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Home Front: WoT
I Just Called to Say I Love You
2006-09-09
by Peggy Noonan
Everyone remembers the pictures, but I think more and more about the sounds. I always ask people what they heard that day in New York. We've all seen the film and videotape, but the sound equipment of television crews didn't always catch what people have described as the deep metallic roar.

The other night on TV there was a documentary on the Ironworkers of New York's Local 40, whose members ran to the site when the towers fell. They pitched in on rescue, then stayed for eight months to deconstruct a skyscraper some of them had helped build 35 years before. An ironworker named Jim Gaffney said, "My partner kept telling me the buildings are coming down and I'm saying 'no way.' Then we heard that noise that I will never forget. It was like a creaking and then the next thing you felt the ground rumbling."

Rudy Giuliani said it was like an earthquake. The actor Jim Caviezel saw the second plane hit the towers on television and what he heard shook him: "A weird, guttural discordant sound," he called it, a sound exactly like lightning. He knew because earlier that year he'd been hit. My son, then a teenager in a high school across the river from the towers, heard the first plane go in at 8:45 a.m. It sounded, he said, like a heavy truck going hard over a big street grate.

I think too about the sounds that came from within the buildings and within the planes--the phone calls and messages left on answering machines, all the last things said to whoever was home and picked up the phone. They awe me, those messages.

Something terrible had happened. Life was reduced to its essentials. Time was short. People said what counted, what mattered. It has been noted that there is no record of anyone calling to say, "I never liked you," or, "You hurt my feelings." No one negotiated past grievances or said, "Vote for Smith." Amazingly --or not--there is no record of anyone damning the terrorists or saying "I hate them."

No one said anything unneeded, extraneous or small. Crisis is a great editor. When you read the transcripts that have been released over the years it's all so clear.

Flight 93 flight attendant Ceecee Lyles, 33 years old, in an answering-machine message to her husband: "Please tell my children that I love them very much. I'm sorry, baby. I wish I could see your face again."

Thirty-one-year-old Melissa Harrington, a California-based trade consultant at a meeting in the towers, called her father to say she loved him. Minutes later she left a message on the answering machine as her new husband slept in their San Francisco home. "Sean, it's me, she said. "I just wanted to let you know I love you."

Capt. Walter Hynes of the New York Fire Department's Ladder 13 dialed home that morning as his rig left the firehouse at 85th Street and Lexington Avenue. He was on his way downtown, he said in his message, and things were bad. "I don't know if we'll make it out. I want to tell you that I love you and I love the kids."

Firemen don't become firemen because they're pessimists. Imagine being a guy who feels in his gut he's going to his death, and he calls on the way to say goodbye and make things clear. His widow later told the Associated Press she'd played his message hundreds of times and made copies for their kids. "He was thinking about us in those final moments."

Elizabeth Rivas saw it that way too. When her husband left for the World Trade Center that morning, she went to a laundromat, where she heard the news. She couldn't reach him by cell and rushed home. He'd called at 9:02 and reached her daughter. The child reported, "He say, mommy, he say he love you no matter what happens, he loves you." He never called again. Mrs. Rivas later said, "He tried to call me. He called me."

There was the amazing acceptance. I spoke this week with a medical doctor who told me she'd seen many people die, and many "with grace and acceptance." The people on the planes didn't have time to accept, to reflect, to think through; and yet so many showed the kind of grace you see in a hospice.

Peter Hanson, a passenger on United Airlines Flight 175 called his father. "I think they intend to go to Chicago or someplace and fly into a building," he said. "Don't worry, Dad--if it happens, it will be very fast." On the same flight, Brian Sweeney called his wife, got the answering machine, and told her they'd been hijacked. "Hopefully I'll talk to you again, but if not, have a good life. I know I'll see you again some day."

There was Tom Burnett's famous call from United Flight 93. "We're all going to die, but three of us are going to do something," he told his wife, Deena. "I love you, honey."

These were people saying, essentially, In spite of my imminent death, my thoughts are on you, and on love. I asked a psychiatrist the other day for his thoughts, and he said the people on the planes and in the towers were "accepting the inevitable" and taking care of "unfinished business." "At death's door people pass on a responsibility--'Tell Billy I never stopped loving him and forgave him long ago.' 'Take care of Mom.' 'Pray for me, Father. Pray for me, I haven't been very good.' " They address what needs doing.

This reminded me of that moment when Todd Beamer of United 93 wound up praying on the phone with a woman he'd never met before, a Verizon Airfone supervisor named Lisa Jefferson. She said later that his tone was calm. It seemed as if they were "old friends," she later wrote. They said the Lord's Prayer together. Then he said "Let's roll."

