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Summary
Time assumes a much different perspective when you are young than it does
as the years move along. For instance, in December of 1951, I was almost seven
years old; Pearl Harbor was 10 years in the past. However, an event of 10 years
prior to a seven-year-old seems much more distant than it actually is within
the context of history, or it will seem to that seven-year-old when he or she
is in their 40s.
I invoke Pearl Harbor for obvious reasons. Until 9/11/01 came along, the 12/7/41
attack on Pearl Harbor was viewed as the most egregious attack directly against
America in the nation's history. Yet, in 1951, 10 years after the fact, Pearl
Harbor was far more visible, far more on the country's mind than 9/11 often
appears to be now, a mere four years after its occurrence.
I am of the strong view that we would do well to remember 9/11 every single
day, at least in general terms. However, the day on the calendar has almost
arrived again to do so in a more specific way, particularly to remember our
thousands of fallen brothers and sisters.
In 2003, on the second anniversary of 9/11/01 and in remembrance of that ghastly
day, I published the following piece. It was nothing more than a collage of
material I had written previously, in close proximity to what Americans will
now always remember as the "first 9/11." I again posted it on the GRA website
last year, exactly as it was presented on 9/11/03. I am doing so again this
year. -- http://www.gillespieresearch.com/cgi-bin/s/article/id=652
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Douglas R. Gillespie, Sr.
Gillespie Research Associates
165 Sheridan Avenue
HO-HO-KUS, NJ 07423
201-447-5743
Doug Gillespie oversees his own financial-market and economic
consulting firm, Gillespie Research
Associates. For a complimentary sample of Dougs material, e-mail him at drgillespiesr@aol.com.
Copyright © 2004-2005 Gillespie Research
Associates. All rights reserved.
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