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6 answers

It was honestly the day that I stopped being a child and for the first time had to worry about my safety as a citizen of the US and as a New Yorker.

2007-09-10 15:00:53 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

For me the significance is that some radical group decided that they wanted to kill over 5,000 innocent people who were just working and minding their own business because they didn't like us or the God they believed we chose to worship.

I'm not sure what the world thinks because most Countries hate us.

Bill J. where is this website that shows everything you're talking about. You either have been brainwashed or a vivid imagination.

2007-09-10 16:20:54 · answer #2 · answered by ego_maniac 4 · 0 1

It was a bigger tragedy that the loss of the twin towers or the lives within them. There was a moment when the whole civilized world stood shoulder to shoulder with the US in their grief, ready to do anything to help.

And Bush just frittered all that goodwill away, and turned the US into a greater pariah than it's ever been.

CD

2007-09-10 16:20:33 · answer #3 · answered by Super Atheist 7 · 2 2

For me, it's a reminder that we aren't invincible. We aren't indestructible. Our actions in other countries, in the world, can come here to our own soil and affect us.

2007-09-10 16:24:10 · answer #4 · answered by ~*~ strryeyedgrrl ~*~ 4 · 0 1

Damned shame...it was something that happened and it's over with.

Quit meddling in foreigner's affairs.

2007-09-10 16:18:04 · answer #5 · answered by gobraghomagh 3 · 0 1

fome it another reminded how fragile we are how fragile we are as humans, and for those radical muslims groups human life is nothing.

2007-09-10 16:27:28 · answer #6 · answered by steven25t 7 · 0 1

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