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9/11/2001 in Staten Island, New York
My annual remembrance of September 11, 2011
I post this essay every year in honor of September 11th, 2001 (see 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022).
Every generation has a defining moment. For my generation, it was 9/11/2001.
Here are my memories of 9/11/2001. It was a Tuesday.
I was a Senior at Staten Island Technical High School, which is about 20 miles from ground zero. We were about 1 week into the school year. I was sitting in Ms. Endriss's 2nd Period A.P. Political Science class. We were going over some NYC Public School discipline policy, and discussing what kinds of weapons were forbidden in schools (brass knuckles were a no-no). A student walked into the classroom late. He had heard a rumor that a Cessna airplane had hit the World Trade Center. A girl in my class exclaimed that her father worked in the World Trade Center. I could see the look of fear in her eyes, even though none of us had any clue what was going on. She wanted to call her dad. I was the only student in the class with a cell phone, which I promptly gave her. The call did not go through–he worked on one of the upper floors of the tower, and passed away.
We finished second period, apprehensively. I logged onto a computer, and attempted to check the news. I recall one friend told me to check MTV.com for news. At that point, the reports were unclear, and no one knew what was going on. We proceeded to 3rd period A.P. Calculus with Mr. Curry. At that point, someone told us that it was not a Cessna, but in fact a passenger jet. We were all getting nervous, and didn't quite know what was going on. Later in class, a student came into the class and said a second plane had crashed into the other tower. We also heard that there was an explosion at the Pentagon. At that point, we knew it was not an accident.
I remember leaving the class (something I never did) and walked up to the library where I knew there was a T.V. Just as I arrived in the library, I saw the first tower collapse. I watched it live. I was stunned and could not believe what was happening before my eyes. I grabbed my cellphone to call home, and almost immediately after the tower collapsed, I lost all service. I was not able to call my mom in Staten Island, though I could call my dad who was working in Long Island. Long distance calls seemed to work, but local calls were not working. I remember my dad told me that this was a life-changing event, and he had no idea what would happen. I heard some rumors on TV that there were 15 planes that were hijacked, and unaccounted for in the skies.
By lunch time, the school guidance counselor set up a conference room where students could go to talk. I remember seeing student after student who had a family member or friend who worked in the World Trade Center or in Manhattan. A large number of firefighters and police officers reside in Staten Island. Tragically, many of the emergency responders who perished were from Staten Island. What could we even tell those students?
After that, the day become a blur. I remember hearing that the second tower had collapsed, though I did not see it. I remember watching the entire United States Congress sing God Bless America on the steps of the Capitol. I had never been so afraid in my life. Later that night, I took a bus home. The New York City public buses were still running, and I remember the driver was not collecting fares. On the bus, people were talking about the imminent war (against whom, no one knew) and the imminent draft. Some were saying that students were exempt from the draft.
The next morning, September 12, 2001, I woke up and smelled this horrible smell. The air had this pungent odor, that reminded me of burned flesh at a BBQ. I went to school that morning, and attendance was low. In all of my classes, we were talking about war. I asked whether the US would need to use nuclear weapons. My teacher explained that carpet bombing–a phrase I had never heard of–could wreak plenty of damage in Afghanistan. Later that week students began making sandwiches for the relief workers, and collecting goods to donate to the relief effort.
From Staten Island, I could see the smoldering Ground Zero. It was surreal. The skyline looked so very empty. To this day, whenever I look at the Skyline, a sight I had seen thousands of times, I have the most bizarre feeling. Additionally, whenever we saw an airplane fly overhead, we all freaked out. This lasted for months.
For days, weeks, and months after 9/11, people in Staten Island were waiting for their loved ones to come home. Many patients were alive, but were so badly burned that they could not be identified. People prayed that these unnamed patients would soon come home. One woman whose husband was a firefighter waited outside her home every single night for months. She eventually put a candle in her window every night. Later, she put a memorial lamp in her window. He never came home. Others were simply waiting for remains of their loved ones to be returned. Many were never identified.
