Remembering 9/11
posted at 1:30 pm on September 11, 2008 by Ed Morrissey

Image courtesy Chris Muir, Day by Day
How does one remember 9/11 and honor the day on its seventh anniversary? Most bloggers will have some kind of memorial on their sites, but today is a travel day for me, which I’ll get back to in a moment. For me, I’d like to reprise a post I wrote in 2006 about one of the more faceless victims, Ysidro Hidalgo-Tejada:
Not long ago, I received an invitation from the 2,996 Tribute Project. The organizers want bloggers to remember each one of the dead from that terrible day, and in order to ensure that no one gets forgotten, they assigned a victim to each blogger. The project assigned me Ysidro Hidalgo-Tejada, a food-service worker in the World Trade Center.
I tried doing some research on Ysidro. The messages at the website indicate that he had a family that loved him, a family that the Dominican Republic immigrant supported by working at the Windows On The World restaurant at the top of the North Tower. We have heard something about the situation that the people in the restaurant faced in their final minutes. The restaurant manager called several times to emergency workers, trying to get some assistance and eventually realizing that it would not come. The smoke and fumes were choking those trapped in the restaurant even before the tower fell, but they did their best to hold up until the very end.
We do not know how Ysidro spent those last desperate minutes. We do know that all three stairwells were severed by American Airlines Flight 11. Did he try to make his way out? Or did he die like he lived, helping others and supporting them even after hope ran out? In the end, we have no information on which to judge, just like I could find no information on the life Ysidro lived before the attack that killed him.
It’s hard to do justice to Ysidro. I never knew him, his family, or even have an inkling of his life; all I have is his death, and not even enough of that to distinguish him from the other 2,996 victims of the attack. But in a way, Ysidro serves as an example of the people who died that day. All Ysidro did was work hard and support his family, serving the diners who made their way to the highest restaurant in the world in one of the greatest cities ever built. Everyone who died that day just wanted to help people and make life a little better for themselves and those around them.
Ysidro came to the United States because of the promise of freedom and the ability to make his own way in the world. He died because terrorists fear and hate that about America and the West. Ysidro stood for something they could not abide: the ability to make his own decisions and live life his own way. Ysidro deserves to be remembered far more than the lunatics who took his life and all the others.
Godspeed, Ysidro. I’m sorry we didn’t get the chance to know you better. The terrorists stole that opportunity from us.
I want to recall how each of these people left their mark outside of being victims, and recall the human cost of forgetting the danger of terrorism. Ysidro should be home taking care of his family and enjoying life, and murderous, lunatic bastards stole that from him, and from everyone Ysidro left behind. Multiply that by 3,000, and consider that for the rest of the day.
As I mentioned, this is a travel day for me, and those who know me also know how much I dislike air travel. I’m traveling on the anniversary of 9/11 to go to the nation’s capital to participate in a free and democratic political system. I’m not going to let terrorists frighten me into seclusion. This day more than any other seems appropriate for this kind of trip.
Michelle has a series of great posts on this day. Start at the top and keep scrolling.










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Amen.
leetpriest on September 11, 2008 at 1:32 PM
God Bless the USA!
Weebork on September 11, 2008 at 1:33 PM
I blame
Bushthat demon-possessed child molester Muhammed.eea on September 11, 2008 at 1:35 PM
Whew. 3,000, that’s taking the entire current population of the town in which I was born and disappearing them forever.
Bishop on September 11, 2008 at 1:38 PM
Today, I’m making it a point to be “business as usual.” I’m going to live like the free man that I am. I’m going to spend my money, drive my car, hug my kids, eat my dinner, and (hopefully) make love to my wife. (O.K. that last bit was TMI!)
That’s the way those who passed would have wanted the world to be, and the way our enemies wouldn’t. They’d rather I spent today cowering in a corner, hoping they’ll be merciful by letting me convert to Islam rather than lopping my head off with a dull scimitar.
Screw ‘em!
CurtZHP on September 11, 2008 at 1:39 PM
HOO-rah.
manwithblackhat on September 11, 2008 at 1:39 PM
Thanks, Ed.
