Memories of September 11

I was in the city on September 11 and thought it would be interesting to collect anecdotes here from people who lived through it, and who experienced the atmosphere in the city immediately afterward. Where were you and how did you find out?
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Uraniumfish 2yrs+
It's bee often remarked how incredibly serene the weather was that day. In the afternoon we were being told on TV not to go down to the site to try to help, that the best way to help was to stay out of the way of the rescuers. So there was literally nothing to do, and wanting a break from the TV replays, I took a book with me and went walking through Central Park.

The people who had arrived in Manhattan that day to go to work downtown had been told to simply start walking uptown, to get out of the chaos of people and rubble downtown. The subways and buses had stopped running so the only way you could get around was to walk. So it was really hearbreaking, walking through Central Park, to spot several men in business suits laying down on benches or in the grass, using their briefcases as pillows. They were the people who had arrived for work in Manhattan early in the morning, but then could not get out of the city and had nowhere to go.
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hhusted 2yrs+
It was disheartening. I was in Edison, NJ at the time. I was planning to come in to help my girlfriend celebrate her birthday but was told that all cross points were shut down. That was the first time that I can remember when NYC was actually shut down and quiet.
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uptowngirl 2yrs+
Uraniumfish,.. I have my own 9/11 story.. I was in NYC on holiday that summer and was staying with a cousin on South End Avenue in Battery Park City. I was set to leave NYC on the evening of 9/10 after having spent two months in NYC. It was a rainy evening and my flight from JFK to Singapore was delayed from 9pm on 9/10 to 3 am on 9/11. We waited and waited and kept cajoling our carrier Singapore Airlines to cancel the flight as we were tired and irritable but they finally put us on and I believe we were the last flight out of JFK that night. While we were on our way to Singapore the TV screens on the flight displayed news flash-'Air attacks on World Trade Center' with no other details. I was traveling with my aunt and I alerted her to the message as my cousin with whom we had spent the summer lived near the WTC where he was working on 'opening' the Ritz Carlton Battery Park Hotel' . We were a bit worried and asked the air hostesses but nobody had any news. When we landed in Singapore nearly 22 hours later we were greeted by a TV crew who wanted our reactions. We really didn't have a clue about what had happened until we were informed that the WTC towers had been destroyed by terrorist attacks. We then saw the horrible pictures in a newspaper supplied by our cab driver and couldn't believe what we had escaped... needless to say we were in a state of shock and anxious to find out the well being of friends and family in NYC. For weeks afterward I walked about in a daze even though I was not personally harmed I couldn't help empathize with the people who had been affected by this terrible tragedy in a city where I had enjoyed such a glorious summer holiday
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hhusted 2yrs+
You are a great person. I feel for you. I understand what you went through. Thankfully, my girlfriend at the time, was nowhere near there. She actually saw it on TV and called to let me know about it. What a horrible event. Hopefully such an event won't ever happen again.
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I cant imagine what it must have been like to live (or be in) NYC on that day that has changed history.

I have my own story - it was the night after we got married, on my honeymoon on a deserted island in the Pacific watching it on television live. Just remember my wife's tears and shock, such a contrast to the night before. And most of the resorts guests were Americans trying frantically to call home.
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hhusted 2yrs+
That was a trying time for most people. It was a day that time nearly stood still for NY. It was also a time when the city nearly collasped. Let's hope the ones responsible for the disaster never have a chance to repeat it again.
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DBlack 2yrs+
I know someone whose father died. Not a close friend but still was sad and shocking...
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Let's see - I was eleven, and at school, and at the assembly our Middle School Principal told us something had happened. She was very cagey about it - said something had crashed "near" the WTC - but it was quite clear from her demeanor something was wrong. My mother picked me up from school - after defying her nuts workaholic boss to be able to leave the office - and we went to the now-defunct Cafe Guy Pascal and I remember being absolutely terrified. The next day, said boss insisted we all come into work, and as school was closed, I spent the day wandering aimlessly around my mother's office while her boss yelled at everyone for watching the news instead of being busy at their desks...needless to say she quit some months later.
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hhusted 2yrs+
Yes, DBlack, it was a horrible day and hopefully one we will never see again. I personally did not lose anyone in the tragedy but felt bad for those who did lose someone. Hey, ajadedidealist, having a boss act that way, especially with what happened the previous day, I can see why your mother quit. I would have told him where to stick his business to. How heartless and inhumane can one be.
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Uraniumfish 2yrs+
Weird reaction. I remember people being especially sensitive to each other in the days after, as though we had all shared in something...Though with touches of paranoia and talk of anthrax interspersed.
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I suppose some people just feel the need to carry on/pretend as if nothing happened.
That said, however, I do think New York, as a whole, tends to be a close community in times of crisis or pseudo crisis (ie, the blackout). We might be a diverse city - extraordinarily so - representing a wide range of race, class, and what-have-you, but I've found on some level that New Yorkers have more "community spirit" than your average homogeneous, close small town.
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hhusted 2yrs+
I know, Uraniumfish, but then six months later it was back to attitudes as usual. I heard this guy talking about 9/11 on the street recently. He was talking to someone next to him and he even remarked how people in NY were nice to each other, supporting one another. But he said after about six months the feelings subsided and he noticed people were acting selfish, arrogant, and basically to themselves. I really don't know if this is true of all people, considering I know and have friends who are kind, sweet, and friendly.

