At 1:34, his expression is so real and says so much, I remember seeing this years ago, but what I remember most is that dreadful expression that no Hollywood movie could ever copy.
omg..even it has been 10 years past the feeling,the sick of it,the hates,the cry it never run dry,,i dont even know what to do or say,,cant even imagine to live in that moment,noone can choose how to die,,all we can do is just pray for the one that lose the battle that day,all the survivors that prolly bring the guilt for not save those people that die,,and may peace in all over the world,,and hoping the world will fill with love not hate..RIP,,we love you all
I have so much respect for the fireman that day. I know the surviving fireman will probably carry 'survivors guilt', but they need to realise that living the rest of their life well, is the best way to honor their fallen comrades.
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I have a problem with this whole thing. ok many. here's something that pisses me off, why the hell were they all just standing around all that time in the lobby? they coud've saved so many more lives than they did.how much time went by while they were standing around debating on what to do? what you do is get your asses up there
umm, the guys you're seeing "standing around" were the battalion chiefs and captains....they had their crews ascending the building, who were trying to save lives (which they did). But for the south tower collapsing, the brass would have never given the order to evacuate. I've read the fireman's reports that say after the south tower collapsed, it was decided to just let the north tower burn and to evacuate all personnel and apparatus in the vicinity. They knew it was hopeless at that point.
wow that's a rough decision to make. I can't even begin to imagine what the day must've been like for them. sure they wrote it down somewhere and recorded testimonies were taken, but we'll never truly know how heavy their hearts must be to this day. very sad :(
@rustedtractor That must've been the most sickening thing to hear, being a firefighter climbing the North Tower. Thinking about all your friends in the other tower and realizing that if you don't escape, the same can happen to you. =/ What those guys went through just to save lives is so bitter-sweet.
For all those fire fighters and people who lost there lives that day. We will never ever forget you. Thank you and God bless.
28nayr 1 month ago
that old man is the definition of honor and pride
chunkylover817 5 months ago
At 1:34, his expression is so real and says so much, I remember seeing this years ago, but what I remember most is that dreadful expression that no Hollywood movie could ever copy.
Kirinet 5 months ago
omg..even it has been 10 years past the feeling,the sick of it,the hates,the cry it never run dry,,i dont even know what to do or say,,cant even imagine to live in that moment,noone can choose how to die,,all we can do is just pray for the one that lose the battle that day,all the survivors that prolly bring the guilt for not save those people that die,,and may peace in all over the world,,and hoping the world will fill with love not hate..RIP,,we love you all
gmirelli 5 months ago in playlist More videos from lattepower
I have so much respect for the fireman that day. I know the surviving fireman will probably carry 'survivors guilt', but they need to realise that living the rest of their life well, is the best way to honor their fallen comrades.
Tehui1974 1 year ago 3
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I have a problem with this whole thing. ok many. here's something that pisses me off, why the hell were they all just standing around all that time in the lobby? they coud've saved so many more lives than they did.how much time went by while they were standing around debating on what to do? what you do is get your asses up there
pattisgirls 2 years ago
umm, the guys you're seeing "standing around" were the battalion chiefs and captains....they had their crews ascending the building, who were trying to save lives (which they did). But for the south tower collapsing, the brass would have never given the order to evacuate. I've read the fireman's reports that say after the south tower collapsed, it was decided to just let the north tower burn and to evacuate all personnel and apparatus in the vicinity. They knew it was hopeless at that point.
rustedtractor 2 years ago 12
wow that's a rough decision to make. I can't even begin to imagine what the day must've been like for them. sure they wrote it down somewhere and recorded testimonies were taken, but we'll never truly know how heavy their hearts must be to this day. very sad :(
pattisgirls 2 years ago
@rustedtractor That must've been the most sickening thing to hear, being a firefighter climbing the North Tower. Thinking about all your friends in the other tower and realizing that if you don't escape, the same can happen to you. =/ What those guys went through just to save lives is so bitter-sweet.
TheGuyWithTheSniper 4 months ago
Comment removed
campbell4show 2 years ago
I saw this in class today evreyone went dead silence evreytime they heard the smack and the tower collapse
Spartanz1170 3 years ago
very scary. i missed this when it aired thankyou for putting it online.
ridgeways 4 years ago 5
Ye its reaaaaaaaly great ;=) and sad :*(
peterflightsim 3 years ago