The Kids From the 9/11 Class Bush Was Reading To

cawacko

Well-known member
Thought this was kind of interesting. I'm sure most of us can remember 9/11 like it was yesterday and now these little kids are 16 and 17 years old. They'll have a pretty amazing story to tell for the rest of their lives.


The Students with Bush on 9/11: The Interrupted Reading


There has rarely been a starker juxtaposition of evil and innocence than the moment President George W. Bush received the news about 9/11 while reading The Pet Goat with second-graders in Sarasota, Fla.

Seven-year-olds can't understand what Islamic terrorism is all about. But they know when an adult's face is telling them something is wrong - and none of the students sitting in Sandra Kay Daniels' class at Emma E. Booker Elementary School that morning can forget the devastating change in Bush's expression when White House chief of staff Andrew Card whispered the terrible news of the al-Qaeda attack. Lazaro Dubrocq's heart started racing because he assumed they were all in trouble - with no less than the Commander in Chief - but he wasn't sure why. "In a heartbeat, he leaned back and he looked flabbergasted, shocked, horrified," recalls Dubrocq, now 17. "I was baffled. I mean, did we read something wrong? Was he mad or disappointed in us?"

Similar fears started running through Mariah Williams' head. "I don't remember the story we were reading - was it about pigs?" says Williams, 16. "But I'll always remember watching his face turn red. He got really serious all of a sudden. But I was clueless. I was just 7. I'm just glad he didn't get up and leave, because then I would have been more scared and confused." Chantal Guerrero, 16, agrees. Even today, she's grateful that Bush regained his composure and stayed with the students until The Pet Goat was finished. "I think the President was trying to keep us from finding out," says Guerrero, "so we all wouldn't freak out."

Even if that didn't happen, it's apparent that the sharing of that terrifying Tuesday with Bush has affected those students in the decade since - and, they say, it made the news of al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden's killing by U.S. commandos on May 1 all the more meaningful. Dubrocq, now a junior at Riverview High School in Sarasota, doubts that he would be a student in the rigorous international-baccalaureate program if he hadn't been with the President as one of history's most infamous global events unfolded. "Because of that," he says, "I came to realize as I grew up that the world is a much bigger place and that there are differing opinions about us out there, not all of them good."

Guerrero, today a junior at the Sarasota Military Academy, believes the experience "has since given us all a better understanding of the situation, sort of made us take it all more seriously. At that age, I couldn't understand how anyone could take innocent lives that way. And I still of course can't. But today I can problem-solve it all a lot better, maybe better than other kids because I was kind of part of it." Williams, also a junior at the military academy, says those moments spent with Bush conferred on the kids a sort of historical authority as they grew up. "Today, when we talk about 9/11 in class and you hear kids make mistakes about what happened with the President that day, I can tell them they're wrong," she says, "because I was there."

One thing the students would like to tell Bush's critics - like liberal filmmaker Michael Moore, whose 2004 documentary Fahrenheit 911 disparaged Bush for lingering almost 10 minutes with the students after getting word that two planes had crashed into the World Trade Center - is that they think the President did the right thing. "I think he was trying to keep everybody calm, starting with us," says Guerrero. Dubrocq agrees: "I think he was trying to protect us." Booker Principal Gwendolyn Tose-Rigell, who died in 2007, later insisted, "I don't think anyone could have handled it better. What would it have served if [Bush] had jumped out of his chair and ran out of the room?"

When the children's story was done, Bush left for the school's library, where he discussed the New York, Washington, D.C., and Pennsylvania nightmare with aides, reporters and another group of students waiting for him. Back in the classroom, Daniels brought in a television and turned on the first bewildering images of the Twin Towers in flames and smoke. At that point the kids started connecting the dots. "It was pretty scary," says Williams, "and I remember thinking, So that's why the President looked so mad."

Dubrocq got mad himself. "But I had to wait a few years before I could digest what had really happened and why they attacked us," he says. "I of course grew up to have nothing but contempt for Osama bin Laden." Yet he adds the episode "motivated me to get a better handle on the world and to want to help improve the world." It also made Dubrocq, who wants to study international business, more aware of his own multinational roots - he's French and Cuban on his father's side and Spanish and Mexican on his mother's. Not surprisingly, he also wants to learn other languages, like Chinese and, in an echo of his 9/11 memories, perhaps even Arabic.

