I hope the port authority officials who told the the 9/11 employees to go back up have nightmares

Mystic

Superstar
Joined
Nov 10, 2015
Messages
11,450
Reputation
-523
Daps
18,545
There was rising anger across downtown Manhattan yesterday as more and more stories from survivors of Tuesday's assault converged on the horrific truth: that staff had been instructed to remain - or even return - inside No 2 World Trade Centre after the first tower had been hit and was in flames.

Most were turned back by officials of the Port Authority, which had commissioned and supervised the building of the centre in the Sixties.



Workers had looked across the divide after 8.48am at an inferno in their twin tower, and decided to make a run for it. They were told, however, to remain in their seats.

Others, who had made it down stairwells towards - or even out into - the lobby giving out on to the street and freedom, were told to run back upstairs, so that during the crucial 15 minutes of what should have been escape, there was confusion and a two-way rush along the panic-stricken arteries of life.

Meanwhile, the frantic rescue operation amid an apparently endless ocean of rubble continued yesterday, with 4,717 people now listed as missing. But for all their desperate efforts, and the long line of construction and former military volunteers waiting for days to join them, workers faced the grim reality that for many further people to be found alive under the original collapse would be a miracle.

In the flood of statistics that has followed the attacks on Tuesday morning, one stands out: Zero, the number of living survivors of the initial collapse rescued since Wednesday morning.

The last person to be found alive underneath the federal building in Oklahoma City was brought into the light 24 hours after the bomb that wrecked it.

The same is so far true of the World Trade Centre, with rescue workers pinning their final hopes on the system of train tunnels leading underneath the financial district, yesterday being pumped clear of flooding and groundwater.

The evidence that people were instructed by employers and security guards to remain in the south tower, and thus were condemned to death, is spreading this weekend.

Ernie Falk, who delivered packages to the offices of Morgan Stanley, the towers' biggest tenant, said that he was walking into the bank's reception area when he heard a 'horrendous boom' of the first plane's impact, and made a successful run for it.

But he told The Observer that as he ran downstairs, 'I heard people being told, "The building is secure. The safest place is inside; stay calm and do not leave". That's what they were saying. They were telling people to go back up to their offices and their desks, like the building was not in danger.'

A broker with the Morgan Stanley bank said that she had made it out on to the staircase and galloped more than 20 floors when she heard a voice on a megaphone telling her and others in flight to return and go back upstairs to the sixtieth floor.

The woman, who wished to be known as Eileen, said that she was consulting her lawyers with a view to taking the Port Authority to task, and would be in touch with Governor George Pataki - the nominal chief of the authority - to report what she saw.

The bank's employees duly went back upstairs, fighting a tidal flow of people from higher storeys running down, and sat at their desks.

When the second plane hit their own tower minutes later, at 9.03 am, 27 floors further up, all those remaining rose. Some went to windows and perished one way or another; others, like Eileen, ran back to the stairwell to try another dash, and some of those survived.

Another Morgan Stanley employee, Arturo Domingo, told the New York Times that he too had started down from the sixtieth floor, and was told to go back up by a man with a bullhorn. 'I really felt like punching that guy,' he said of the official, after returning to his office and managing a second escape following the second attack.

The announcements urging people to go back up were being made on the fortieth and forty-fourth floors, apparently by Port Authority officials.

People who worked in offices above the ninety-third storey would have been able to reach their workplaces only for the second plane to plough into the tower beneath them - leaving them with little or no chance of survival.

Any workers positioned on floors 87 to 93 would have been sent directly back into the path of the Boeing 767, and at the heart of the fireball.

One of those would have been Mary Thomas, had she obeyed instructions. Thomas worked in an architecture studio on the ninety-first storey, which was entirely taken out by the second plane. The scenes of confusion in the attempted evacuation of the second tower contrast markedly with those in the first, where the terrorists' plane hit higher.

There, the evacuation was orderly and fast, with people obviously managing to walk or run to safety from floors as high as the upper eighties.

Port Authority officials refused to comment on the reports about the south tower yesterday, and there was confusion about who was responsible for evacuation policy.

But the accounts were borne out by firefighters and rescue workers on Friday. They told The Observer unofficially that the majority of the bodies thus far extracted appeared to be towards the southern end of the tower complex - beneath the second tower to be hit, the first to fall.
Anger of survivors told to stay inside blazing towers

fukk them nikkas :scust: A plane crash into a building, I don't care if it isn't a terrorist attack, A PLANE CRASHED INTO A BUILDING, you can go home or do something else but keep working:whoa::damn::scusthov::birdman::sitdown:
 

Double Burger With Cheese

Veteran
Supporter
Joined
May 6, 2012
Messages
27,395
Reputation
17,115
Daps
160,935
Reppin
Atlanta
Obviously this is messed up. And I don’t think bad intent was there. It was just a horrible assessment of the situation and it had fatal consequences for a lot of people.

But the take away here is to always follow your instincts. I don’t give a fukk what your job crisis plan is. If some shyt going down and you feel like you need to leave, get the hell up outta there. Worse case scenario you wrong and you come back when the threat over lol.

And you can’t blame the people who didn’t listen. And not to say I would have survived. But if I truly thought my life was in danger, ain’t nobody stopping me from leaving. First of all, it’s not like they was physically restraining them. And second, you couldn’t even talk to me to try and convince me cause I’m out that bytch. RIP to those people and Shout out to Mary


“Any workers positioned on floors 87 to 93 would have been sent directly back into the path of the Boeing 767, and at the heart of the fireball.

