Where were you when the world stopped turning?
2,977 people were killed and thousands injured when Islamic terrorists flew aircraft they had hijacked into the World Trade Center, the Pentagon, and a Pennsylvania field after passengers on board that aircraft found out about what was happening and heroically fought to the end to stop their plane being used for more destruction.
Babies, policemen, firemen, everyday workers and people all died at the hands of the "Religion of Peace".
Policemen, fireman, and both ordinary and extraordinary Americans were heroes that day, giving their lives trying to save lives in the face of unbelievable devastation.
That heroism should not be forgotten.
The evil that caused the need for that heroism should not be forgotten.
Meanwhile, our education system is continuing to fail us:
They're taught by leftist progressives in schools to hate capitalism, hate conservatives and hate America. Add the mental stress and mental illness caused by the completely wrong response to handling COVID, and we're living with the results.
Boston. On my way to work. The first word was that a small plane had crashed into one of the towers. It was another half hour before the enormity was evident. It's when the Islamists brought war and terror to our shores.
ReplyDeleteSo many people did so much that day to save others. Heroes, all of them.
Twenty four years later, our educational system has perverted that.
I was running a vacuum furnace to make, ironically, Superalloy steel for the aerospace industry. My wife phoned my furnace platform when the first plane hit, and I was still talking to her when the second one hit.
ReplyDeleteAt work, but I remember CAPT Larry Getzfred, CDR Jack Punches (USN Ret), AW1 Joe Pycior all died in the NWC in the Pentagon.
ReplyDeleteWe as a nation have ignored the obvious truth that islam attacked the USA.
ReplyDeleteIts a death cult, not a religion.
You cannot fix a problem until you identify it.
We need a formal national recognition that islam does not meet the criteria for a religion as expressed in the First Amendment.