I ordered a gas mask from eBay, which I kept in my car, fearing a biological weapon attack on New York City. I remember I tried it on once and I almost suffocated. I wanted to order some Cipro for an anthrax attack, but I could not locate any.
It is hard to encapsulate what a New Yorker went through on 9/11. Thinking back on that day, when I was just 17 years old, I realized that I had to grow up awfully quick. It was a new world we were living in.
Never forget. Ever.
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I think no matter where you were that affected you. I was at home because the week prior my job in IT had been outsourced to some firm in India. I remember after hearing the reports of a plane possibly heading for the White House (local reports here in Pittsburgh thought the USX Tower was a possible target) I stepped outside and saw what turned out to be Flight 93 pass over my house.
I was working for a Lighting Company in Pittsburgh. I was finishing the "as built" drawings for a lighting project that was supposed to have been in the Mall on the Subway level of the WTC. We originally heard that a plane had hit one of the towers and we though that it was a small plane. We turned the radio on just in time to hear about the second plane hitting the other tower. Then we heard about a voluntary evacuation of downtown Pittsburgh. Most of us decided to stay where we were, figuring that being out in traffic was probably more dangerous than staying put.
When I was leaving I looked at a nearby building that housed the County 911 center, there were some people on the roof, one of whom had a Stinger missile. As I was crossing the Highland Park bridge it was like something out of a movie. I was the only car on a normally busy bridge. I heard a roar, looked up and saw two F-15s flying up the Allegheny River.
We had a friend who worked for Verizon at the time. He was based in Philadelphia but got assigned to the 1st team to penetrate the PATH Station after it all happened. He sent us a copy of the footage they made. Shocking. I think we actually got to see it before even the media had a copy.
“It was a new world we were living in. Never forget. Ever.”
Bullshit. And I say this as a New Yorker who was 8 years into being a lawyer, working in Manhattan. For nine months there was a haze that we had to breathe — which included molecules of dead bodies.
This should have been treated as a police matter. It was a crime committed by men who should have been tracked down and subjected to justice. Instead we got this “it’s a whole new world now” bullshit, this “War on Terror” bullshit, which inflicted more harm on others (at a cost of trillions of dollars) than we ever suffered on Sept. 11, 2001. We were tested as a nation and we flunked, badly.
I agree the War on Terror was a failure we are still seeing the implications of today. I don’t agree that it was a law enforcement issue, military action was necessary. The problem is we went after the wrong target, Saudi Arabia should have been the main target.
"Saudi Arabia should have been the main target"
Why?
"The 9/11 Commission's final report, the 9/11 Commission Report, published in July 2004 at the request of Bush administration and the U.S Congress, concluded that there was "no evidence" linking Saudi Arabian government or its senior officials to the September 11 attacks." Wikipedia: Alleged Saudi role in the September 11 attacks
Because it was their practice to export their radicals in the name of domestic peace. In a way they were inflicting their worst on the rest of the world.
But what would we do to SA with our troops? Regime change? Nation building?
Good question, because KSA has bought (and still buys) our acquiescence.
And they prop up a lot of the Middle East.
The best thing we could have done after 9-11 to SA would have been to divest.
Wouldn't make much difference, but our hands would be cleaner.
In the old aphorism, I'd have seized the oil fields, placed them under international administration and left them to wither on the vine.
So imperial occupation of Saudi Arabia is what you wish we'd done.
"Why? "
Because it is the head of the snake.
Most non-Saudi Arabs to whom I have spoken say that
What attack would you had proposed?
Air strikes, occupation, "nuke Mecca"?
Bin Laden et al were not in SA by then.
Oh, I’d have still gone after bin Laden, that was necessary, but to hell with the Taliban and “fixing” Afghanistan. We have known going back to Alexander the Great that place is hopeless. Best to just keep them contained.
I don't get it. You wanted NYC cops to arrest the dead terrorists, or to roll into Afghanistan and Pakistan, lights flashing, to try to arrest people?
We would have had the immediate and unstinting help of practically every police agency in the world, national local and international.