How do you perceive people in NYC in the last year or two?
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uptowngirl 2yrs+
@ajadedidealist your mum's boss sounds like a witch! how could he/she not have been affected by what happened in NYC that fateful day, until this day I think about those people who were sent back to their offices in the second tower after the first tower was hit. The logical response would have been to evacuate the entire area but I guess chaos and confusion reigned as the authorities probably thought the first incident was just an accident.
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Uraniumfish 2yrs+
Anybody remember the paranoid talk, though? Seemed like everywhere I went in the months afterward people were weird about their neighbors, and everybody was talking about anthrax all of a sudden. Maybe a symptom of shock. There were ads all over the subways advertising free counseling services.

One really really weird sight in the days immediately afterward was walking in Times Square and every single one of those famous lights were shut OFF. I remember feeling like I was walking in a war zone...
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hhusted 2yrs+
Yeah, Uraniumfish. It was rather a messy situation. Many people were hurt or killed that day. Every race, nationality, and culture parished that day.

Remember on December 7th, 1941, a day that will live in emphamy. It was the day Japan bombed Pearl Harbor. Well, 9/11 was also a day that will live in emphamy for New Yorkers.

Do you agree?
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Uraniumfish 2yrs+
Here's a NY Times editorial about the recent pressure not to hold the rial of accused terrorists in New York.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/31/opinion/31sun2.html
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uptowngirl 2yrs+
@uraniumfish I wonder what everyone thinks on this forum, I seem to agree with the article that the trial should be held in NYC after all this was the city that suffered the direct consequences of the attack. In someway I think a trial held in NYC would somehow help the families of those NYers who lost their loved ones in the attack get some form of closure don't you think? but then on the other hand the cost to the city in monetary terns would be tremendous as Bloomberg avers.Maybe the right way would be to hold the trial in NYC with the help of federal funds as the article seems to suggest.
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uptowngirl 2yrs+
My husband who was living in the city during 9/11 had quite a different reaction to other folks in the city yes he was as shocked as everybody else but he yet went out to dinner with friends just to show some support to the neighborhood restaurants who naturally lost all their custom in the weeks that followed 9/11.
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Uraniumfish 2yrs+
@uptowngirl The strange thing was, there wasn't much else to do in those few days after except try to be normal though nothing was normal, really. @uptowngirl I would just wish the accused get a fair trial, and would wonder whether that's possible in New York? Not sure what I think about this one.
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uptowngirl 2yrs+
@Uraniumfish do you think a trial held in NYC would be biased? I haven't really thought so far though I have strong feelings about what happened during a similair terrorist attack on two luxury hotels in my erstwhile home city of Mumbai in November 2008. Bet you saw it on TV here , but I was in Mumbai then and happen to know many of the victims personally. It was awful but until today the one lone captured terrorist who has been identified by CCTV coverage and eyewitness accounts is yet to be brought to justice. He is in police custody and is being kept alive on taxpayer funds while those families who lost their loved ones have to pick up their lives and move on with no real closure.
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Uraniumfish 2yrs+
@uptowngirl It's probably a tough call, since I also want to be careful about the right people being accused of the right crimes. Immediately after the attacks, everyone was so hurt, that I wondered if people who were only suspected would be able to actually get a fair hearing, considering the general atmosphere. But there's no answer to this one and I'm glad I don't have to be the one to decide...
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I agree, @uptowngirl - I think the trial should be held in NYC, as it would give us closure. I'm really not keen on the Republican fearmongering/"terrorist attack" meme that they're spreading, when it's clearly a political issue.
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hhusted 2yrs+
@uptowngirl: The argument is that if the terror suspects are held on trial in NYC, this could impose terror attacks, as the terrorist will not like it and will come to rescue one of their comrades. On the other hand, the terror suspect could decide to commit suicide as an directive from Al Queda. But no one really knows for sure.