I reposted my 2996 post from last year today also.
Mr. Bingley on September 11, 2008 at 1:39 PM
i forgot, what happened?
venicesurfer on September 11, 2008 at 1:40 PM
Not sure why, but I wonder what that idiot Charlie Sheen is doing today.
AubieJon on September 11, 2008 at 1:42 PM
It’s also a good day to exercise your 2nd amendment right, too. Our freedoms were bought, paid, and earned in blood. It’s our duty to protect and defend them at all costs.
Dr.Cwac.Cwac on September 11, 2008 at 1:42 PM
I thought 7 years was a safe enough distance – no not a time to forget what happened, but to be numbed to the tragedy. I watched the film from the NYU Dorm on the 102 minutes site and cried. So, no, 7 years is not a safe enough distance. I wonder if 14 or 21 years will be.
HawaiiLwyr on September 11, 2008 at 1:43 PM
If you get to thinking or feeling Like A Democrat, watch some of the unedited ‘raw footage’ of people jumping out of the Twin Towers windows because ( like most of us ) they fear being burnt alive more than hitting the pavement far below them
Watch that 8-months-pregnant women hitting the sidewalk, and think of the jihadis and their Useful Idiots here and abroad.
Get mad–and stay mad. In this case, Mad is Good
Janos Hunyadi on September 11, 2008 at 1:43 PM
Rush just played the audio on this: The Day We Lose Our Will to Fight is the Day We Lose Our Freedom, a message to Mr. Obama from Iraq vet Joe Cook. Make sure you watch the whole thing.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TG4fe9GlWS8
Mr_Magoo on September 11, 2008 at 1:44 PM
this isn’t the time for sarcasm.
pullingmyhairout on September 11, 2008 at 1:44 PM
I am also making it a point to be business as usual.
eaglescout1998 on September 11, 2008 at 1:45 PM
Rest in Peace
ronsfi on September 11, 2008 at 1:45 PM
And Keith Olbermann last night chastised republicans for showing footage at the convention – saying that it was “too hurtful” and that people probably couldn’t handle watching it again.
What a slimeball.
We all need to remember it, every detail.
pullingmyhairout on September 11, 2008 at 1:46 PM
3000 people was my entire high school, x2.
Geronimo on September 11, 2008 at 1:46 PM
My husband, Rick Rescorla, was one of the 3,000 Americans murdered by terrorists on 9/11/01. Rick was Vice President of Security for Morgan-Stanley/Dean-Witter, the largest tenant in the World Trade Center. His heroic actions on the day of the attack, along with his extraordinary foresight and preparation, saved the lives of 2,700 people. His story has been told on television and radio – in newspapers and magazines – and in the book Heart Of A Soldier, by Pulitzer Prize winner James B. Stewart. Rick is also on the cover of another book, We Were Soldiers Once… And Young, written by General Hal Moore and Joseph Galloway. You see, 9-11 was not the first time Rick had distinguished himself. 9-11 was just the last heroic chapter of his heroic life.
I am so very proud to have had him in my life. I want so to have his legacy live on. Rick’s friends and I decided to establish The Richard C. Rescorla Memorial Foundation in Rick’s memory, to keep present the magnitude of Rick’s life and to promote the virtues Rick lived by – duty, honor, and courage.
To that end we commissioned a bronze statue of Rick, based on that iconic photo of him at the Ia Drang. This statue will be placed on permanent display at the new National Infantry Museum to be built at Ft. Benning, Georgia. This statue was unveiled April 1, 2006 at a wonderful ceremony at the old museum and is now in storage there while the new museum is being built.
Many people contributed their time, effort, and money to this project. To each of you, I extend my deep gratitude and enduring appreciation.
Susan Rescorla
Rick Rescrola was a survivor of the Ia Drang valley campaign who went on to work security for Morgan Stanley.
Thank you God for seeing Rescorla through the Ia Drang and letting us borrow him to engage in one final act of heroism.
America is saddened by his loss and the others who died that day, but I know that even heaven is improved by their being at your side on your throne.