Williams says she also hated Bin Laden more as she grew up and gained a better appreciation of how fanatics had changed her world on 9/11. "All that just because he wanted to control everybody in the world, control how we think and what we do," she says. Williams doesn't plan to pursue a military career - she wants to be a veterinarian - but the military academy student was impressed by the Navy SEAL raid in Pakistan that killed Bin Laden: "I was shocked - I thought after 10 years they'd never find him. But what the SEALs did, it, like, gives me even more respect for that kind of training."

Guerrero, in fact, may as well be part of that training. She also plans a civilian life - she hopes to study art and musical theater - but she's a Junior ROTC member and part of her school's state champion Raiders team, which competes against other academies in contests like rope bridge races, map navigation and marksmanship. In other words, the same sort of skills the SEAL commandos have to master. She admits to feeling an added rush when she woke up to Monday morning's news: the SEALs operation, she says, "was very, very cool."

More than cool, Guerrero says, it was also "so reassuring, after a whole decade of being scared about these things." Most of all, it "brought back a flood of memories" of their tragic morning with a President - memories that prove kids can carry a lot heavier stuff in those plastic backpacks than adults often realize.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/20110504/us_time/08599206932700
 
Thought this was kind of interesting. I'm sure most of us can remember 9/11 like it was yesterday and now these little kids are 16 and 17 years old. They'll have a pretty amazing story to tell for the rest of their lives.


The Students with Bush on 9/11: The Interrupted Reading


There has rarely been a starker juxtaposition of evil and innocence than the moment President George W. Bush received the news about 9/11 while reading The Pet Goat with second-graders in Sarasota, Fla.

Interesting, but starts off with a lie........Bush was well aware of aircraft hitting the WTC before he arrivied at the school....granted, the details were not clear, and exactly what was going on wasn't clear, but to claim he first heard about it as he sat with the children is a lie....

Seven-year-olds can't understand what Islamic terrorism is all about. But they know when an adult's face is telling them something is wrong - and none of the students sitting in Sandra Kay Daniels' class at Emma E. Booker Elementary School that morning can forget the devastating change in Bush's expression when White House chief of staff Andrew Card whispered the terrible news of the al-Qaeda attack. Lazaro Dubrocq's heart started racing because he assumed they were all in trouble - with no less than the Commander in Chief - but he wasn't sure why. "In a heartbeat, he leaned back and he looked flabbergasted, shocked, horrified," recalls Dubrocq, now 17. "I was baffled. I mean, did we read something wrong? Was he mad or disappointed in us?"
If Bush would have stood up and excused himself for whatever reason, the kids would have been even more "baffled"...
Similar fears started running through Mariah Williams' head. "I don't remember the story we were reading - was it about pigs?" says Williams, 16. "But I'll always remember watching his face turn red. He got really serious all of a sudden. But I was clueless. I was just 7. I'm just glad he didn't get up and leave, because then I would have been more scared and confused." Chantal Guerrero, 16, agrees. Even today, she's grateful that Bush regained his composure and stayed with the students until The Pet Goat was finished. "I think the President was trying to keep us from finding out," says Guerrero, "so we all wouldn't freak out."

Even if that didn't happen, it's apparent that the sharing of that terrifying Tuesday with Bush has affected those students in the decade since - and, they say, it made the news of al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden's killing by U.S. commandos on May 1 all the more meaningful. Dubrocq, now a junior at Riverview High School in Sarasota, doubts that he would be a student in the rigorous international-baccalaureate program if he hadn't been with the President as one of history's most infamous global events unfolded. "Because of that," he says, "I came to realize as I grew up that the world is a much bigger place and that there are differing opinions about us out there, not all of them good."

Guerrero, today a junior at the Sarasota Military Academy, believes the experience "has since given us all a better understanding of the situation, sort of made us take it all more seriously. At that age, I couldn't understand how anyone could take innocent lives that way. And I still of course can't. But today I can problem-solve it all a lot better, maybe better than other kids because I was kind of part of it." Williams, also a junior at the military academy, says those moments spent with Bush conferred on the kids a sort of historical authority as they grew up. "Today, when we talk about 9/11 in class and you hear kids make mistakes about what happened with the President that day, I can tell them they're wrong," she says, "because I was there."

One thing the students would like to tell Bush's critics - like liberal filmmaker Michael Moore, whose 2004 documentary Fahrenheit 911 disparaged Bush for lingering almost 10 minutes with the students after getting word that two planes had crashed into the World Trade Center - is that they think the President did the right thing. "I think he was trying to keep everybody calm, starting with us," says Guerrero. Dubrocq agrees: "I think he was trying to protect us." Booker Principal Gwendolyn Tose-Rigell, who died in 2007, later insisted, "I don't think anyone could have handled it better. What would it have served if [Bush] had jumped out of his chair and ran out of the room?"

