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Pictures
Remember:

This website was barely three weeks old when the attacks happened, and at the time, I wrote about what it was like to be in New York City that day, and the day after.

And over the weeks that followed, friends and online acquaintances sent me pictures to post online, each doing their part to preserve another memory of what happened that day. You can find these pictures here.

The Photo of the Day, via Don Surber:

Photo credit: Robert Philabaum

Some kind, compassionate, tolerant, pacifist New York liberal(s)* have recently taken to posting George W. Bush shooting targets—complete with simulated bullet holes penetrating various parts of the body—around town. This picture was taken on the west side of Second Avenue, between 72nd and 73rd Streets.

Despite the cartoonish look, it is a bit eerie that these posters, which implicitly advocate the assassination of a sitting U.S. president, could remain unmolested in the nation’s largest city for days on end. (No, I won’t be taking it down, since it stands as a graphic monument to the mentality of today’s left.)

PowerLine and Michelle Malkin have recently noticed similar examples. One has to wonder whether we’re seeing a modern fascist movement being born before our very eyes.

* Yes, I am making some assumptions here. Since I don’t actually know who’s been posting these, perhaps it is a bit unfair to be blaming liberals. Still, given the prevailing political views of New York City residents, combined with my extensive first-hand experience witnessing liberals advocating violence, I feel fairly comfortable making this assertion.

New York City is in mourning, as people display symbols of their emotions around town. More >>
Scenes from a walk around lower Manhattan starting at the Union Square Vigil and heading south to Canal Street. Impromptu memorials turn lower Manhattan into a shrine for the victims of the World Trade Center attacks. More >>
Three firefighters raise the American flag among the wreckage of the World Trade Center. More >>
SoHo resident Jon Davis captures the aftermath of the World Trade Center as he walks to Tribeca, just north of the towers. More >>
Dust cloud of Tower 2 collapse approaches as Corey Menscher photographs from the north, along the Hudson River. More >>
Tribeca resident David Vogler captures the final minutes of the World Trade Center towers along with signs of the grief that gripped Manhattan afterwards. More >>