Remembering the 9/11 Terrorist Attacks, 20 Years Later Survivors tell us what they saw and what they've learned in the intervening years
by Steven Greenhouse, AARP | July 28, 2021
the attack on the world trade center show both towers struck and burning
SEAN ADAIR/REUTERS
It's hard to fathom that teens now entering college or serving in the armed forces were not yet born on that unforgettable Tuesday morning. Nearly 3,000 people died in Manhattan, at the Pentagon and in a Pennsylvania field on September 11, 2001, in what remains the deadliest act of terrorism in history. To mark the 20th anniversary of that infamous day, we asked people with a connection to the attacks to reflect on what they experienced then and what it means to them today.
Bill Keegan, a lieutenant* in the Port Authority Police Department: The World Trade Center in lower Manhattan was a beacon to the whole world. It said, We want to know who you are, we want to work with you, and we want to trade with you. Trade allows us to understand different cultures and different people, and for them to understand us. I think that's why these terrorists targeted the towers.
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Poster Comment:
No one has any idea how the QRS-11 Flight Interrupter microchip has to do with this. It can be controlled from a few hundred miles away.
Hillary Clinton's Rose Law Firm in Little Rock filed for the patent on the QRS- 11.