Reference:
Does anyone think "enough is enough" and we should just remember the events of that day without the sometimes harrowing scenes of these programmes, or do you think we need to keep seeing these things to remind ourselves
I don't. There are still so many unanswered questions, still people who are affected by it. Facebook is full of questions today and people sharing their stories of how they lost loved ones and one American friend sharing a really moving story of her experience being there at the time.
For me 9/11 is a day I will never forget, I can remember exactly where I was, who I was with and what was said for about an hour after it first started happening. I had work colleagues with family and loved ones who worked in both towers and another colleague who was flying domestic to LAX. Because there was the rumour that planes had been hijacked en route to Heathrow (I worked for a national newspaper group at the time and that's the report that was coming from HQ) we were ordered to stay at the office and I remember frantically calling my mum and telling her to get my son out of nursery and get up to my office cos I lived right under the flight path about 2 miles from the airport, in the end I just jumped in the car anyway and went and got them (with my then boss screaming at me).
I still watch all the documentaries that come on at this time of year, it was an event that the whole world was watching and we saw it happen in front of our eyes. Those poor people desperately waving out the windows while we watched and knew they didn't stand a chance. The FDNY and the NYPD who went in vain to try and save them and lost their lives too. 3,500 dead within a matter of hours. The whole world just came to a standstill and the week that followed (not to mention the affect it had on the economy as a whole for months afterwards) is something that I hope will never happen again. It was horrible.
However, what I do think is great today compared to say 5 years ago (the London bombings) is that not all Muslims are being eyed with suspicion. Don't know what it was like where you lived but where I lived and worked (2 separate areas of London), it was terrible for a while. Innocent Muslims were getting attacked and I'd get on a train and all eyes would be on the Asian looking guy (this was just after 9/11 and just after 7/7).
Maybe in another 10 or 20 years when the next generation have matured it wont have so much exposure media wise, but personally I think it's good that it's still remembered in such a major way.
(God I've gone off on one again. Sorry
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