@ajdadedidealist: The fear being presented can't be ignored. This city has to be protected no matter what. And if having the trial in the city will put us in harms way, or risk security, I say have the trial somewhere else. Isn't it better to be safe.

Here are some comments you may find interesting about the terror trials:

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/16/us/politics/16giuliani.html
http://biggovernment.com/publius/2010/01/28/white-house-orders-no-terror-trials-in-nyc/
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/01/27/boehner-way-terrorist-trials-held-new-york/

By reading the above comments, you can clearly see that Bloomberg is not happy with having the terror trials in NYC.

Unfortunately, this is a touchy subject and warrants further thought and discussion before any decision should be made. All angles need to be addressed including the pros and cons of having a trial here, and other factors need to be considered.
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uptowngirl 2yrs+
@hhusted I hadn't really thought about the terrorist retaliation angle at all but perhaps we in NYC are not so secure as we think ourselves to be . I just read this in the newspaper today that a body of a stowaway was found in the landing gear of a Delta airlines flight which landed at Tokyo's Narita airport . The flight originated at JFK where security is supposed to be airtight. Then how did a man escape detection and stowaway? the implications of this are quite scary ..the next time around someone can probably access a plane parked on the tarmac and post some kind of explosive device. Who is to know? even after the TSA and other security measures in place it's shocking that this should happen .

http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-02-09/dead-stowaway-on-delta-air-flight-spotlights-security-update1-.html
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hhusted 2yrs+
That's right. Now you can see why it is imperative to do the right thing and keep the trials out of NYC so we won't be in harmed or be in a threat for someone to cause us harm.
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BroadwayBK 2yrs+
@uptowngirl I read that article about the stowaway and became interested in finding out just who could actually survive a flight in a wheel well, and the more I read the more it seemed as if stowaway-in-the-landing-gear incidents seem to happen once every few years, including one in 2007 on a British Airways jet - the body was found in LA.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/1541417/Body-may-have-been-week-on-plane.html

Anyway, not to go too far from the original topic, but if anyone else is interested, this is what the Telegraph had to say about the few survivors of these desperate ordeals:

"Few stowaways who climb into planes' wheel wells survive. Despite the fact the area is enclosed, it is not pressurised or heated.

Temperatures could have plunged to minus 50C during the 10-hour flight, officials said.

There are some exceptions, however. In August 2000, Fidel Maruhi, from Tahiti, miraculously survived a 4,000-mile journey in a wheel well after enduring normally fatal temperatures as low as minus 45C.

When he was pulled from the aircraft in Los Angeles, he was treated for hypothermia and dehydration but was otherwise unharmed.

And in 2002, a Cuban stowaway, Victor Alverez Molina, endured minus 40C in a wheel well en route to Canada.

Discovered in Montreal, he was detained by the authorities but later freed. He was allowed to remain in the country and found work in a car showroom and learned French."

And of course it's unsettling to think what could happen if someone with an explosive device managed to get into a wheel well...
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BroadwayBK 2yrs+
So Giuliani - though I barely care what the man thinks - seems to believe that the Sept 11 attacks should be treated as "an act of war." Any thoughts on this?

It mostly seems to me that he is just looking to put down the Democrats in the White House more than anything else, saying that Obama is being soft on terrorism and "deciding we’re not at war with terrorists any more."

