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A Few of FR's Finest....Every Day...911 Week, Day THREE 09-11-02
Written by JohnHuang2 with Graphics and Layout by Billie | JohnHuang2

Posted on 09/11/2002 5:21:09 AM PDT by Mama_Bear






              





September 11th --
A Day America Must Never Forget

By JohnHuang2


It was early September 11, 2001 -- just another beautiful, sparkling summer morning in America. From Florida's comely, sandy beaches, across the Carolina Smoky Mountains, to sensual Mt. Rainer in Washington State, it was just another typical, uneventful workaday. The roads and highways bustling with rush-hour traffic, factories humming right along, tireless shopkeepers, vendors and farmers were busy as ever.
The imperturbable, mundane serenity augured not a clue of the nightmare to come.
The clock strikes 8:46 a.m. EST. Suddenly, seemingly from nowhere, a colossal, titanic explosion rips the heart of New York's financial center. A Boeing 767 passenger jet had just plunged into the World Trade Center's north tower. Instantly, a hellish fireball erupts, engulfing the skyscraper's upper-third, the towering flames scorching the morning sky. The explosion's unbridled power and fury were felt miles from the infernal epicenter.
Then, minutes later, yet another jet from hell rumbles over the trembling city, flying low as it eerily swoops towards the embattled WTC. At 9:03 a.m., the gruesome horror is repeated; this time the south tower is struck.
The world knew then this was no accident, no unlucky mishaps. This was terrorism -- the evil misdeed of savages.
But, more than that, these were acts of war. America was under attack.
As if to remove any doubt, reports of yet another kamikaze strike crosses the wires -- barely an hour after the south tower was struck. This time, the nation's military nerve center was the target. At 9:43 a.m., American Airlines Flight 77 crashes into the Pentagon in Washington.
Then, reports of United Airlines Flight 93, and still another hijacking. At 10:03 a.m. a Boeing 757, bound originally for San Francisco, slams into a field in Somerset County, Pennsylvania, killing all 40 on board.
All told, the most barbaric acts of domestic terrorism snuffed out the lives of more than 3,000 men, women and children. These innocents became the war's first casualties.
The unspeakable horror and agony that day had broken the quietude and serenity we had long casually taken for granted.
America would never be the same again, her innocence ravished and raped that black September morning.
Suddenly, bursting before our eyes, what hitherto had seemed beyond unimaginable. The nation, whipsawed in terror and sorrow, stumbled and staggered.
Gone forever was our sense of sheltered invulnerability. The unfettered brutality and virulence (common-place in Bogota and Beirut, perhaps), could never befall on American soil -- or so we thought.
That indomitable aura of invincibility, like the World Trade Center itself, lay in ruins.
Amid the seared and parched remains, the smoldering corpses, the shrieks of agony and bellowing cries for help from under the sizzling rubble, as jolted rescuers, shrouded by plumes of blinding smoke, scurried heroically in search for survivors, the inevitable question "why?" ricochet across the lengths and breadths of our shaken land.
What kind of animals would deign to perpetrate such dastardly, despicable horror?
The answer would soon be forthcoming, as the trail of evidence pointed inexorably towards an all-too-familiar name, Osama bin Laden -- perennial enemy of the United States.
The shadowy, elusive Saudi national had long ago become a household name, having been the terror mastermind behind a deadly series of devastating attacks in the 90s, involving hundreds of casualties -- all under the unwatchful eye of the Clinton (mal) administration. The pathetic, halfhearted/half-baked 'military' 'retaliations' which followed would only embolden bin Laden and his al-Qaeda camarilla of war criminals.
While Clinton diehards deny it, September 11 has become an indelible blotch on the Clinton "legacy" -- a stain far more tarnishing than Lewinsky.
Today, exactly one year to the day after the harrowing carnage that awful morning, we commemorate the victims of 9/11 -- the more than 3,000 innocent men, women and children who perished that infamous day.
Three-thousand lives pulverized suddenly, senselessly.
Three-thousand hopes, 3,000 dreams, 3,000 candles of life extinguished, for no reason.
Among the victims, someone's father, someone's mother, someone's son or daughter, aunt or uncle or dear friend.
But all of them, fellow human beings.
A part of America died with them that terrible day.
September 11th was a cruel and vicious attack on all of us -- as Americans.
September 11th reminds us all of our shared humanity, and our common mortality.
The stupendous and miraculous out-pouring of love and support from people all across America during those darkest hours stands as living testament to the greatness of America itself. Our resilience as a people is what makes us uniquely American.
Our enemies may bomb us, hijack our planes, topple our buildings, but our shared sense of community, our effervescence and our love for each other can never say die.
This indomitable spirit moved the gallant heroes of hijacked Flight 93 to fight back, sparing the capital even greater carnage and destruction. Todd Beamer, who led the passenger revolt, epitomizes the courage and spirit and valor of America. This nation will never forget him.
The invincible spirit of the firefighters saved countless lives that day. The stories of heroism, of courage overcoming seemingly insurmountable odds would take more than a lifetime to recount. These brave men boldly defied death in the face that day, again and again.
Take the story of the men of Ladder Company 6. It's a story of how six New York firefighters were miraculously saved from the jaws of death -- all because of Josephine Harris, a woman they call their very own 'Guardian Angel'.






