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1monster (8,147 posts) Today, at 8:45 a.m., the school PA system blared into life:Last edited Tue Sep 11, 2012, 03:53 PM USA/ET - Edit history (3)"Would everyone please rise and observe a moment of silence for the fallen of 9/11." After about 45 seconds, "Thank you. Please resume your classes." All the kids in the classroom were eleven and twelve years old... At most they were about one year old at the time of the 9/11 attacks. They have no actual memories of the events or the emotions. For them, the existance of the Twin Towers is ancient history. And I ask myself why are we still dong this? After eleven years, why are we still trying to keep alive the chaotic emotions of that day? Why force it on our kids who were too young to notice or who weren't even born yet? Were they asking school kids to rise and remember Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1946? 1951? I know they weren't in 1962. At what point do we ease our grip on the tragedy and let go of the past? How can we more forward and onward if our feet are always draggng in the past?
arcane1 (18,515 posts) 1. I wonder the same thing about all the rebroadcasts the networks doHow much longer do we have to re-live that horror? I'm pretty sure we'll "never forget" without all that.
upaloopa (435 posts) 3. 9/11 is stuck in our political hate fests.Until we stop blaming it will go on IMHO.
barbtries (13,196 posts) 8. i wasn't born yet in 1941,so i can't speak to the pearl harbor comparison. my daughter was killed in 2001, less than two months before 911, and to this day i will not work on July 19, the anniversary of her death. i think it is appropriate to spend 45 seconds of this day remembering the victims. their loved ones should know they are not forgotten.
forthemiddle (49 posts) 10. bravoI am so sorry about the death of your daughter, but like you I will never forget. 9/11 was my generations Pearl Harbor. For many it changed their lives forever. If others choose not to recognize it, that is their prerogative, but it is only 11 years (not 70 like Pearl Harbor). For gosh sakes, I read more sympathy on John Lennon's death anniversary, than I do here about 9/11. Just because we remember 9/11 with reverence, does not mean we condone all our Country has done, in its name, since then.
At what point do we ease our grip on the tragedy and let go of the past?
soon as you find your manhood all else falls into place.
If Ft. Hood was "workplace violence," then the Hindenburg was an air show.
I don't know if sand glows in the dark, but we're gonna find out.
I don't know. At what point does the "peculiar institution", warred to death in 1865, stop afflicting the daily lives of persons born, say, after 1965?
How can we more forward and onward if our feet are always draggng in the past?
"Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it"George Santayana
Although this quote is somewhat out of context it seems to fit.
I don't see where that quote was derived from.
Given the attacks going on in Egypt and Libya...and now our Embassy in Algiers has been given a heads up for possible violence...to say that 9/11 is in the past when the same radical Islam that killed 3,000 Americans 11 years ago...is killing and parading American dead through the streets RIGHT NOW!This isn't old news or the past DUmmies...this is the here and now and no matter how you try to ignore it or spin it...it's real.
http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/George_Santayana
How about when the problem disappears, or is obliterated from this God's good earth.
Would turning the problem into glass be an option?
1monster (8,147 posts)At what point do we ease our grip on the tragedy and let go of the past? How can we more forward and onward if our feet are always draggng in the past?
When the islamofacist scum are no longer polluting the Earth.
Turn 'em over to Corning Glass Works, then . . .