"practically every police agency"
Well, except for the Afghan one, where the Al Queda leadership lived.
Oh, good. The UK would send police to get gunned down by the Taliban? would they be armed?
I literally cannot imagine how you think sending police (to a place they have no ability to arrest anyone) where they would be gunned down by a foreign military is supposed to work
"subjected to justice"
They were, they were killed. Justice.
Go back to porno reviews.
Thanks Obama. Pity about the rest.
"Go back to porno reviews."
Grow up, Bob.
"Grow up, Bob."
He said this below:
"9/11 would not have happened under a Gore Administration."
He's the one who needs to grow up.
"He’s the one who needs to grow up."
Whataboutism is no excuse, Bob.
There's no such thing as 'whataboutism'.
Leftists made up the term because they were sick of getting called out for their hypocrisy on literally everything --'It's okay when WE do it' is their mantra.
It was a new world, all right, but not in a way we should welcome. What was new was that the supposedly invincible defenses of our country were shown to be inadequate (or possibly even complicit) and no one had the guts to fix them.
Events like this are something to take personally and be enraged about. Sadness is not enough.
I will get over that when and if somebody thoroughly fixes it.
9/11 would not have happened under a Gore Administration.
Why not? Did Gore have magic powers?
Clinton (and Gore) knew that bin Laden was fomenting terrorist attacks. They came within a few hours of killing him in 1998. But to the Bush folks that was just a diversion from the real crisis facing the country, that spot of semen on the blue dress.
I wouldn't be as definitive as capt but it would hardly have taken sorcery to NOT ignore that intelligence briefing warning of an attack.
The intelligence briefing warning said nothing meaningful. It provided no actionable intelligence. There was nothing to "ignore."
Capt,
You say "bullshit," but there is no way to know what the world would have been like had we not attacked Afghanistan and Iraq. However as it is, the world is very different
I was working in Hong Kong, and that evening I get a call from a colleague. “Are you watching the news?” “No.” “A plane has hit the north tower of the world trade centre.” “Shit”. We chatted for a short while and then “a plane has just hit the south tower”. “I’ve got to go” – one of my brothers was working on the 94th floor of the south tower and I needed to call his home ASAP. I got through after 5 minutes, to be told he was safe. It turned out he’d seen the plane hit the north tower, and decided to leave the building, taking plenty of colleagues with him. The lifts were still operating at that point, of course.
My parents in England were watching it as well but it took them 30 minutes to get through.to find out he was ok.
I was aware that the Empire State Building had been hit by an airplane -- a USAAC B-25 hit between the 78th & 80th floors, killing 14 people and starting a fire that was quickly extinguished.
It was a hot & humid day in Amherst and I presumed that there would be fog along the ocean (as there had been that day in 1945) and hence when I heard the report that "a two engine plane had hit the WTC", I nonchalantly dismissed it as a tragic but routine accident. When I heard that another plane had hit the other tower, I remembered that our overloaded ATC system was (and is) essentially strung together with bailing wire and that we were finally paying the price for relying on 1950's technology and vacuum tubes.
Remember that airplane congestion had been the issue all summer -- too many companies flying too many planes through the sky.
i was busy, I had work to do and didn't quite notice that the rock music station hadn't been playing any music recently, nor any commercials, but when they mentioned that the Pentagon was on fire, that got my attention.
You really didn't realize 2 Airliners hitting the WTC wasn't an "Accident"??
I think a lot of people thought the same thing after the 1st hit. If you didn't leave the TV on and went about your day you may very well think that.
Its what I thought when my wife called about plane 1 as I was walking from the light rail to my office. A horrible accident, then plane 2 hit.
A second plane hitting a DIFFERENT building in highly congested airspace if the FAA's equipment had gone haywire and before they could reduce load by doing a groundstop (no more takeoffs) and not letting any more in -- that was a hell of a lot more logical than what really happened.
We'd had hijackings since the early 1970s -- it always was some combination of wanting to go to Cuba, wanting money (i.e. DC Cooper) and/or wanting to make some leftist point. It was even in our movies: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WQnv22Qnp8s
No one had ever used planes as missiles before.
