-09-09 14:23:46
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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When someone mentions 9/11 there is no problem for me in remembering it. But which 9/11 do you refer to. Could it be the 9/11/73 when the CIA overthrew the democratically president of Chili and installed a most brutal military dictator.
So much fo defending democracy - when it is in the national interest of the US. Or should that be when it's perceived to be in the interest of corporate America.
A reign of terror followed the coup in which tens of thousands of Chileans underwent torture, hundreds of thousands were forced or fled into exile and the democratic institutions of the country were systematically destroyed. The coup leader, General Augusto Pinochet, remained military dictator of Chile for seventeen years four years longer than Hitler.
2007-09-09 14:19:08
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answer #3
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answered by seniorcanuck 2
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I cant think such a lot of folks gave such sensible *** solutions! a exact smile to people who truthfully responded the query with the admire that it merits...... I will not ever omit that day, I labored at a on line casino and no person used to be playing that day the entire employees and customers eyes had been at the more than a few TVs unfold by way of out the on line casino...I have not ever heard such silence. And silence is how i can recollect it. I will recollect the entire guys ladies and youngsters aboard each and every airplane...the 2 that crashed into the sector alternate middle, one on the Pentagon, and the one who crashed in Pennsylvania...The lives of the folks that labored on this planet alternate middle, the NYFD, and the ones on the Pentagon. And i can thank each and every veteran i see now not simplest at present however every day for combating for my freedom and in particular the ones which can be combating now in Iraq and Afghanistan
2016-09-05 08:21:00
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answer #4
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answered by edge 4
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wow. Check out my 360, I just redid the whole thing in remembrance. I'll never forget that day, and I cry every time I think about it.
For some people, it just didn't effect them as much. For me, it was the turning point. I realized, I have to do something with my life. I have to help people. This is what happens when we get cocky. We don't rule the world anymore, and we are getting more and more venerable each day. God bless America, but that doesn't mean that we are indestructible.
2007-09-09 14:27:00
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answer #5
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answered by *Forget me not* 5
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I usually make a mental note to spend a moment of silence to remember all the people that were harmed and their families. Then, when I have some time, I light a candle and say a little prayer. Other than that though, I don't make a big deal out of it.
2007-09-09 14:06:07
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answer #6
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answered by Rebeccah 3
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I remember it with pride; pride in the police, emergency personnel, and firefighters who selflessly responded to mayhem, those who died and those who didn't. Pride in the passengers who took back their airplane as it crashed into a field, preventing it from reaching its target. Pride in the ordinary people who did extraordinary things that day to assist and rescue. Pride in the entire city of New York as they banded together to care for those who had been physically, emotionally, and mentally injured. There is no way I can mention all the people and all the ways they stood to the occasion. But, mostly, I have pride in the entire country as it swelled together into one bright, burning emblem of solidarity. This is how I remember 9/11. Bin Laden did not terrify America; he unified it as no event since the bombing of Pearl Harbor had done.
2007-09-09 14:33:50
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answer #7
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answered by claudiacake 7
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You're looking at it from a philosophical standpoint. Yes, there are 150K people killed every day from a variety of causes, all over the country. But how many are killed in one place by outsiders flying planes into them that then collapse? The US has never experienced an attack that catastrophic by an outside force. The significance of that and the impact it has had on our foreign policy and our place in the world can't be over stated.
2007-09-09 14:11:38
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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i try to expose the truth for all to see. lets start here.
here is the august 6, 2001 presidential briefing entitled "bin laden determined to strike in the US." actually evidence that bin laden wanted to hijack airplanes and fly them into buildings and landmarks. i saw on another question how many people did not know of these warning. 14 countries warned the bush administration. here don't just take my word for it. do your own research.
http://www.cnn.com/2004/ALLPOLITICS/04/10/august6.memo/index.html
2007-09-09 14:14:14
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Theres some parts of us that don't want to remember but then again, we do want to remember and honor the people who died for us we just don't want to remember why they died.
2007-09-09 14:07:52
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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