Heartfelt sorrow to the survivors of the lost,
Never Again,
sven
sven10077 on September 11, 2008 at 1:47 PM
Our tradition is to mark the occasion by recounting the terrorist attacks that have been foiled since, the latest edition spanning the past two years.
ironman on September 11, 2008 at 1:48 PM
No. As long as I draw breath on this planet will not be long enough to forget.
Dr.Cwac.Cwac on September 11, 2008 at 1:53 PM
Thank you Ed.
Thank you very much.
SilverStar830 on September 11, 2008 at 1:53 PM
Ed, where are you going and Sedatives MAN! I hate flying more then anyone I know. Anxiety to the point of throwing up.
9/11 will always be in our hearts.
upinak on September 11, 2008 at 1:55 PM
That today’s general public neglect the memory only 7 years old proves to enemy terrorists how easily crimes against America are conducted with the DNC Liberals lubricating escape.
Poll results: people reject any likelihood that the 9/11 tragedy could happen again.
SECURE BORDERS!
Get this year’s McCain 9/11 response.
Where is McCain speaking today?
Only Palin today?
maverick muse on September 11, 2008 at 1:57 PM
This morning as I was getting ready for work I was listening to news and various memorials…so overwhelming…I just wanted to weep. But then, more than that, I just want to go to work because I get to. I want to do everything today more and better than usual as a big FU to the bad guys. I’m a Christian American woman in the workforce with all kinds of opinions…let freedom ring.
ocbrat on September 11, 2008 at 1:58 PM
If you pass a soldier today, offer to buy them lunch or a cup of coffee, shake their hand, pat them on the back and say thank you for keeping us safe.
They have been fighting the war that began on 9/11.
fogw on September 11, 2008 at 1:59 PM
I cried this morning. It’s still raw. I watch the documentaries and the raw footage and cry my little brain out.
Oh, my life continues but it will never be the same. My naivete died that morning. My will to fight for what I believe not matter the circumstance fanned to new flame that morning. I think it’s a sad, but fair trade-off.
My prayers continue with the families and friends of the people lost that day.
mjk on September 11, 2008 at 2:02 PM
My home town is even smaller than that. (oddly enough, there was a time when it was the most populous town in California, on account of all of the miners)
Count to 10 on September 11, 2008 at 2:03 PM
We have had two attacks on our Republic in the last sixty years or so, Pearl Harbor and September 11. I will never forget the last one as long as I live. Agree or not, President Bush has seen we have not be hit again from people who would kill each and everyone of us if they thought they could. God Bless my country.
L
letget on September 11, 2008 at 2:04 PM
Ace wrote a fine synopsis of the American 9/11 experience with unity and division reposted today.
The hoary fact remains, Liberals Are Warfare, the tools of revolution, as Jefferson argued with Adams.
Liberals, socialists, internationally behave as described in:
Liberals Change By Force. Liberal Force not only deprives us of rights, it inflicts pain, suffering, and TERRORISM.
The bottom line: Liberals feign pacifism.
Pacifism (that Liberals are without) would provide cover for their own iniquities, as Liberals deny their own identity. Liberals were impotent to protect America from 9/11 and deny any responsibility for their own faults that led to the tragedy. Who hides his birth certificate and college transcripts? Who’s senatorial record leaves him the MOST liberal of all? And who has yet to acknowledge to himself and all others who he is, let alone who sent him, or what “Change” means? Obama, and his Liberal Morlock masters who MOST CERTAINLY ARE NOT PACIFIST.
maverick muse on September 11, 2008 at 2:06 PM
Yeah. Its the jumpers that gets me every time.
That, and imagining the passengers in the planes.
Count to 10 on September 11, 2008 at 2:08 PM
The point to never accept from a Liberal is LABEL.
What the Liberal says evil of his opponent actually applies to himself.
Liberals call conservative the blundering bullies with an appetite for destruction. When in fact, Liberals are describing their own nature and habits.
maverick muse on September 11, 2008 at 2:09 PM
This afternoon my enlisted son will be discharged from the ARNG and sworn in again, active duty green to gold ROTC.
