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More 9/11 tapes released
They released the tapes of calls from the towers to 911. So sad. :(
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I wish they'd stop playing them on the news. I don't mind them talking about it, but it's mighty depressing to actually listen to now-dead people asking questions they knew the answers to.
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I defy anybody to remain stoic while listening to those heart-wrenching tapes.
I first heard them on the news in my nail salon yesterday and I had trouble keeping a brave face. This morning when they played them on the radio, I cried. When you listen to those poor trapped people, people just like you & I, at work...crying and pleading to be saved...toruted by the intense heat and crying while asking if they would die..I can't even fathom the horror... When the normally trained to remain cool & calm Dispatchers begin to lose control...when the one Dispatcher loses her caller and shouts her name, realizing they have died..and says, "They've all gone to sleep"..I'm about to cry now. (I decided to edit out my rather furious bomb-Osama & friends-Elmer-Fudd-style-with limitless-TNT-inside-their-caves rant. I'll save it for my boyfriend.) :( |
I still won't listen, or see any of the movies. I can't handle it.
I won't even watch comercials for the movies - it has that much of an affect on me. |
Last weekend's This American Life was about death and one of the segments was a guy who compiled transcripts from the cockpit voice recorders from some number of plane crashes.
It was interesting but one segment that he read was the technical back and forth of them trying to save the plane and then right before the recording ends the co-pilot says "I love you Ann." Even read in transcript form it was very moving and Lani was crying in the car (as she did again at another one where a Turkish pilot started singing a lullaby once it became clear his fate was unavoidable). But apparently this is the only transcript in the book that included such personal statements by the cockpit crew so Ira Glass asked about that. It turns out that the NTSB redacts the transcripts to remove personal and emotional statements unless it bears directly on the technical issues at hand. Those are released to the families if they want to hear it but otherwise it is considered private. I have no interest in hearing these 9/11 calls. It would just be a morbid voyeurism that I don't think I could stomach. They should be released to families if they want them. Information useful for future training should be gleaned, but I can't think of any actual news value in playing these tapes for general consumption. |
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And I'm really ticked at last night's news for slipping it into the newscast without warning. They start off talking about some new tapes have been released that shed light on the rescue efforts and I expect to see the redacted transcriptions displayed or played of rescue efforts. As in, gee, let's learn from this and improve our procedure stuff. Not unreasonable. But no. The first tape segment is played aloud and is from some frantic trapped person. This is not what I want to listen to while I wait for the weather report before heading to bed. Playing yet another "person about to die" tape is the worst sort of sensationalism.
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These types of "news items" serve absolutely no necessary purpose and I really find the playing of them for the purpose of ratings to be more than offensive. |
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I did hear somewhere that there were segments removed at the request of families. |
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Ditto on this. I don't see how the general public has any right to hear these tapes. |
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