This is what I get from the last messages. People are often stronger than they know, bigger, more gallant than they'd guess. And this: We're all lucky to be here today and able to say what deserves saying, and if you say it a lot, it won't make it common and so unheard, but known and absorbed.

I think the sound of the last messages, of what was said, will live as long in human history, and contain within it as much of human history, as any old metallic roar.
There are many kinds of strength and courage.
Posted by:.com

#6  In memory of those who perished on 9-11.

NEVER FORGET. NEVER FORGIVE.
Posted by: Zenster   2006-09-09 23:09  

#5  Just one look at this article's picture is all it takes for me to go totally ballistic, all over again. It's why my television is still turned off, five solid years later. After seeing some of the live 9-11 coverage at my job, I knew the networks would replay these images a million times. That was something I did not want etched into my memory.

As the 9-11 atrocity's fifth anniversay approaches, I have totally and completely lost all hope for any peaceful reconciliation with Islam. Muslims have not demonstrated even one percent of the commitment against terrorism that is required for them to have the least credibility.

Instead, we have been treated to atrocity after atrocity and only have an endless stream of them to look forward to so long as Islam still exists. I now join you, .com, in supporting the "fry 'em up" stance. Nothing else will preserve us from Islam's bloodlust.

.com, since there's a chance you will review this thread, I'm going to give you some background about me that you have honestly asked about and truly deserve.

I was a lifelong democrat who finally became fed up enough when Clinton sought re-election. After commiting perjury on the stand and wasting untold millions of this nation's dollars doing it, I reached my limit. Because of how strongly I feel about a woman's right to self-determination, I was obliged to vote for Al Gore, despite his totally uninspiring platform. To this day, Bush's campaign of intentionally blurring the separation of church and state is so repugnant to me that I have never been able to consider voting for him.

Am I glad that Bush is in office? Even if not, I am glad that Al Gore is not. The propensity democrats have for negotiating with even the most dispicable sorts could not possibly serve this country in time of war, which is where we are, at war with Islam.

In the last election, I could not possibly bring myself to vote democratic. John Kerry was absolutely repulsive in his rudderless morality and meandering, weather vane campaign platform. I voted libertarian to send a message to both parties.

In the coming elections, I am still unsure of how I will vote. The republican party still is far too much in bed with this country's fundamentalist Christian right wing for me to gladly join their ranks. The democrats' defeatist stance has absolutely forbidden me to vote for them. I may still have to vote libertarian again, but I doubt I'll ever vote democrat again in my entire life.

The threat of Islamist terrorism cuts across all party lines and trumps even some of my highest priorities, like a woman's right to choose. I forgot who here said it, but it boiled down to "abortion and gay marriage are something we can debate, fighting Islamism is not". (Feel free to step up and take a bow for that line.)

That pretty much encapsulates my own political reorientation. I give vast and deepest thanks to Rantburg and Fred Pruitt particularly for the keen insights I have gathered here. I give special thanks to you, .com, for rising to the challenge and making sure that I had to provide proper backing for my own political positions. Something many of my own personal friends do not do because of how lacking in rationality their own belief structures are.

Thank you .com for blasting the scales from my eyes regarding the myth of moderate Islam. As Duh! mentioned today:

There's never the need to specify moderate Christians or Buddhists for the very reason that their (present day)teachings do not support violence.

The fact that moslems have to claim this title of "moderate" clearly shows that it's essential nature is certainly neither moderate nor peaceful when the rabble rousing mullahs appear.


It was a personal pleasure to share Fjordman's article, Why We Cannot Rely on Moderate Muslims with you today, .com. Without your untiring persistence in illuminating all things perfidious about Islam, I might not have appreciated what I was reading. Instead, I did, and I thank you for it.

Best Wishes,

Chris
Posted by: Zenster   2006-09-09 23:03  

#4  Never forget. Never forgive.
I'm still pissed and the current moonbat offensive is killing me.
Posted by: J. D. Lux   2006-09-09 22:18  

#3  damn, PD, I'm all teared up. For such a big strong guy, I'm a puss
Posted by: Frank G   2006-09-09 22:13  

#2  Never forget. Never forgive.

And may all who support or excuse the bastards who did this and those who would do it again, only worse, burn in HELL for all eternity. Starting soon.

And that includes all the traitors, fellow travelers, and assorted slavering America-hating moonbats in this country, too.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2006-09-09 22:00  

#1  May we never forget.
Posted by: mcsegeek1   2006-09-09 21:36  

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