One of those would have been Mary Thomas, had she obeyed instructions. Thomas worked in an architecture studio on the ninety-first storey, which was entirely taken out by the second plane. The scenes of confusion in the attempted evacuation of the second tower contrast markedly with those in the first, where the terrorists' plane hit higher.”
 

Kinguno

The Immortal
Joined
Jan 11, 2017
Messages
15,737
Reputation
1,403
Daps
33,814
Reppin
New York
It’s not they fault they believed in the buildings but unfortunately they weren’t made to handle the size of the planes that hit plus the amount of fuel, the amount of papers, the design of the building having everything in the center to have open space, and the forces of sky scrapers working against it like higher up the forces of air resistance sucking people from out of windows


I’ve been reading bits and pieces about this since 9/11 and there’s always new shyt it wasn’t until last year I learned that the force of the planes hitting the building shut and locked doors. People died with nothing to show at all and people from the planes didn’t all die instantly. Firefighters went into there blind because their communication set up was connected through the buildings.


The terrorists created terror and things like this add to it. 9/11 the Jordan plus Jackson and everyday something in your life relates to that day without you knowing because that’s what it is and to think consciously of it adds to it more. Somebody is going to want an example and the best example is your phone everything is recorded by the government and other governments with companies making trillions off that information. The military industrial complex and all them blue lives matter people use this as a reason to be how they are. The movies we watch using elements of that day to pull us in to touch on something we can’t talk about.
 

Egomaniacal1

Director of the Federal Bureau of Instigation
Supporter
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
7,371
Reputation
1,055
Daps
19,247
Reppin
Martin, TN
One of the documentaries I saw, a survivor mentioned this. The plane crashed through his office, he said he could see it coming toward him. But after the first plane hit, he had made it down to the lobby with his colleagues where they were told to go back upstairs, that everything was secure.

Which documentary was it?
 

skylove4

Veteran
Joined
Nov 20, 2013
Messages
19,400
Reputation
3,962
Daps
92,575
It’s not they fault they believed in the buildings but unfortunately they weren’t made to handle the size of the planes that hit plus the amount of fuel, the amount of papers, the design of the building having everything in the center to have open space, and the forces of sky scrapers working against it like higher up the forces of air resistance sucking people from out of windows


I’ve been reading bits and pieces about this since 9/11 and there’s always new shyt it wasn’t until last year I learned that the force of the planes hitting the building shut and locked doors. People died with nothing to show at all and people from the planes didn’t all die instantly. Firefighters went into there blind because their communication set up was connected through the buildings.


The terrorists created terror and things like this add to it. 9/11 the Jordan plus Jackson and everyday something in your life relates to that day without you knowing because that’s what it is and to think consciously of it adds to it more. Somebody is going to want an example and the best example is your phone everything is recorded by the government and other governments with companies making trillions off that information. The military industrial complex and all them blue lives matter people use this as a reason to be how they are. The movies we watch using elements of that day to pull us in to touch on something we can’t talk about.
:dwillhuh: How long did some of them survive and how?

I can’t even imagine the fear on those planes, I just found out it was a 2 year old on one of them shyts:to:
 

Mystic

Superstar
Joined
Nov 10, 2015
Messages
11,450
Reputation
-523
Daps
18,545
Which documentary was it?
Not sure the documentary(watched it but don't remember which one it was)

When American Airlines Flight 11 struck the North Tower, Praimnath started to evacuate from his 81st floor office in the South Tower, but he returned when the building's security guards said the South Tower was secure, and workers should return to their offices.[2] Soon after he reentered his office, United Airlines Flight 175 crashed into the building. The left wing sliced through his office and became lodged in a door 20 feet (6 m) from him.[3] Praimnath was bruised and exhausted, and covered in debris after the crash, which left him stuck and unable to escape on his own.[4]

While Praimnath called for help, Euro Brokers executive Brian Clark, from the 83rd floor, and a group of his coworkers were debating in the stairwell whether to descend through the impact zone using the stairwell, which they had been told was impassable, or to climb to the roof. Clark heard Praimnath's cries for help, and made his way to him by using his flashlight and following his voice. As Clark was on his way to find Praimnath, he looked back towards his coworkers and saw they had decided to climb up the stairs instead of going down. Because of the decision to ascend the stairs, all of Clark's coworkers were killed, except for one, Ron DiFrancesco, who reversed course.[4]

Once Clark had found Praimnath, the two men made their way to the stairwell, which Clark had already been told was blocked further down. However, Clark and Praimnath wanted to see for themselves if the stairs were really impassable.[4] They descended the stairs, and while there was debris in some spots, the two men were able to get through it and continue down the stairs and out of the building. They were two of only eighteen survivors from at or above the impact zone in the South Tower. After the two men had made it outside and walked two blocks away from the South Tower, they stopped and looked back at the building they had just exited, and Praimnath said to Clark, "You know, I think that building can come down." Clark was in the midst of replying, "Those are steel structures, there's no way—", when he was cut off by the South Tower starting to collapse.[5]

As the dust cloud from the collapsing South Tower approached them, they ran south and entered 42 Broadway as the wave caught up to them. Inside that lobby they exchanged business cards. Clark made his way home to New Jersey; Praimnath went to the hospital for his injuries. Later on that evening, after midnight, when Praimnath had finally gotten home from the hospital, he called Clark to find out what had happened to him. The two men, who had never met before 9/11, remain friends and have appeared on numerous shows and documentaries telling their story.[6]

They were FOUR minutes from being in the building when it collapsed :ohhh::merchant::damn:
 
Last edited:
Top