I agree with this part of the editorial Uraniumfish linked in:

"President Obama was right to move Mr. Mohammed and four other high-profile terrorism suspects out of the jurisdiction of military tribunals. President George W. Bush’s decision to hold prisoners outside the law and then attempt to try them in rigged military courts was legally wrong, and hugely damaging to American values and this country’s global image."

I don't know if I agree with the op-ed piece's declaration that the trial should be in NYC; if Bloomberg thinks it will cost too much, then perhaps the money - if it exists - is better spent elsewhere. Give it to MTA and order them to do some good with it.

@hhusted Is someone really arguing that if the trial were held in NYC, one of Mohammad's terrorist buddies would swoop in and try to save him? Or blow something up?
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Uraniumfish 2yrs+
I'm finding the terrorist-retaliation idea pretty implausible myself and don't think that's too relevant to the discussion of whether the trials should be held in NYC.

@BroadwayBK I think insisting on this particular label - "an act of war" - carries with it several connotations which conservative Republicans would like to perpetuate. Among them is the idea of being at war, or needing to go to war, as a result of September 11, which aligns very well with a Republican agenda of making war for the sake of profit - in case it's not immediately obvious, every time America goes to war, a small minority of contrators make enormous profits from military contracts, plus there's oil interest in the Middle East, plus a tactical advantage to having troops positioned in the region, etc.

It's generally understood in intellectual circles that the fundamentalist mentality that inspired the terrorist attacks is a function of widespread poverty across the entire Middle East region. It's not hard to imagine why common people in the Middle East would resent the West, and most especially the US, as the central symbol of Western prosperity and the values that have generated this prosperity. For decades now they have had no real share of the increasing wealthy and opportunity that is available in the West, nor from globalization. They are marginalized and frustrated, and it's no wonder that frustration leads to violence. Obviously I don't condone the actions of terrorists of any persuasion. But thoughtful analysis of "the other side" and what might motivate them is not generally advantageous to the Republican war-mongering agenda. A thoughtful analysis might lead to the idea that the attacks were "an act of frustration." Or at least it might be healthy to allow several ways to interpret the attacks, the above-mentioned two interpretations getting to only a part of a very complex problem. I think Giuliani is playing out a specific, and very Republican agenda, in which it's advantageous to reduce this very complex problem to a too, too simple interpretation in one sentence.

Anyway, Republicans know the only way they can win an election in this particular political climate is to insist that we are in a lot more danger from terrorists than we really are. Even a basic understanding of human psychology could tell you that the reason the Middle East hates us is because we're rich.
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hhusted 2yrs+
Hey, guys, I never said that if the trials were held here, the terrorists would attack, I only said it was a possibility and that we should be concerned about it. I am not inciting an argument here, I merely stating info I read somewhere by a terrorist expert.
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hhusted 2yrs+
I just read a report on NY1 that, according to a recent poll taken by New Yorkers, 68% say they oppose any terror trials in the city. Because of the danger that it poses for the city, the Department of Justice is looking to find a place to hold the trials. I wonder where that will end up being?
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Uraniumfish 2yrs+
So why not post the article. I'd be interested in reading it.
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BroadwayBK 2yrs+
Doesn't say anything about "danger" being imposed on the city... mentions security, but that doesn't mean that anyone is afraid of more terrorist attacks.

I don't think these trials should be held in military courts; I don't think terrorist attacks should be treated as an "act of war," because, honestly, terrorists don't pose the same kind of threat that an actual war would.

And I agree with Uraniumfish that these are marginalized, impoverished people, and they aren't the only ones.

Maybe more of us should worry about making the world a better place instead of making just one country a better one at the expense of others.

Then again I am not condoning terrorist attacks, either, and I think that these guys should pay for the crimes they've committed.
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Uraniumfish 2yrs+
Okay, so there's been a poll, but "public perception" is a lousy expert on any real danger that might exist. It seems normal that your average person would have safety worries about living in this city, since it is very obviously a prominent target. It also seems like a perfectly good idea to ignore people's irrational fears and try to evaluate the real danger posed by having a trial here. People are irrational, hey!

