You should read some of the other WTC attack threads. They caught on to the fact that it was terorism about five or six minutes before we did. It truly didn't dawn on me until I saw the second plane hit.
I might have posted "close the airports" here once that day, but I was screaming it over and over here in my apartment. Of course I meant "close the Northeast corridor" because that's where the planes seemed to be coming from; I never dreamed they'd shut them ALL down, so quickly and for so long. No telling what else was prevented
It's hard to read this now, not least because I was so naive back on 9/11.
After reading the Wash Post series on the situation behind the scenes in the first few hours, I was impressed with how Mineta handled it. From the WP story:
"Transportation Secretary Norman Y. Mineta, summoned by the White House to the bunker, was on an open line to the Federal Aviation Administration operations center, monitoring Flight 77 as it hurtled toward Washington, with radar tracks coming every seven seconds. Reports came that the plane was 50 miles out, 30 miles out, 10 miles out-until word reached the bunker that there had been an explosion at the Pentagon.
Mineta shouted into the phone to Monte Belger at the FAA: "Monte, bring all the planes down." It was an unprecedented order-there were 4,546 airplanes in the air at the time. Belger, the FAA's acting deputy administrator, amended Mineta's directive to take into account the authority vested in airline pilots. "We're bringing them down per pilot discretion," Belger told the secretary.
"[Expletive] pilot discretion," Mineta yelled back. "Get those goddamn planes down."
Sitting at the other end of the table, Cheney snapped his head up, looked squarely at Mineta and nodded in agreement."
I wasn't a big Mineta fan when he was named, but my admiration went up a few notches when I read this.
It was a good thing to bump this thread, especially on a day where it looks like we may have lost some men.