[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 130 (Thursday, September 11, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5523-S5524]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING SEPTEMBER 11, 2001
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I am not sure everyone remembers where they
were 13 years ago today, but most of us remember. The vast majority of
us remember. Just a few feet from here in S-219 Senator Daschle had his
usual Tuesday morning leadership meeting. I was assistant leader at the
time. I was first to come into the room shortly before 9. About 9--
maybe a minute or two after--Senator John Breaux from Louisiana walked
in and said: Flip on the TV. Something is going on in New York. And we
flipped on the television. Something had happened in one of the towers,
like an airplane had hit one of those towers.
We said: What happened there? And we kind of looked at each other.
[[Page S5524]]
People started coming into the room. The TV was turned off and the
meeting was started. Just a short time thereafter--5, 6 minutes at the
most, as I recall--someone came into the room and grabbed Senator
Daschle, who was at the head of the table, took him out and came back
in just a very brief minute and said: The building is being evacuated.
We all have to leave. There is an airplane headed for the Capitol.
As we left that room, we could look out and see already the smoke
billowing from the Pentagon. The airplane had struck the Pentagon.
Now that day was a day I will never forget--never forget. I was taken
with Senator Daschle, Don Nickles, who was the Republican assistant
leader, and Trent Lott, and we were flown to a classified location. We
spent the day there with a number of people, including the Vice
President of the United States.
Late in the evening we came back to the Capitol after having been
cleared to come back. The Senators gathered on the Senate steps in the
Capitol, Democrats and Republicans. We were gathering just to show we
were supportive of this great country. Barbara Mikulski, small in
stature but powerful in soul, in every way, said so everyone could hear
it: Let's sing ``God Bless America.''
I don't sing very often, but I sang that night. We all did. ``God
bless America.'' We did it because we knew it was a day we would never
forget. It was a day we wanted to show we were together as Members of
Congress.
So as I have said already two or three times this morning, I don't
want to ever forget that moment, that day, and I want to make sure we
honor the heroes who paid the ultimate price for our freedom. The
greatest memorial we have to offer the brave men and women who perished
on 9/11, thousands of them, is to simply never forget.
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