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Meltdown99 said:The truth hurts. Navy seals could have found bin laden with minimal loss of life. If was so damn. important to some of you, why did you not leave your cushy life and join the fight? Likely not, but sending kids to die in a bullshit war is OK. At least after Pearl Harbour people left their cushy jobs to join the fight, and those that could not, sacrifice in some way back home.
While the US was bombing the shit out of 2 countries most of you were leading nice comfortable lives. None of you's sacrificed much is my bet. But hey, at least 1 a year you remember...
Post edited by pjhawks on0 -
Meltdown99 said:The truth hurts. Navy seals could have found bin laden with minimal loss of life. If was so damn. important to some of you, why did you not leave your cushy life and join the fight? Likely not, but sending kids to die in a bullshit war is OK. At least after Pearl Harbour people left their cushy jobs to join the fight, and those that could not, sacrifice in some way back home.
While the US was bombing the shit out of 2 countries most of you were leading nice comfortable lives. None of you's sacrificed much is my bet. But hey, at least 1 a year you remember...
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pjhawks said:Meltdown99 said:The truth hurts. Navy seals could have found bin laden with minimal loss of life. If was so damn. important to some of you, why did you not leave your cushy life and join the fight? Likely not, but sending kids to die in a bullshit war is OK. At least after Pearl Harbour people left their cushy jobs to join the fight, and those that could not, sacrifice in some way back home.
While the US was bombing the shit out of 2 countries most of you were leading nice comfortable lives. None of you's sacrificed much is my bet. But hey, at least 1 a year you remember...
mace, right on.0 -
Bay of PigsJFKRFKMLKVietnamLove CanalSpace Shuttle ChallengerExxon ValdezChernobylBhopalKuwaiti Oil FiresIragAfghanistan9/11Deepwater HorizonFukushimaI remember them all, each as horrible in their own way."It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0
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pjhawks said:Meltdown99 said:The truth hurts. Navy seals could have found bin laden with minimal loss of life. If was so damn. important to some of you, why did you not leave your cushy life and join the fight? Likely not, but sending kids to die in a bullshit war is OK. At least after Pearl Harbour people left their cushy jobs to join the fight, and those that could not, sacrifice in some way back home.
While the US was bombing the shit out of 2 countries most of you were leading nice comfortable lives. None of you's sacrificed much is my bet. But hey, at least 1 a year you remember...
Not a good person - this is yet another thread where this is made obvious.
The love he receives is the love that is saved0 -
Remember that day very vividly."Mostly I think that people react sensitively because they know you’ve got a point"0
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Meltdown99 said:The truth hurts. Navy seals could have found bin laden with minimal loss of life. If was so damn. important to some of you, why did you not leave your cushy life and join the fight? Likely not, but sending kids to die in a bullshit war is OK. At least after Pearl Harbour people left their cushy jobs to join the fight, and those that could not, sacrifice in some way back home.
While the US was bombing the shit out of 2 countries most of you were leading nice comfortable lives. None of you's sacrificed much is my bet. But hey, at least 1 a year you remember...
Maybe start another thread and spew your angry and apathetic monologues there next time.
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EV
Toronto Film Festival 9/11/2007, '08 - Toronto 1 & 2, '09 - Albany 1, '11 - Chicago 10 -
18 years ago, where did time go?Makes me feel old being a mature age university student surrounded by students who don't remember that day as they were too young.I'll never forget. I was in year 11 at high school but home that day because I had a cold. I was lying in bed in the morning and all I could hear coming from the television in the living room was "America under attack".I was thinking and imagining some foreign military has started bombing America.I got out of bed to investigate and thought it was a movie on the television. Truly horrifying.Boy how I miss those days before 9/11.Adelaide 17/11/2009, Melbourne 20/11/2009, Sydney 22/11/2009, Melbourne (Big Day Out Festival) 24/01/20140
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Meltdown99 said:The truth hurts. Navy seals could have found bin laden with minimal loss of life. If was so damn. important to some of you, why did you not leave your cushy life and join the fight? Likely not, but sending kids to die in a bullshit war is OK. At least after Pearl Harbour people left their cushy jobs to join the fight, and those that could not, sacrifice in some way back home.
While the US was bombing the shit out of 2 countries most of you were leading nice comfortable lives. None of you's sacrificed much is my bet. But hey, at least 1 a year you remember...
jesus, dude, you ramble on and on complaining about the toxicity of the internet like you're some kind of fucking victim. look in the mirror, dude.Post edited by HughFreakingDillon onHugh Freaking Dillon is currently out of the office, returning sometime in the fall0 -
wife and I were chatting about this morning in the car on the way to work and dropping the kids off at school. She was talking about a well known local radio dj who was talking about it, and he started to openly weep on air remembering it.
my oldest daughter said "wait, yesterday was 9/11?". I was VERY disappointed in their teachers.Hugh Freaking Dillon is currently out of the office, returning sometime in the fall0 -
My wife and I watched 2 documentaries on HBO about it. Both only about 30 minutes long and were pretty good. But I really liked one of them, I forget the name, but they mostly interview young kids and talk about what it means to them and show how they are learning about it. Unfortunately a lot of kids 12 or 13 and younger don't really grasp or understand what happened. It is pretty sad.
