[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 131 (Friday, September 11, 2015)]
[House]
[Page H5947]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING 9/11
(Mr. HOYER asked and was given permission to address the House for 1
minute and to revise and extend his remarks.)
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, this morning, we had a moment of silence, but
we recognize today 14 years of memories. All of us remember where we
were when terrorists attacked our Nation 14 years ago, murdering 2,977
of our fellow Americans and shocking the conscience of our country and
of the world.
None of us will ever forget the tears, the sorrow, and the loss of
that day; but neither will we ever forget the extraordinary acts of
heroism, the first responders who rushed headlong into burning towers,
the passengers who stormed the cockpit, and the Air National Guard
pilot who was prepared to ram her fighter into a hijacked airliner to
stop the next attack.
These, Mr. Speaker, are the stories that our children and
grandchildren must hear, along with those of the brave men and women
who donned our Nation's uniform in the years since, when they ask us to
explain what happened on September 11, 2001.
Today, Mr. Speaker, as we mourn the victims of the September 11
attacks and pay tribute to the heroes of that day, we should honor them
by renewing the sense of unity we felt that morning and in the weeks
and months that followed.
America, Mr. Speaker, is strongest when we stand together in defense
of our common ideals--individual freedom, tolerance, equality,
justice--which the perpetrators of those acts found so objectionable
and which were the real objects of their attack.
As we gather, Mr. Speaker, to mark this anniversary, let us remember
that our greatest rebuttal to those who attacked us, as well as the
most fitting tribute to all those we lost, is to keep defending these
principles that bind us together as Americans and that will always be
the enduring source of our strength.
God bless those who we lost, and we commit to their memory and to
their cause.
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