Stationed in downtown Manhattan, Ladder 6 heard the harrowing explosion when the first jet slammed the north tower. "A plane has gone into the World Trade Center!", boomed the intercom.
Ladder 6 rushed to the scene. Three minutes later, they saw "pieces of aircraft lying on the sidewalk and there were computer monitors smashing in the street", firefighter Billy Butler told the Guardian newspaper.
Butler, a seven-year veteran on the force, recalls how they "waited for the debris to stop falling and grabbed our stuff and made a beeline for the front door."
Captain John Jonas told Dateline NBC that, as they entered "One World Trade Center, the [north] tower, there were two badly burned people right there at the lobby door."
"We were in the lobby when the second plane hit", recounted Sal D' Agostino. "You could hear a rumble and an explosion. And from the windows in the World Financial Center across the street, the reflection of the explosion came off of that, came off of those windows", he said.
Climbing stairwell B, each carrying 110 lbs of gear on their backs, Ladder 6 reached the 27th floor when suddenly they heard a "rumble that nobody's ever heard before -- a 110-story building coming down", Captain Jonas told Dateline. The south tower had just crumbled to earth. They were ordered to evacuate -- immediately.
It was then when Ladder 6 came upon Josephine, a Grandmother who had already climbed down 46 floors from her office at the Port Authority.
Captain Jonas described his reaction to Dateline this way: "And Billy's my biggest, and strongest guy. I said, 'Billy, just put her arm around you, and just, we'll do the best we can'. And she was having a hard time. She was elderly, and she wasn't walking very well."
"We started down with her and it was a slow process because she was extremely fatigued, her legs were collapsing," Billy Butler tells the Guardian.
Butler: "We made it down to the fourth floor. We took two steps down the stairs and the whole building started to collapse. It threw us down to half landing. I have never been in a tornado or an earthquake but I think it was like a combination of both. You could see the stuff coming down past your face and the next minute it was going up past your face."
"My lower legs were covered with debris", Butler added, "and as I picked it off I heard something. It was this woman Josephine, she was laying at my feet. Then some of the other guys started getting up. The dust and the smoke did not clear for an hour and half."
Mr Butler: "We didn't give a Mayday initially because we thought we could walk out of there like gentlemen. Then we gave a Mayday and nobody answered, we couldn't get a signal. The chief finally ... got a message out. Captain Jonas told them that they were in the north tower's stairway B. The reply came back, 'where's the north tower?"
Richie Picciotto, the Batallion Chief, told Dateline that "there was no way out. We were encapsulated. So even though we were alive, there's 105 floors above us."
In fact, as Dateline reports, little did they know "those 105 floors were now in pieces all around them. The men of Ladder 6 had survived the collapse but were now marooned in one of the few fragments of the building still standing -- a darkened stairwell. And surrounding them, a craggy wasteland shrouded in smoke."
In his Mayday call, Captain Jonas kept "telling them, 'we're in World Trade Center One. You enter through the glass doors, you make a right, stairway B is the first stairway on the left. We're on -- between the second and the fourth floor. And my five year old daughter could follow those directions."
But Butler has a better idea. He borrows a cell phone from a Port Authority police officer hunkering with them and calls home.
Bill Butler: "My wife answered the phone. She said how are you doing. She was asking a lot of questions. I said, listen to me. And she started to whimper a little bit, and I said, ‘You can’t cry, do not cry right now.' She actually is writing this stuff down, so I just told her call the fire house and tell the guys where we’re at."
Then, suddenly, miraculously, "everything cleared just for a moment. And we could see we were at the top of this debris pile. And I'm thinking, this is going to be OK, you know? This, we're going to be OK here."
Richie Picciotto: "There’s light there. I thought it was an optical illusion. There’s light, we’re safe. There’s life. There’s light."
Dateline recounts how "Chief Picciotto followed the light to an opening they had not seen before, climbed out and secured a rope to show others the way. Still sounding his bullhorn siren, the chief was soon discovered by the men of Ladder Company 43. The firefighters could now climb out. But what about Josephine Harris?"
"I knew that we couldn’t get Josephine out by ourselves", Butler recalls. They stayed with Josephine till she was rescued.
Butler explains the remarkable irony to the Guardian this way: "This woman was soooo slow, but she was a guardian angel sent to us. It was because she slowed us up that we ended up in that void. If we had gotten out of that building we may have sought refuge in our fire truck which was flattened. I saw it the other day and it's just one twisted piece of metal."