The thing is, though Tom Clancy wrote exactly about using an airliner as a missile in 1994 In Debt of Honor. If an author thought of it, surely some of our egghead braintrust did.
BTW: Take this bus to Cubahttps://youtu.be/9MYxAlA5wuk
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kamikaze
For most of the high schoolers in my class, it was as distant as some 3rd world civil war, or an earthquake in Morocco
Carl Sandberg had the right of it (though my understanding has changed). I read the poem in high school in the mid-70's and thought it was reassuring that mistakes could be naturally erased. My english teacher gave me an "A" for my analysis/essay, but noted that he found the poem "disturbing". Now, it's just a statement of a tragic condition of life.
Grass
Pile the bodies high at Austerlitz and Waterloo.
Shovel them under and let me work.
I am the grass.
I cover all.
And pile them high at Gettysburg.
And pile them high at Ypres and Verdun.
Shovel them under and let me work.
Two years, ten years,
and passengers ask the conductor:
What place is this?
Where are we now?
I am the grass.
Let me work.
That’s interesting
Battles seem like groups of people trying to “working on” each other, while the grass is content to do its own thing, at its own pace.
The last episode of "Blackadder".
In 2001 I was trying to take my start-up firm into an IPO, and that meant lots of appointments in Manhattan at various investment banks. So many on one trip that it turns out to be more economical to just hire a limo for the day and leave all your travel stuff in it while you hop from building to building.
We ware supposed to be in the WTC that day. I don't remember what firm it was but plans changed and it was rescheduled to the following week. So for that random event alone we weren't there.
I do recall one gentleman we visited a few weeks earlier, in Boston. I think it was at JP Morgan there. We really got along and after 9/11 our investment firm tried to call him. It turned out he was on that flight from Logan. We had used the same gate to go back home. I remember the rocking chairs near it in the concourse.
Life is strange.
I recently shared a graph of Jenga sales by year with my 15 year old. She asked me what happened in 2002.
Her kids won't have a clue
What strikes me is that it was more than two decades ago. Nobody under the age of almost 30 has any real firsthand memory of it. It's to my oldest daughter what the Kennedy assassination was to me: something in the history books that old people talk about.
David Nieporent,
As Josh Blackman indicates it depends where the then children were living that determines what they remember.
The weekend before my wife and I had taken our three children (15, 14, 6) into the City for a carnival / street fair and then thought we would visit the Statute of Liberty; the line for tickets was very long so we walked around Battery Park, through Castle Clinton and then up West Street. "What next ?" My wife said: "Let's do something we'll never do again ... go to Windows on the World." (Know my wife and I had been there once before with friends. And, that had been special because of her fear of elevators. ... So she meant she was willing to suppress her irrational fear again.)
It was a clear day: planes going up the East River to land at LaGuardia were below us; newlyweds "toes up to the window" looking SW mused about "Was it PA or another state ?"; and our youngest son was impressed by the valet in the mensroom who handed him a towel.
All of our children remember, as we lived in one of those small towns where a large number of residents/too many friends did not come home on 9/11. ... And, our youngest remembers because on 9/11 he asked: "What happened to the man in the bathroom ?".
The Kennedy assassination is the first memory I can associate with a particular date.
My first grade class was interrupted by someone at the door. After speaking with the visitor, the teacher walked to the head of the class and told us someone had shot the president -- she described him as the man depicted in a Sunday newspaper article we had recently discussed -- and that he was dead. She went to her desk and cried.
I had just turned six. I have a few memories that must be earlier but I can't place them beyond "must be earlier."
I wouldn't have told the class. Not like that.
The teacher had a duty to her class -- she could cry later...
I have some earlier fragmented memories, but I think my 1st clear one was going to the appliance store. My parents decided to finally pull the trigger and buy a color TV because something called "Watergate" was going to be on.
Oh, yeah, the reason so many billions were funneled to private contractors and corrupt foreigners. Also, nearly two decades of death and destruction, rendition and torture.