And yeah, keep those trials out of military courts! Anyone accused should at least have a chance at due process, and I seriously doubt military courts will provide that. Fair trials, due process, I want to be proud I live in an open society.
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hhusted 2yrs+
@Uraniumfish: Why would terror trials be held in a military court, when the incident happened on civilian ground. In other words, the military was not involved in it when it happened? At least I don't think they were.
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Basic 2yrs+
Ok.. I know this is an old topic...

But my personal opinion is.....

Hold the trials in Giants Stadium.. easier to protect, can sell tickets(modestly) to public (families of victims are free, of course) and, televise the thing on a pay per view(again, modest) event. This covers the cost of the trial, keeps it close to 'home' allowing families to be there, gives the public the ability to view the proceedings without paying a fortune to do so.

Just my thought....
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uptowngirl 2yrs+
@Basic great idea.. perhaps you should send a note to Bloomberg after all it will be revenue generating for the city ..
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I agree with you, @uraniumfish. When I first heard that the trial would be in NYC, I was happy to see NYC eting out justice for 9/11 - it seemed fitting. I am sorry that the GOP whipped up fear and made NYers too afraid to seek justice
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uptowngirl 2yrs+
@Everyone Just came across this interesting article about the revival of downtown NYC

http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2010/08/28/1649053/tangible-signs-of-life-to-arrive.html
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I still can't believe it's been nearly ten years and still no sign of proper rebuilding at Ground Zero. I think that's ridiculous and shameful - how can people just not get it together?
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Uraniumfish 2yrs+
@ajadedidealist Har har har, one is tempted to ask the same thing about the MTA. So typical of NYC political skirmishes that nothing at all ever gets done...
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hhusted 2yrs+
There is rebuilding going on at ground zero. They just don't show you what is happening.
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uptowngirl 2yrs+
@hhusted everyone knows there is rebuilding going on down there we are just surprised as how long its taking
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@uptowngirl, indeed! Apparently it's slow going but still! Come on! Shouldn't this be a priority for so many reasons?
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uptowngirl 2yrs+
@Everyone Here's a slide show on the progress of the construction at Ground Zero
http://www.newsweek.com/photo/2010/09/04/ground-zero.html
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uptowngirl 2yrs+
@Everyone here's the latest 9/11 controversy- apparently the kin of victims who perished in the terrible attacks had tried to get the US supreme court to rule against the decision of the city to move a ton of debris from the site to a landfill in Staten Island. They wanted the debris to be buried in a cemetery as they feel that the debris were not completely sifted for remains and the remains of 1000 victims are still to be found.
http://nz.news.yahoo.com/a/-/world/8069152/9-11-families-fail-in-us-court-appeal/
I do understand the city's point of view to bury the remains would cost the taxpayers a lot but then perhaps I would react differently if I was personally affected by the tragedy. What do you think?
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A landfill seems horrid and impersonal, somehow. A burial site would be appropriate, I think. Yes, it costs taxpayer money, but I think this is one of those times where it's necessary/worth it to do so.
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uptowngirl 2yrs+
@Everyone The famous Rockefeller Center Christmas tree has a deeper connection to NYC this year as the tree comes from the upstate NY home of New York City firefighter Peter Acton who served as a first responder in the 9/11 terrorist attacks.. what a great story
http://www.dnainfo.com/20101112/midtown/rockefeller-center-christmas-tree-arrives-midtown
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uptowngirl 2yrs+
The September 11th museum has just released an online time line of the attacks...

http://timeline.national911memorial.org/

Even after a decade it feels like yesterday..I still remember that day so vividly don't think I will ever forget..
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Uraniumfish 2yrs+
It's insane to pay for the expense of burying debris. They should do a respectful ceremony and then get on with getting rid of the debris in the most efficient way possible. People have their memories of their loved ones and ithat should be enough.
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JenMac 2yrs+
I tend to think I wouldn't want my mother or husband dumped into a landfill in Staten Island. So, I can see where they're coming from. They're not trash.
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Uraniumfish 2yrs+
@JenMac No one said so, of course they're not trash. But there are also the living to care for and I would rather use the money it would take to do that to treat people who are hungry or homeless or in distress.
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uptowngirl 2yrs+
@Uraniumfish Youre argument is a rational one but I am on the fence on this issue. I think if I were one of the family members I too would want a burial. Somehow even after a decade this issue seems so relevant to New Yorkers ..
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