Folks, the story of Ladder 6 is the story of America, a tribute to this great and wonderful country of ours.
'But that was a year ago', the cynic scoffs. 'Today, that spirit is dead'.
Nonsense.
America is roaring back, thanks to the leadership of our President, George W. Bush. And thanks to the courage and bravery of the troops he leads, our enemies are either dead, captured or on the run.
"We'll succeed," thundered the Commander-in-Chief at a White House ceremony in March marking six months since the September 11th attacks.
"There will be a day when the organized threat against America, our friends and allies is broken," the President continued. "I see a peaceful world beyond the war on terror, and with courage and unity, we are building that world together."
Over the site of the World Trade Center, two beams of light tower defiantly into New York's night sky, a touching memorial to the victims of 9/11. But more than just columns of light, those beams piercing boldly the darkness are unflinching towers of courage, towers of strength, towers of firmness and undaunted resolve. To our enemies, these poignant symbols send a message, loud and clear: You will never defeat us, we will never surrender, through fire and water we will triumph over you, whatever it takes.


To the victims and heroes of September 11th; to the firefighters, policemen, emergency/rescue workers -- to all who were taken from us that day -- these radiant beams illuminating the heavens are our way of saying, 'We will never ever forget you.'
America must never forget. ~ JohnHuang2







THIS WEEK'S THREADS

09-09-02   911 Week, Day ONE
09-10-02   911 Week, Day TWO



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Political Humor/Cartoons
KEYWORDS: freepers; memorial; michaeldobbs; military; patriotday; patriotic; tribute
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To: Billie; ru4liberty; JustAmy
Guess I just forgot....'you're' the head Nanny. : )

That would be me. LOL I can't get anyone else to TAKE the job!
Unless it's ru!!

Shhhhh....'ru' is TOO stern with the 'Hooligans'. : )

221 posted on 09/11/2002 4:01:08 PM PDT by ST.LOUIE1
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To: Billie
Thank you Billie. I think a cup of tea would be nice about now. I just got back. Had to be away for awhile.
222 posted on 09/11/2002 5:15:11 PM PDT by WVNan
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To: WVNan; Freedom'sWorthIt; whoever; dixie sass
I think this week, with no featured FReepers, that some of us have been taking a little extra time away from the thread. It just seems necessary to take a breather occasionally! At least, it does for me!