Bill Clinton warned W's people that it was coming. I remember watching the press conference.
"Bill Clinton warned W’s people"
You mean Richard Clark in his shameless self-promotion
He was correct, and unheeded. That is the only important fact.
"That is the only important fact."
No one predicted three airplanes being hijacked and used as missiles. So the "warning" would have accomplished nothing.
Jamie Gorelick, under Clinton, had disabled relevant intel sharing. Then she sat on the 9/1 commission! She would have been Gore's AG.
Sorry, 4 airplanes.
And a bunch more that never got off the ground -- they never thought we'd simply shut down the airspace. Memory is that there were at least four more airplanes with terrorists aboard and targets chosen.
Weren't they all celebrating in New Jersey while Donald Trump watched them?
There's that infamous Dr. Ed "memory" of things that never happened, yet again.
You could probably find someone who warned Obama about ISIS and he still didn't do enough to stop them. They just don't have a big enough platform to trumpet it.
That is not correct. While Clark was warning about terrorism, he was warning about cyberterrorism, not a 9/11-type attack. Nobody at any point provided any actionable intelligence that could have stopped 9/11.
Disbanding the Clinton Administration's terrorism unit didn't help.
Nor did ignoring the "tomorrow is zero hour!" email from a known al-Qaeda operative, intercepted on Sept. 10, 2001. Not translated from the Arabic in time because they'd fired the translator for being gay (it wasn't illegal then and the GWB Administration were compulsive gay-terminators).
"Intelligence officials said the two messages -- even if translated on Sept. 10 -- would not have provided enough information to prevent the attacks.
***
U.S. intelligence sources said NSA analysts are not certain who was speaking on the Sept. 10 intercepts. They came from sources -- a location or phone number -- that were of high-enough priority to translate them within two days but were not put in the top priority category, which included communications from Osama bin Laden or his senior al Qaeda assistants."
NSA Intercepts On Eve of 9/11 Sent a Warning By Walter Pincus and Dana Priest June 20, 2002
capt will blame the dancing Israelis next.
Fired for being gay — or fired for lying about it? They didn’t care if you were gay — they DID if you didn’t tell them.
But look at this the other way -- the then all-White Portland (ME) police arrest Mohammed Atta as he attempts to enter the Jetport. The others are arrested as well.
And you think the outcry over George Floyd was loud? Can you imagine the outcry here???
Fired for being gay — or fired for lying about it? They didn’t care if you were gay — they DID if you didn’t tell them.
This is absolutely not what don't ask don't tell required.
It certainly was in intelligence Being closeted was definitely a concern because it could be used by a foreign operative to blackmail one of our people in intelligence. It's been done before.
Clarke was appointed cybersecurity advisor later; his January 2001 memo that requested an urgent meeting on al Qaeda and attached a December 2000 paper that described a terrorist organization that operated by bombings and was reported to have agents in the United States, including involvement with the earlier attacks in New York.
Enough about me already on the anniversary of this terrible day.
So, let me tell you about how September 11th affected me!
https://youtube.com/shorts/F0qRj_Oa6_g?si=ks4B-dcN5oxJxNC5
You wanna know what I remember?
That before 9/11 no one said 'north tower' and 'south tower'
They were called 1 World Trade and 2 World Trade.
I remember eating at Windows on the World.
I remember jumping in the express elevators as they started down and landing with a huge thump (and getting shown the door by security far too often afterwards)
I remember the shops and restaurants under the WTC.
I remember lying to a bunch of tourists about the WTC about how yes, they were the WTC, but the twin towers were these two other building that looked amazingly like one another, built by different companies and they got called the 'twin towers' because of that weird coincidence. I was so serious about it and so 'here's an insider, real new yorker secret' that I'm sure they believed me.
Right up until they asked the guy at the front desk in Liberty Plaza about the observation deck--but I was long gone, laughing, by then. Down to the Nathan's stand by the ferry.
I miss those ugly buildings.
And I miss the New York those ugly buildings were a part of.
Oh, Josh, just wanted to mention, I went to Curtis