When the children's story was done, Bush left for the school's library, where he discussed the New York, Washington, D.C., and Pennsylvania nightmare with aides, reporters and another group of students waiting for him. Back in the classroom, Daniels brought in a television and turned on the first bewildering images of the Twin Towers in flames and smoke. At that point the kids started connecting the dots. "It was pretty scary," says Williams, "and I remember thinking, So that's why the President looked so mad."

Dubrocq got mad himself. "But I had to wait a few years before I could digest what had really happened and why they attacked us," he says. "I of course grew up to have nothing but contempt for Osama bin Laden." Yet he adds the episode "motivated me to get a better handle on the world and to want to help improve the world." It also made Dubrocq, who wants to study international business, more aware of his own multinational roots - he's French and Cuban on his father's side and Spanish and Mexican on his mother's. Not surprisingly, he also wants to learn other languages, like Chinese and, in an echo of his 9/11 memories, perhaps even Arabic.

Williams says she also hated Bin Laden more as she grew up and gained a better appreciation of how fanatics had changed her world on 9/11. "All that just because he wanted to control everybody in the world, control how we think and what we do," she says. Williams doesn't plan to pursue a military career - she wants to be a veterinarian - but the military academy student was impressed by the Navy SEAL raid in Pakistan that killed Bin Laden: "I was shocked - I thought after 10 years they'd never find him. But what the SEALs did, it, like, gives me even more respect for that kind of training."

Guerrero, in fact, may as well be part of that training. She also plans a civilian life - she hopes to study art and musical theater - but she's a Junior ROTC member and part of her school's state champion Raiders team, which competes against other academies in contests like rope bridge races, map navigation and marksmanship. In other words, the same sort of skills the SEAL commandos have to master. She admits to feeling an added rush when she woke up to Monday morning's news: the SEALs operation, she says, "was very, very cool."

More than cool, Guerrero says, it was also "so reassuring, after a whole decade of being scared about these things." Most of all, it "brought back a flood of memories" of their tragic morning with a President - memories that prove kids can carry a lot heavier stuff in those plastic backpacks than adults often realize.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/20110504/us_time/08599206932700
.
 
Really interesting read; thanks for posting that.

He still froze, though.

:rolleyes:

One thing the students would like to tell Bush's critics - like liberal filmmaker Michael Moore, whose 2004 documentary Fahrenheit 911 disparaged Bush for lingering almost 10 minutes with the students after getting word that two planes had crashed into the World Trade Center - is that they think the President did the right thing. "I think he was trying to keep everybody calm, starting with us," says Guerrero. Dubrocq agrees: "I think he was trying to protect us." Booker Principal Gwendolyn Tose-Rigell, who died in 2007, later insisted, "I don't think anyone could have handled it better. What would it have served if [Bush] had jumped out of his chair and ran out of the room?"

if bush had a (D) after his name...onceler would be praising his ability to keep people calm...i think those kids and the principle, being there first hand, have a bit more knowledge than the armchair projector warrior....
 
:rolleyes:



if bush had a (D) after his name...onceler would be praising his ability to keep people calm...i think those kids and the principle, being there first hand, have a bit more knowledge than the armchair projector warrior....

How can anyone in their right mind make an argument that it was more important to keep a class of kids calm while 10's of millions were freaking out?

Ever hear of "politely excusing yourself?" The kids & principle can think whatever they want. Bush froze, and blew a chance at real leadership.
 
How can anyone in their right mind make an argument that it was more important to keep a class of kids calm while 10's of millions were freaking out?

Ever hear of "politely excusing yourself?" The kids & principle can think whatever they want. Bush froze, and blew a chance at real leadership.

wow....just wow....

so bush was ONLY trying to keep the kids calm? he had no idea his actions would be watched around the world or at a minimum the country?

good fucking lord, you are truly delusional...he KNEW everyone would see his actions, he even wrote about it. but wussy armchair warriors like you know better....

he should have excused himself earlier....but "froze" and blowing leadership? only far left wackos like you talk like that....these kids and the principle appreciate his actions. yes, he should have left sooner...but he thought it best to show a calm face to the nation. and his actions afterwards were a great comfort to the nation....until iraq. you often tell others they rewrite history, but you don't realize how often you do the same thing.
 
