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Thread: 9/11 minute's silence

  1. #1
    Junior Member HelenPolly's Avatar
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    9/11 minute's silence

    Hi,

    Just wondered what other people felt about this. I work for a huge well known investment bank on their trading floor in the city and they didn't observe the minute's silence today. They always have in previous years with announcements notifying people, perhaps they feel it's time to move on or that people would prefer to observe privately? Lots of my colleagues lost friends and colleagues etc. and they were all fairly angry nothing was done, I think it was an extremely bad decision by management here, and it must have been a decision as I can't see somehow that they simply "forgot".

    Kind regards,
    Helen

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    Re: 9/11 minute's silence

    No one mentioned it here. I think it would have been a good idea.
    Alan's defence lawyer claimed that "Booze played no part in his typo's."

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    Senior Member pachinkofan's Avatar
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    Re: 9/11 minute's silence

    Tesco's did, my work [American company] hasn't {so far}

    :|

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    Garry
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    Nights were a real drag, thankfully work's on 2 shifts now [day/back] so more time to do things... If only photography were higher up the pecking order ;-)

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    Local Lycanthrope Fen's Avatar
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    Re: 9/11 minute's silence

    Why?

    Do we have a minutes silence for all the dead from all the IRA bombs?

    Surely (as Jeremy Vine was saying this morning of Radio 2) we're just giving the terrorists more publicity.

    (playing devils advocate here)
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    Re: 9/11 minute's silence

    Ref. The IRA - we have in the past haven’t we?

    I personally think that it would have been appropriate and acceptable.
    Alan's defence lawyer claimed that "Booze played no part in his typo's."

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    Senior Member mjc7uk's Avatar
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    Re: 9/11 minute's silence

    I agree with you there Fenris.

    I would have perfer for the television to curb the tranmission about the 9/11 too.
    Mad Hatter: Have I gone mad?

    Alice: I'm afraid so. You're entirely bonkers. But I'll tell you a secret. All the best people are.

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    Re: 9/11 minute's silence

    Admittedly, I'm possibly one of the least mawkish people on the planet, but why?

    What makes the lives of those lost during 9/11 more memorable than any other victim of terror/war/violence in recent history! Where's their minutes silence, etc!

    A remembrance held locally, I can understand. Personal tribute, definitely. But international...
    TheFatControlleR
    'But above all, he should be taught to yield to the truth, and to lay down his arms as soon as he discovers it, whether it appears in his opponents argument, or to himself in his own thoughts.' - Michel de Montaigne (on the education of children)

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    Junior Member HelenPolly's Avatar
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    Re: 9/11 minute's silence

    I think it's all about just honouring and remembering those people who died, which is what any minute's silence is all about surely?

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    Re: 9/11 minute's silence

    Perhaps in my innocence I believe that if we are reminded of past acts of terrorism, war or catastrophe and the human costs we are less likely to repeat past follies, as a species. I don’t see any problem with showing respect for the dead or empathy with those who suffered loss. Personally I wouldn’t mind if we had marked this anniversary with a minute’s silence. A little thought and reflection wouldn’t hurt either. The fact that we are not marking the dead of WW2 or any other conflict today doesn’t enter into it for me. It’s five years since 9/11 and I wouldn’t have had a problem with marking that fact.
    Alan's defence lawyer claimed that "Booze played no part in his typo's."

  10. #10
    Junior Member HelenPolly's Avatar
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    Re: 9/11 minute's silence

    I thankfully didn't know anyone who died but looking at some of my colleagues who did, I could see they were upset by not having that minute's silence and obviously felt the need for it, that's why I posted the question to see what other people think.

  11. #11
    Member BennyBoy's Avatar
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    Re: 9/11 minute's silence

    I think it's time to move on, if every heinous act ever committed was commemorated with silence we wouldn't get much done.

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    Re: 9/11 minute's silence

    I am a little worried that every day in the calendar will one day be given over to rememberence of atrocities.

    The press love these "dates", and I think it's the press who pretend to guide public opinion, or indeed fabricate it.

    However tragic these events ( and they all are), the press have ruined them with spin, ( as labour has) and drama. It's partly propogandist to justify the wars currently being fought I believe.

    On that point, no one would have guessed that Diana died all those years ago, she is still hounded in the press to this day....the reason? Well apart form her becoming an unsolved x-file, I think it's Possibly $$$£££!!!

    R.I.P obviously doesn't mean what it used to mean.

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    Re: 9/11 minute's silence

    Time to move on I think. Doesn't mean what happened to these people has been forgotten. It just doesn't need to be publicly commemorated.

