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Home Front: WoT
Never Forget: Recommended Readings for the Anniversary of 9/11
2005-09-09
Here’s a collection of some of the best information on 9/11 available online today. Feel free to add to the list in the comments section.

Eyewitness accounts & actualities

I saw the airliner at the instant it hit the north tower of the World Trade Center. A little later I saw the flames burst out of the south tower when the second airliner hit it. I saw people fall from the top of the World Trade Center. I saw the south tower fall down. A little later, I saw the north tower fall down. I have, in the past several hours, looked into lower Manhattan, and each time, where the World Trade Center stood, there is absolutely nothing.
I think that in the next few days I am going to wish that I had not seen any of this. . . .

Daniel Henninger, "I saw it all. Then I saw nothing." Wall Street Journal September 12, 2001

Around the 35th floor we started meeting a steady stream of firefighters walking up and had to press into single file again. None of them said a word as they went up and past us carrying unbelievable loads of equipment. They were already exhausted by the time we started seeing them. I can't stop thinking about the look in their eyes and how heroic they were. I pray some of them made it out. . . .

John Labriola, First-person account & accompanying photo essay

Jeff Jarvis, First-person account & audio narrative.

"Tilly" (LGF commenter), First-person account

Little Green Footballs "9/11 Stories" (discussion thread)

"The Voices Project" A Small Victory (collection of first-person accounts)

Chuck Simmins, "No Ordinary Day" (collection of weblog postings)

Gedeon & Jules Naudet, 9/11 (documentary film)

Immediate reactions

This is not an easy enemy to confront. This will not be a matter of great troop movements, of trenches and bombs and massed charges. This will be small teams of inconceivably brave men and women, working in strange places, unknown and unacknowledged. But is the same enemy, the same truth, of which Kipling spoke: evil, naked and proud: "a crazed and driven foe." This is what humanity has faced before, since our story began to be written down. This is civilization versus barbarism.

John Derbyshire, "Steel and Fire and Stone" National Review Online -- written within two hours of the first attack.

So when I heard a plane overhead tonight, it was wrong. Turns out they were military jets circling around, securing the airspace. Just heard an unusually loud one, and I flinched; what had been an ordinary sound, an ordinary annoyance, was now a dire portent. Is this the future? Fearing the sound of every jet?
HELL no. I am not going to live in fear. They want my freedom, my peace of mind? Come and get it.
I won't do your work for you.

James Lileks, "The Daily Bleat" 9/12/01

. . . on a local TV show last night the reporter Dick Oliver was asked how it was that so many firemen died, couldn't they have escaped, and he said, with a rough voice that had love in it, "Firemen don't run out of buildings. Firemen run into buildings"

Peggy Noonan, "What I saw at the devastation" Wall Street Journal.

"Sgt. Mom" (Sgt. Celia D. Hayes, USAF, Ret.), "I am all right - just in another country" (personal letter)

World Trade Center

Jim Dwyer, Eric Lipton, Kevin Flynn, James Glanz and Ford Fessenden. "Fighting to Live as the Towers Died" New York Times (LRR) -- a detailed reconstruction of the 102 minutes between the first attack and the final collapse.

. . . in the midst of tragedy we do well to recognize that these firefighters did not lose their lives. They gave them.

Editorial, "Common Valor" Wall Street Journal

Three hundred firemen. This is the part that reorders your mind when you think of it. For most of the 5,000 dead were there--they just happened to be there, in the buildings, at their desks or selling coffee or returning e-mail. But the 300 didn't happen to be there, they went there. In the now-famous phrase, they ran into the burning building and not out of the burning building. They ran up the stairs, not down, they went into it and not out of it. They didn't flee, they charged.

Peggy Noonan, "Courage Under Fire" Wall Street Journal

"Mysterious ’Red Bandanna’ Man Is 9/11 Hero" WNBC-TV -- The story of Wells Crowther, an equities trader and volunteer firefighter who worked in 2 WTC, and was as much a hero as anyone that day.

Mudville Gazette (weblog), "9/11 Remembered: Rick Rescorla was a Soldier"

Andrew Duffy, "Last Man Standing" Saskatoon Star-Phoenix

Tom Junod, "The Falling Man" Esquire

Steve Fishman, "The Miracle Survivors" New York Magazine

Vincent Druding, "Ground Zero: a Journal" First Things -- account of an early volunteer in the recovery effort

Every morning when I open the door to go to work, there is a hole in the sky where the World Trade Center used to be, a memento mori, a reminder of death. Not just the death of the 2,800, but of death itself, and the impermanence of all things human. That hole is the first thing I see in the morning when I leave my house, and the last thing I see at night before I come inside for my supper.

