RCdc
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This is Darcy I was at work. Around lunchtime (GMT - I am based in England) one of my colleagues came back from lunch with news that apparently up to ten aircraft had been hijacked, but at the time nothing more was known. We then turned on the radio, to catch any breaking news, and I was also logged into a news/gossip website that is popular in the UK and which was giving regular updates. Once the first plane hit the internet virtually collapsed under the weight of the hits as people tried to get more information. For some reason this site stayed up - even the BBC news site went down for a short while. There were a couple of people based in New York giving real time updates, so we knew seconds after the second plane hit. Shortly after that, one of the posters posted a picture of the buildings on fire. The mood in the office was strange - there were only a handful of us who seemed to be aware of the implications of this act of terrorism, while the rest carried on as normal. When I got home that night I sat in front of the TV for several hours, flicking between BBC News 24 and CNN to get a balanced view of the confusion that was unfolding in New York, and indeed around the globe as the news travelled around the planet. It was completely surreal, like watching an elaborate Hollywood movie, but for real. I lost count of the amount of times I watched that second plane slam in the WTC, from a myriad of angles as new footage surfaced all the time, hungrily devoured by the media and audience alike in our quest to comprehend just what was happeneing in front of our eyes. I personally can't remember a more shocking piece of news - this I suppose is my generation's Kennedy Assasination in terms of bringing the world to a halt, if temporarily. A day that I will never forget. Darcy
< Message edited by Darcyandthedark -- 9/12/2007 3:11:40 AM >
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RC&dc love isnt gazing into each others eyes - it's looking forward in the same direction
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