However, I am really ready for FWI and whoever and dixie sass to come back, come back, wherever they are!


223 posted on 09/11/2002 5:21:45 PM PDT by Billie
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To: NattieShea; Carry_Okie; PowerBaby
Along a happier note.....today is one special young lady's birthday, and I would like to wish her a Happy Birthday. I know it's a somber day for all because of the anniversary of 9/11, but, NattieShea, if you're here, hope that you have had a very special 10 year old birthday.



224 posted on 09/11/2002 5:25:25 PM PDT by Billie
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To: Billie
I'm going to sit back and watch the President on (gasp)cbs. He's on 60 Min.II right now and will speak to the nation at 9. Later gang.
225 posted on 09/11/2002 5:35:57 PM PDT by WVNan
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To: Pippin
Thanks for the ping.

Welcome Aboard.


226 posted on 09/11/2002 5:47:40 PM PDT by Dubya
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To: Mama_Bear; Billie; JohnHuang2; JustAmy; ladyinred; LadyX; maxwell; MeeknMing; humblegunner; ...
It has been a long day...a long week, actually, for many of us, counting down to this day. I wanted to post my story from 9-11-01 on the first day the Finest Thread in Remembrance began, but could not find the strength, the presence of mind, the words.

Today gold pins with this stamp commemorating the heroes of 9-11 was given to all of us who work for the United States Postal Service. We all left off sorting our mail into our individual cases (we have 10 city and 6 rural routes in my office) and gathered in the middle of the workroom floor at 8:46 for two minutes of silence.

I did not think I would cry. Since 9-11-01 I have been very angry at the terrorists, the evil, the death, the destruction. But looking around at my coworkers just before I bowed my head, in various states of uniformed dress as they prepared for their day on the street, and with various looks of sadness and patriotism upon their faces...seeing my young supervisor struggling to rise to the occassion as best he could with the humble words he had...when I realized that the entire nation was stopping with us, at that very moment, to pause, to pray, and to remember, I was overcome with love, with pride, and with patriotism. The rest of the day was transformed by the moment: my soul was stilled and everything I saw was more meaningful, bittersweet; and everyone I spoke with was precious. We are more One Nation Under God this day than we have been in my lifetime, even more so than on the same day one year ago.

On September 11th, 2001 I was at the Montpelier, VT, post office sorting my mail in preparation for delivery. A fellow employee turned the radio on, and then up, and we gathered there, listening to the first reports of the tragedy in New York. As with other disasters - floods and ice storms in my history with the USPS - we all knew that the mail must go through, and we pulled ourselves away from the radio, pulled down our respective routes, and hit the streets. But we were in shock.

Because I am a Rural Carrier and deliver my route from my truck, I was able to follow the radio reports all day - the collapse of the first tower, then the second; the President's address to the nation; the crash at the Pentagon; Flight 93 that went down in Shanksville; the reaction of all of America....I spent extra time at many mailboxes that day, crying out in rage and helplessness, praying and praying and praying.

Two entire zip codes were wiped out with the World Trade Center Towers, and four postal workers lost their lives that day. But days later 2 more postal employees lost their lives in America's war with terrorism, having contracted anthrax. The "Anthrax Scare" is what brought the USPS onto the front lines of the battle. We were not afraid. We were mad, and we were determined: the mail must go through!

I am very proud of John E. Potter, the Postmaster General of the United States, for the 'Heroes' stamp, for calling us to commemorate the day with our moment of silence, and for ensuring that despite the actions of terrorists, the mail will go through.

Ben Franklin was the first US Postmaster General and was instrumental in ensuring the inclusion of the establishment of the Post Office in the US Constitution. Our Founders recognized the importance of the American Postal Service in UNITING our country. That same theme was carried through the Lincoln administration, when the President assured the nation that due to the importance of our UNITY, the mail would go through, despite all the political division and despite the war.

