- Post starter
- #85
Heather
Diamond Member
We, meaning the United States had to get Bin Laden.... he taunted us for the past 10 yrs. Mocked us. stating that we would never find him.
Maybe we are a country with an Eye for an Eye mentality but when you order an attack that kills over 3,000 people. INNOCENT people. What do you expect our government to do? Sit idly by? Do nothing? I personally know people that have lost loved one's and it breaks my heart to see the anguish that they live with to this day.
I have a friend that worked in NYC. She saw the 2nd plane hit the WTC. She said the boom was deafening and the heat from the jet fuel exploding/ she couldn't get over the heat..... She couldn't get out of the city. All trains/buses/subways/taxi's/cars... No one was allowed in or out. She had to walk over one of the bridges into New Jersey. She was missing for over 10 hours before she could call her family. They were in a panic not knowing if she was dead or alive. After that she couldn't get on the subway to go to work. She was having full blown panic attacks. 2 months later, her and her husband moved out of the city to Connecticut. It still affects her to this day.
So, we can all go back and fourth and around and around. But when you are right there when it's happening it takes on a whole different meaning.
Maybe we are a country with an Eye for an Eye mentality but when you order an attack that kills over 3,000 people. INNOCENT people. What do you expect our government to do? Sit idly by? Do nothing? I personally know people that have lost loved one's and it breaks my heart to see the anguish that they live with to this day.
I have a friend that worked in NYC. She saw the 2nd plane hit the WTC. She said the boom was deafening and the heat from the jet fuel exploding/ she couldn't get over the heat..... She couldn't get out of the city. All trains/buses/subways/taxi's/cars... No one was allowed in or out. She had to walk over one of the bridges into New Jersey. She was missing for over 10 hours before she could call her family. They were in a panic not knowing if she was dead or alive. After that she couldn't get on the subway to go to work. She was having full blown panic attacks. 2 months later, her and her husband moved out of the city to Connecticut. It still affects her to this day.
So, we can all go back and fourth and around and around. But when you are right there when it's happening it takes on a whole different meaning.