The other one was good too, it interview about 8 or so kids from a high school just a few blocks away and talked about their experiences. It is getting some backlash for not talking about the health problems walking to school every day for a year while the pile of debris was still smoldering and putting off toxic fumes, especially since one of those interviewed died from cancer a few months after filming0 -
I think it's completely normal and expected that young kids wouldn't grasp what happened and what it means, and in fact in some ways it's a good thing. I don't believe we need to work hard to burden young kids with the enormity of such loss and all the consequences, both to the US and the rest of the world. We can certainly teach it, but they will never have the emotional connection that those who lived through it had, because that's unrealistic.my small self... like a book amongst the many on a shelf0
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oftenreading said:I think it's completely normal and expected that young kids wouldn't grasp what happened and what it means, and in fact in some ways it's a good thing. I don't believe we need to work hard to burden young kids with the enormity of such loss and all the consequences, both to the US and the rest of the world. We can certainly teach it, but they will never have the emotional connection that those who lived through it had, because that's unrealistic.Hugh Freaking Dillon is currently out of the office, returning sometime in the fall0
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mace1229 said:My wife and I watched 2 documentaries on HBO about it. Both only about 30 minutes long and were pretty good. But I really liked one of them, I forget the name, but they mostly interview young kids and talk about what it means to them and show how they are learning about it. Unfortunately a lot of kids 12 or 13 and younger don't really grasp or understand what happened. It is pretty sad.
The other one was good too, it interview about 8 or so kids from a high school just a few blocks away and talked about their experiences. It is getting some backlash for not talking about the health problems walking to school every day for a year while the pile of debris was still smoldering and putting off toxic fumes, especially since one of those interviewed died from cancer a few months after filmingThey aired a couple of documentaries here to mark the anniversary.One of those was 102 Minutes That Changed America. A very disturbing documentary.
Adelaide 17/11/2009, Melbourne 20/11/2009, Sydney 22/11/2009, Melbourne (Big Day Out Festival) 24/01/20140 -
Meltdown99 said:I wonder if Iraq and Afghanistan have a day where they can mourn the millions killed by the US following 9/11. You can knock off the "woe is me" anytime...what America did post 9/11 was disgusting.
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HughFreakingDillon said:oftenreading said:I think it's completely normal and expected that young kids wouldn't grasp what happened and what it means, and in fact in some ways it's a good thing. I don't believe we need to work hard to burden young kids with the enormity of such loss and all the consequences, both to the US and the rest of the world. We can certainly teach it, but they will never have the emotional connection that those who lived through it had, because that's unrealistic.
Well, sure, I agree we should teach it. It wasn't really your post I was referring to.my small self... like a book amongst the many on a shelf0 -
I've had so many stories related to 9/11 over the years (Lots of people in our town commute to NYC). Yesterday I was teaching 9/11 to my 6th grade class and I always open with does anybody have any personal stories, what do you know about the day, etc. We go around the room for about ten minutes then all of a sudden I look over and one of my students is crying. I say to her, you ok, what's wrong, did you personal connection to this day? etc. She said her dad and uncle worked on the computer systems on the 92nd floor of the South Tower. For some reason they decided to call out that day. She cried out, what if they hadn't called out? I wouldn't have been here!
My eyes started to fill up. So many crazy stories from that day.I'll ride the wave where it takes me......0 -
Thoughts_Arrive said:mace1229 said:My wife and I watched 2 documentaries on HBO about it. Both only about 30 minutes long and were pretty good. But I really liked one of them, I forget the name, but they mostly interview young kids and talk about what it means to them and show how they are learning about it. Unfortunately a lot of kids 12 or 13 and younger don't really grasp or understand what happened. It is pretty sad.
The other one was good too, it interview about 8 or so kids from a high school just a few blocks away and talked about their experiences. It is getting some backlash for not talking about the health problems walking to school every day for a year while the pile of debris was still smoldering and putting off toxic fumes, especially since one of those interviewed died from cancer a few months after filmingThey aired a couple of documentaries here to mark the anniversary.One of those was 102 Minutes That Changed America. A very disturbing documentary.
I enjoy the ones that follow survivors and what they went through. Some of the ones who just focus on the death are sometimes too sad for me.
I started another new one on History Channel, that was about what Air Force One was doing. Am about halfway through it, but its pretty interesting so far. It shows how poor the communication was from the White House, to NORAD and other high military. They were all confused and just confused each other more.0 -
mace1229 said:Thoughts_Arrive said:mace1229 said:My wife and I watched 2 documentaries on HBO about it. Both only about 30 minutes long and were pretty good. But I really liked one of them, I forget the name, but they mostly interview young kids and talk about what it means to them and show how they are learning about it. Unfortunately a lot of kids 12 or 13 and younger don't really grasp or understand what happened. It is pretty sad.
The other one was good too, it interview about 8 or so kids from a high school just a few blocks away and talked about their experiences. It is getting some backlash for not talking about the health problems walking to school every day for a year while the pile of debris was still smoldering and putting off toxic fumes, especially since one of those interviewed died from cancer a few months after filmingThey aired a couple of documentaries here to mark the anniversary.One of those was 102 Minutes That Changed America. A very disturbing documentary.
I enjoy the ones that follow survivors and what they went through. Some of the ones who just focus on the death are sometimes too sad for me.
I started another new one on History Channel, that was about what Air Force One was doing. Am about halfway through it, but its pretty interesting so far. It shows how poor the communication was from the White House, to NORAD and other high military. They were all confused and just confused each other more.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MDOrzF7B2Kg&fbclid=IwAR2ZDQqIhIdTDnZ0IPTf4l7m-dgXmOmwGpkDE5olPQnZ4xLoPE9_F7Fj3XA
I'll ride the wave where it takes me......0
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