The Legacy of 9/11
Comments
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bootlegger10 wrote:What jackass accuses you of that?bootlegger10 wrote:I'm sure you felt this way 9/10/01.
"I hate America, I hate America, I hate America, I hate America, I hate America, I hate America, I hate America, I hate America, I hate America, I hate America, I hate America, I hate America, I hate America, I hate America, I hate America, I hate America, I hate America, I hate America, I hate America, I hate America, I hate America, I hate America, I hate America.""Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity." ~ MLK, 19630 -
hippiemom wrote:America showed her true colors. "The Land of the Free and the Home of the Brave" was proven to be a nation of cowards who would happily sacrifice the liberties their ancestors fought and died for because they're afraid.
hehehe..........Take me piece by piece.....
Till there aint nothing left worth taking away from me.....0 -
hippiemom wrote:LMFAO!!!!!
Ha, I hope you knew my "jackass" comment was in jest to my previous comment that you had replied to in the previous post. I couldn't tell from your post whether you thought I was being serious or not.0 -
hippiemom wrote:America showed her true colors. "The Land of the Free and the Home of the Brave" was proven to be a nation of cowards who would happily sacrifice the liberties their ancestors fought and died for because they're afraid.
I have the utmost respect for you darlin - but you obviously weren't living in New York0 -
bootlegger10 wrote:Ha, I hope you knew my "jackass" comment was in jest to my previous comment that you had replied to in the previous post. I couldn't tell from your post whether you thought I was being serious or not."Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity." ~ MLK, 19630
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EvilToasterElf wrote:I have the utmost respect for you darlin - but you obviously weren't living in New York"Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity." ~ MLK, 19630
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hippiemom wrote:America showed her true colors. "The Land of the Free and the Home of the Brave" was proven to be a nation of cowards who would happily sacrifice the liberties their ancestors fought and died for because they're afraid.
the more it sickens me......Take me piece by piece.....
Till there aint nothing left worth taking away from me.....0 -
SPEEDY MCCREADY wrote:the more i read this post.......
the more it sickens me......
reality can be a hard pill to swallow at times...standin above the crowd
he had a voice that was strong and loud and
i swallowed his facade cos i'm so
eager to identify with
someone above the crowd
someone who seemed to feel the same
someone prepared to lead the way0 -
El_Kabong wrote:reality can be a hard pill to swallow at times...
especially coming from you.....Take me piece by piece.....
Till there aint nothing left worth taking away from me.....0 -
SPEEDY MCCREADY wrote:thats great......
especially coming from you.....
hey, i'm here for ya, speedystandin above the crowd
he had a voice that was strong and loud and
i swallowed his facade cos i'm so
eager to identify with
someone above the crowd
someone who seemed to feel the same
someone prepared to lead the way0 -
El_Kabong wrote:hey, i'm here for ya, speedy
because every once in a while....
i need a little escape from reality........Take me piece by piece.....
Till there aint nothing left worth taking away from me.....0 -
9/11 will go down as one of the bloodiest days in American history. Probably THE bloodiest non-wartime day.
But through it all, there's one thing: it was also the day of the single-greatest rescue operation EVER.0 -
SPEEDY MCCREADY wrote:the more i read this post.......
the more it sickens me......
Why?0 -
I think 9/11 made me more scared to be an American because I saw the nation as a whole get swept up in fear. To see a nation that was founded on freedom and liberty turn into one that surrenders those very things to blindly follow the leader is really quite devastating. Thankfully not everyone is like that, though so many were at the time. Yet, some people were speaking out. And then One Beat was released:
Far Away
7:30 am nurse the baby on the couch
then the phone rings
"Turn on the T.V."
watch the world explode in flames
and don’t leave the house
And the sky overhead
is silent, waiting
Clear blue holds its breath
And the heart is hit
in a city far away
but it feels so close
Don't breathe the air today
Don't speak of why you're afraid
(Standing here on a one way road
and I fall down, and I fall down
no other direction for this to go
so we fall down, so we fall down)
Why can't I get along?
Why can't I get along?
WHY CAN'T I GET ALONG WITH YOU?
And the president hides
while working men rush in
To give their lives
I look to the sky
and ask it not to rain
On my family tonight
Don't breathe the air today
Don't speak of why you're afraid
(Standing here on a one way road
and I fall down, and I fall down
no other direction for this to go
so we fall down, so we fall down)
Why can't I get along?
Why can't I get along?
WHY CAN'T I GET ALONG WITH YOU?if you wanna be a friend of mine
cross the river to the eastside0 -
hippiemom wrote:You're right about the generosity. As president, I would have tried to harness that energy and turn it into something lasting. Rather than encouraging people to go shopping, I would have called for us as a nation to make any sacrifices necessary to achieve energy independence. There should have been an initiative similar to the Manhattan Project or Kennedy's promise to put a man on the moon. Beyond that, see soulsinging's post, I think he pretty much nailed it.
thanks for answering. I agree we should have done more and perhaps missed a great opportunity to KEEP the country united and for once in a long time really establish a plan for our country.hippiemom wrote:What I would NOT have done: spy on American citizens; arrest people without warrants; prevent prisoners from speaking to their families and attorneys; accuse people who disagreed with me of hating freedom or hating America or sympathizing with terrorists.
can i at least still accuse michael moore of hating america if i let everyone else off the hook?make sure the fortune that you seek...is the fortune that you need0 -
I'm not sure 9/11 changed me. I got paranoid about getting on a plane for a couple weeks, but that's about it. Nobody I knew died, and I'm not going to be a hypocrite and say how it affected me so deeply, when people are constantly killed and terrorized all over the world all the time. Terrorism is just a part of humanity. Sad but true. It will always exist. It was a sad event. That's about all I can say.
And I don't think it was the worst day in history for humanity either. I think the Hiroshima bombing is much worse. It was a much larger act of terror, and it showed the world what nuclear weapons can do, which, as we all know, led to massive production of these weapons and the possibility of world destruction.0 -
VictoryGin wrote:I think 9/11 made me more scared to be an American because I saw the nation as a whole get swept up in fear. To see a nation that was founded on freedom and liberty turn into one that surrenders those very things to blindly follow the leader is really quite devastating. Thankfully not everyone is like that, though so many were at the time. Yet, some people were speaking out.
Very nice post. Ditch your own fear though.0 -
Mookie Baylock wrote:I realized 9/11 sucked, but calling it the worst day in the history of the human race is a bit much. 3000 dead is awful, but how many died in the hiroshima/nagasaki bombs, the holocaust, and in attacks that occur on a daily basis in some areas of the world. No offence, but that was a pretty America-biased statement and is a part of the reason much of the world doesn't care for America- they think their lives are more valuable than others.
That being said, I'm sure you didn't mean it like that, not trying to start anything.
I agree with you that the Bush administration fucked up and turned the world against them when the world was at its most sympathic.
That's exactly what I thought too! Just had to barge in the thread to say it...0 -
After 9-11, I was encouraged by many acts of bravery, charity, and sacrifice by many people.
I was also disgusted by many acts of crass opportunism, xenophobia masquerading as patriotism, and the blind, unequestioning allegiance to a president who would piss away every ounce of momentum and good will he had gained in the next 5 years."Of course it hurts. You're getting fucked by an elephant."0
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