OPINION
How 9/11 changed my generation
By Nic Rowan
September 10, 2018 | 8:16pm | Updated
Chad Rachman/New York Post
My earliest memory is watching the South Tower come down on our basement TV — at age 3.
We lived just outside Washington, DC, 15 minutes from the Pentagon building. When the plane hit there, my mom rushed down the street to pick up my older sister from her elementary school. That left me glued to the television, watching the dust clouds billow out as the South Tower crashed.
As soon as mom returned with my sister in tow, she covered my eyes and shooed me upstairs. But those images of destruction I saw that morning are forever seared into my mind.
As I got older, I spent every Sept. 11 focused on studying what had happened. My younger brother and I would pray for the people who died that day — and watch all the documentaries we could find.
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READ MORE: https://nypost.com/2018/09/10/how-9-11-changed-my-generation/
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We are the children of terror, programmed to think in terms of fear and retribution. Perhaps that’s the most lasting damage done by 9/11.
Nic Rowan, a senior at Hillsdale College, interned at the Post Editorial Page this summer.
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