    Mark
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  14. #14
    Junior Member HelenPolly's Avatar
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    Re: 9/11 minute's silence

    One thing I am glad to see though is that the 2 minute silences that started to become the norm a couple of years back (thanks to the media) have gone back to just the 1.

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    Re: 9/11 minute's silence

    I think it's time to move on, if every heinous act ever committed was commemorated with silence we wouldn't get much done.
    Exactly...

    We could start with these dates, all of which happened in our own back yard;

    9th February
    20th March
    10th April
    24th April
    15th August
    12th October
    8th November

    Or don't these dead, injured, traumatised and bereaved warrant the same 'remembrance' purely because of scale & numbers.
    TheFatControlleR
    'But above all, he should be taught to yield to the truth, and to lay down his arms as soon as he discovers it, whether it appears in his opponents argument, or to himself in his own thoughts.' - Michel de Montaigne (on the education of children)

    'Everybody is in favour of free speech. Hardly a day passes without its being extolled. But some people’s idea of it is that they are free to say what they like, but if anyone says anything back, that is an outrage.' - Winston Churchill

    'Live fat, die young, and leave a self-basting corpse for the burn up...' - TFC

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    Re: 9/11 minute's silence

    ... The press love these "dates", and I think it's the press who pretend to guide public opinion, or indeed fabricate it.

    However tragic these events ( and they all are), the press have ruined them with spin, ( as labour has) and drama. It's partly propagandist to justify the wars currently being fought I believe...
    Surely not!

    D'you mean to say that this headline (todays issue) is propagandist...

    Mobile phone grab-shot.

    I might add that the article is equally sensationalist and full of supposition and prime bullsh*t.
    TheFatControlleR
    'But above all, he should be taught to yield to the truth, and to lay down his arms as soon as he discovers it, whether it appears in his opponents argument, or to himself in his own thoughts.' - Michel de Montaigne (on the education of children)

    'Everybody is in favour of free speech. Hardly a day passes without its being extolled. But some people’s idea of it is that they are free to say what they like, but if anyone says anything back, that is an outrage.' - Winston Churchill

    'Live fat, die young, and leave a self-basting corpse for the burn up...' - TFC

  17. #17
    Senior Member T_Sargeant's Avatar
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    Re: 9/11 minute's silence

    A remembrance held locally, I can understand. Personal tribute, definitely. But international...
    Have to agree with the TFC, it's a bit much after this much time has past. Sure, allow people who feel they should observe it to do so. But compulsory silences... especially when there have been so many other terrorist acts that we forget about (or at least, don't actively remember).

    9/11 was a symbol, the States finally got hit with terrorism that had been felt through the world for a long time. However the States were supposed to be invincible, hence the shock.
    Tom
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    Member PeterLanky's Avatar
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    Re: 9/11 minute's silence

    Well, call my thoughts unpopular but what the hell. Personally I am sick of silences for just about anything these days. I am sick of self indulgent media people boosting their own egos by telling me who I should remember, when I should remember it and how I remember it. These silences achieve nothing other than reminding the terrorists just how successful they have been.

    For years, we managed with one silence, once a year and were happy with it, though I didn't indulge myself. Now, we have them it seems every week, with the only criteria being that it made big news. Lots of people die tragically without making the news, and they deserve just as much respect, but in private.

    OK, I've said it now.

    Lancashire - Where it all happens.

  19. #19
    Senior Member TH-Photos's Avatar
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    Re: 9/11 minute's silence

    9/11 was a wake up call to the Americans. Bush et al need to remind themselves that their policies caused the crashes. The only country where the 1 min silence should be observed is the USA.

    7/7 was not a wake up call to Blair et al about his policy of supporting Bush. All the protesters with "Not in my name" banners did this. 7/7 was a reminder that he needs to get out of the american bed. It is right that we should mark this to remind the government of their complicity.
    Ted ACLSFBRIPN
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  20. #20
    Junior Member Sparks's Avatar
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    Re: 9/11 minute's silence

    The terrorists are not targeting Britain because we are allies with America but because we are a Christian Nation which has a democracy and they don't like that, their policy is "First the Saturday people then the Sunday people" we are stuck with it.

    Coming from Northern Ireland I have known nothing else but terrorism on a different scale I might add but none the less tragic and that is the state of the world and it happens so often we are familiar with it, which is sad, but forgetting is not the answer either, we wouldn't be able to forget if it was our own.
    Mark Kincaid

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