¯¯¯̿̿¯̿̿’̿̿̿̿̿̿̿’̿̿’̿̿;809919 said:
bush-pet-goat-book-upside-down-photo.jpg

no surprise epic troll trolls out a fake photo
 
wow....just wow....

so bush was ONLY trying to keep the kids calm? he had no idea his actions would be watched around the world or at a minimum the country?

good fucking lord, you are truly delusional...he KNEW everyone would see his actions, he even wrote about it. but wussy armchair warriors like you know better....

he should have excused himself earlier....but "froze" and blowing leadership? only far left wackos like you talk like that....these kids and the principle appreciate his actions. yes, he should have left sooner...but he thought it best to show a calm face to the nation. and his actions afterwards were a great comfort to the nation....until iraq. you often tell others they rewrite history, but you don't realize how often you do the same thing.

Crazy hyperbole.

Here's the proper scenario. Andy Card whispers "America is under attack" to Bush. Bush waits for pause in book; smiles calmly, and says "Kids, I've really enjoyed this, but there is a little bit of business I have to attend to right now; carry on with this great story, and I'll catch up with you later." And leaves. No one panics, it's all good.
 
Crazy hyperbole.

Here's the proper scenario. Andy Card whispers "America is under attack" to Bush. Bush waits for pause in book; smiles calmly, and says "Kids, I've really enjoyed this, but there is a little bit of business I have to attend to right now; carry on with this great story, and I'll catch up with you later." And leaves. No one panics, it's all good.

maybe he should have slept on it and decided what to do 16 hours later

good lord, if this was obama your response would be:

how unlike the rash cowboy bush who would have immediately jumped and started shooting his guns!!!!! obama is smart, he takes his time, he is calm, he thinks things through and then makes the right decision and acts appropriately.

you're bitching about MINUTES when the situation was already being handled by the military. he believed putting on a calm face, making it seem as if the leader of the free world could spend a few more minutes with the kids (it was cut short) would impart upon the world a president that is confident and can handle the situation. obama ordered the strike on osama and then went out and had laughs and toured places destroyed by the hurricane. why aren't you bitching about that?

should he have left earlier....yes....but tell me....what did his extra minutes cost the US? other than having to listen to you and your fellow lefties constant whining about it....i don't see any loss to the US.
 
I would personally like to challange any of the libtard pussies that cracked on Bush back then.
He did a lot wrong but he was a rock that rallied us after 9/11.

Wanna see someone freeze, challange one of these lace panties wearing toe fu eaters.
 
How can anyone in their right mind make an argument that it was more important to keep a class of kids calm while 10's of millions were freaking out?

Ever hear of "politely excusing yourself?" The kids & principle can think whatever they want. Bush froze, and blew a chance at real leadership.

I have always been curious about people with the above view. WHAT is it you would have liked to have seen him do in that moment?

Politely excuse himself and then???? WHAT? Run to the media and proclaim 'we still are not sure what is going on, but I am here to lead you!!!'????
 
that's the problem with pussies who are best at complaining, solutions are not in thier vocabulary.
Hopefully we get more from the current repubs in congress.
 
Thanks. My point in posting was not to try to reignite the debate on did Bush respond appropriately after getting word of the towers being hit. I was just shocked at the age of the kids now and then hearing them speak that they realized they were present for one of the most historic moments in our country.
 
Thanks. My point in posting was not to try to reignite the debate on did Bush respond appropriately after getting word of the towers being hit. I was just shocked at the age of the kids now and then hearing them speak that they realized they were present for one of the most historic moments in our country.

I am not shocked that you were shocked at their age. The addition of 10 years to their age at the time is probably considered complex math for a USC grad.
 
Man go easy on the little trojan.
He needs to be on suiside watch, now that Utah will be next in line to tap that ass every year.
 
I am not shocked that you were shocked at their age. The addition of 10 years to their age at the time is probably considered complex math for a USC grad.

We at USC think on such a much grander scale that 10 years is but a blip on our radar screen. We don't get caught up in the daily petty grievances such as you commoners do on this board.
 
We at USC think on such a much grander scale that 10 years is but a blip on our radar screen. We don't get caught up in the daily petty grievances such as you commoners do on this board.

that makes me rest easier. Since it is just a blip, it won't effect you too much to watch the Trojans suck for the next decade.
 
offseason composure at it's best, cawacko about killed himself when lowley Washington kick the little trojans ass for a second time in a row.
 
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