I am proud to be an American, proud to serve in this fine institution, and proud to be able to share this story with you all. More than any other feeling I have noted this day,and will cherish and seek to prolong, is this sense of UNITY I come away with....

227 posted on 09/11/2002 5:59:17 PM PDT by .30Carbine
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To: Dubya
Thank You, Dubya!
228 posted on 09/11/2002 6:13:13 PM PDT by Pippin
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To: ST.LOUIE1
HELLOW, LOUIE!

I'm back!

(((((HUG))))))


229 posted on 09/11/2002 6:15:11 PM PDT by Pippin
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To: JulieRNR21
Okay....misunderstood but they both deserve a repeat....

Yes, they do. Thanks, Julie. :-)

230 posted on 09/11/2002 6:21:15 PM PDT by Mama_Bear
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To: Diver Dave; WVNan; Billie; whoever
Wow! What an interesting story behind that beautiful song of hope. This rendition seems artistically appropriate in light of Horatio Spafford's story. Thanks, Dave.
231 posted on 09/11/2002 6:24:25 PM PDT by ru4liberty
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To: WVNan
thank you so much for posting the picture. I really do appreciate it.

You're welcome. It is a beautiful photograph of the twin towers. You are fortunate that you have been able to travel throughtout this country. I am always amazed when I hear someone say that they've never traveled outside of their state. There is SO much of America to see.

I would like to put your twin towers photo on my page, with credit to you as the photographer, of course. Would that be okay with you?

232 posted on 09/11/2002 6:26:58 PM PDT by Mama_Bear
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To: .30Carbine
Mr. Franklin would be proud of you, and WE are proud of you. We know who we are, and the suffering that brought us here, and gave this place to us. You are NEVER alone...you are an American, among Americans...and no matter what the press and politicians say...most of the real world stands with us, in their hearts. Let's be at our best, and diligently worthy of what we have been given, enjoy, and are responsible for maintaining every day...and USING.

There's a lot of filth in this world, and we aren't here to run. We stand together...forever.
233 posted on 09/11/2002 6:28:59 PM PDT by PoorMuttly
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To: bentfeather
That was a beautiful tribute to Barbara Olsen. Thank you, bentfeather. We have such talented writers and poets here on FR.
234 posted on 09/11/2002 6:31:34 PM PDT by Mama_Bear
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To: Billie; ST.LOUIE1

You rang?

235 posted on 09/11/2002 6:34:57 PM PDT by ru4liberty
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To: Diver Dave; WVNan; Billie; whoever
Wow! What an interesting story behind that beautiful song of hope. This rendition seems artistically appropriate in light of Horatio Spafford's story. Thanks, Dave.
236 posted on 09/11/2002 6:37:54 PM PDT by ru4liberty
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To: .30Carbine
Thank you .30Carbine

I really appreciate your story and remembering how the US Postal Service workers were put in harms way but did a good job. I know your feelings of rage, and just wanting to get on with wiping out these enemies who are altering our lives. But until then, and as well as afterwards - prayers are always needed.
237 posted on 09/11/2002 6:40:51 PM PDT by Libertina
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To: PoorMuttly
Thank you, new friend.

PS -Sorry about the grammatical error in the text - 'was' shoulda been 'were', but I had changed the sentence around....I know those who luv me will overlook it! ( :

238 posted on 09/11/2002 6:42:52 PM PDT by .30Carbine
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To: Mama_Bear; Billie
Thank you for the lovely words regarding my poem to Barbara Olson.

Thank you Billie for signing with a quill feather pen and ink, perfect for a poet whose name is bentfeather.
239 posted on 09/11/2002 6:46:35 PM PDT by Soaring Feather
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To: Billie
thanks! I mostly lurk, due to time constraints, if I got to yakking, my day would be GONE! :-) my FRiend ohioWfan, gives me a ping now and then - I really enjoyed the story about her son. :-)I'm sure we're all thankful that today is almost past: a prayer and a sigh of relief . . .
240 posted on 09/11/2002 6:47:09 PM PDT by mamaduck
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