He was 12 years old when ash from the WTC fires fell in our yard.
A date to remember, indeed. I hope the cadre takes a few photos for me.
bloviator on September 11, 2008 at 2:13 PM
same here dr cwac
blatantblue on September 11, 2008 at 2:24 PM
My tribute to Donna Marie Giordano is here.
Nethicus on September 11, 2008 at 2:28 PM
I was 17 and in my last year of high school. Until then, I knew very little about the world, about politics, like most 17 year olds. I went to a very liberal high school (the high school version of Berkelely really), which I managed to resist being indoctrinated to. That day woke me up to the real world. My world had changed, not so much in terms of my daily life, but it was like having a bandana lifted off my eyes. The rose colored glasses were gone, broken forever. From that day on, I learned the difference between conservative and liberal. I know which side I’m on and it isn’t liberal.
wherestherum on September 11, 2008 at 2:37 PM
Remember my cuz Debbie Kobus. A great girl who always had a smile on her face.
Wine_N_Dine on September 11, 2008 at 2:41 PM
I thought that seven years was long enough to blunt the force of it all, but it isn’t. I feel sure that I will remember and shed tears every year for the rest of my life.
Ellen on September 11, 2008 at 2:42 PM
Ysidro should be home taking care of his family and enjoying life, and murderous, lunatic bastards stole that from him, and from everyone Ysidro left behind. Multiply that by 3,000, and consider that for the rest of the day.
And EVERY day.
Tony737 on September 11, 2008 at 2:47 PM
Don’t you think you owe an apology to Ed and Allah for accusing them of forgetting 9/11 all morning?
amkun on September 11, 2008 at 2:48 PM
In memory of a classmate
Kathleen Moran
1959-2001
J.J. Sefton on September 11, 2008 at 2:52 PM
Many here have said they watched the television this morning and seeing the footage made them cry again. I cried too, the tears came easily. Someone said 7 years apparently isn’t long enough. Eternity won’t be long enough.
jewells45 on September 11, 2008 at 2:56 PM
What a lovely post — Rest well Ysidro
Richard Romano on September 11, 2008 at 3:31 PM
In memory of them all. God Bless America.
http://www.qubetv.tv/photos/detail/63730
christene on September 11, 2008 at 3:31 PM
Naturally, Google can’t be bothered to commemorate this day.
Paul_in_NJ on September 11, 2008 at 3:55 PM
I’d just like to say God bless all those murdered, everyone on this website, and my generational compatriots who have enlisted in the military. I’d also like to say God bless my dad, not because he died though. He is an air force veteran who then flew for American airlines out of Nyc. He soon lost his job after 911 and it has been painful watching him struggle with losing his life long passion. This does not usurp those who died, but I’ve hated seeing him struggle even though he has come out on top.
I love all my fellow Hotair readers. I love NYC, America, and my freedom. We should never let this memory stale; as it must remain fresh.
Never ever EVER forget. God bless the military.
blatantblue on September 11, 2008 at 4:00 PM
I am posting this from BWI airport after spending this morning attending the dedication of the Pentagon memorial. If yoy did not watch the ceremony, try to find the video. It was wonderful. pres. Bush and Sec. Rumsfeld gave moving speeches. We visited the memorial afterward and prayed for all we have lost. My dear friend Jim Laychak chaired the memorial project and was just an ordinary american until that day when his brother David was taken from him. Since then Jim has raised 22 million dollars and led the effort to build this stunningly beautiful and moving memorial.
Pres. Bush reminded us today that we have gone almost 2500 days without another attack on US soil. Pray for all those who have kept us safe, especially for our President.
God Bless America.
rockmom on September 11, 2008 at 4:41 PM
I read every link and post. . .
Thank you and God Bless You All.
This thread alone should be mandatory in all schools.
Texyank on September 12, 2008 at 12:47 AM
Please remember my goddaughter, Melissa Rose Barnes, who died at the Pentagon. She was in the Navy. My prayers go out to everyone.
Glynn on September 12, 2008 at 1:33 AM