Rod Dreher, "The Hole in the Skyline" National Review Online

New York Times, Collection of audio recordings from the FDNY radio circuit

Blue Men Group, Exhibit 13 (Flash animation).

Bruce Springsteen, "The Rising"

Flight 93

Dennis B. Roddy, et al., "Flight 93: forty lives, one destiny" Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Karen Breslau, "The Final Moments of United Flight 93" MSNBC

Matthew L. Wald, "Details Emerge on Flight 93" New York Times (LRR)

Dave Berry, "On Hallowed Ground." Syndicated column LRR

The men on the plane decided to attack the hijackers. They learned what had happened in New York with the other hijacked planes; they figured their lives were lost already. They fought back. What it’s like to swallow your terror and act is beyond the imagination of most ordinary folks - but the point is, they were ordinary folks. We’re all on that plane now.

James Lileks, "The Daily Bleat" 9/13/01

In America we remember. We remember people who made choices. We remember an unforgivable attack. We remember people who refused to submit, and chose to die well, defiant to the end. We remember two words: Let's roll.

Steven Den Beste, "The First Anniversary"

Neil Young, "Let’s Roll"

Other Commentary

I’m tired of people who can watch 5,000 people from 62 nations burned alive and crushed to death, and think: well, you know you had this coming.

James Lileks, "The Daily Bleat"the week of 9/17-21/01
9/11/02
9/11/03

That's the choice: Stop, or keep going; keep our promises, or forget we made them; be responsible, or irresponsible; face facts, or ignore them. It's easier to stop, you know. Beating these folks will take a very long time. Decades, probably, and that's if we do everything right.

Larry Miller, "Two Years" Weekly Standard

Remember, too, our just vengeance. Our president told us, 'I hear you, the rest of the world hears you, and the people who knocked these buildings down will hear all of us soon.' And they do hear us, in Iraq and in Afghanistan. They hear us, not because we used our weapons to murder their civilians, but to bring down their tyrants. From our loss, we gave them hope. The loss felt in Baghdad and Kabul is that of Sisyphus without his stone. The sound they hear is the ring of freedom. And they hear us, even if only a whisper, in Syria, in Iran, and - yes - they hear us in Saudi Arabia, too.

Steven Green, "Terrorized? Hell No!" VodkaPundit (blog posting)

Deroy Murdock, "'Did you find her yet?'" National Review

Peggy Noonan, "A Heart, a Cross, a Flag" Wall Street Journal

It will require an economist, politician, historian, philosopher, and artist to make sense of the world turned upside down after September 11, which unlike Y2K really did prove to be the abyss between the millennia.

Victor Davis Hanson, "The Great Divide" National Review

Digital Archives

The September 11 Digital archive

September 11 news.com

The September 11 Web Archive

The Black Day


The Last Word

The course of this conflict is not known, yet its outcome is certain. Freedom and fear, justice and cruelty, have always been at war, and we know that God is not neutral between them.

George W. Bush, Address to a Joint Session of Congress and the American People September 20, 2001

Never forgive, never forget, never excuse.
Posted by:Mike

#5  Here's one of my favorites, We'll go forward from this moment - Leonard Pitts.

So I ask again: What was it you hoped to teach us? It occurs to me that maybe you just wanted us to know the depths of your hatred. If that's the case, consider the message received. And take this message in exchange: You don't know my people. You don't know what we're capable of. You don't know what you just started.

But you're about to learn.

Posted by: BH   2005-09-09 11:00  

#4  yet the MSM is clamoring to show the bloated bodies in N.O. to damage Bush
Posted by: Frank G   2005-09-09 10:55  

#3  Nope. Nope. Nothing to see here. Old News. Images too graphic to be shown.

Hey! It's been a while since we ran an Abu Gharib story, isn't it?
Posted by: The MSM   2005-09-09 09:36  

#2  Add to the "digital archive" section:

National Review 911 Archive
Posted by: Mike   2005-09-09 09:15  

#1  The NYT account is chilling. I won't ever compliment them again.
The part of me that isn't still pissed is disgusted with the America hating left.
People like me jumping out of windows in Manhatten for crying out loud. No amount of kumbaya solves that problem, only dead Islamist's do.

How soon they forget. I won't.
Posted by: JerseyMike   2005-09-09 08:04  

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