From a foreigner perspective, that one kinda makes sense. If something you love is destroyed, rebuild it, but stronger.
It wasn't something loved, it was just a pair of towers. What made it so important was the devastation and casualties. Rebuilding the towers would have meant building on top of thousands of graves, would have meant building over all the memorials erected for lost loved ones. People involved in the incident that survived are still feeling the effects today. Too many people would feel an attempt to rebuild the towers to be disrespectful both to those that died and to those that survived.
I know no one outside the US cares about that event, but I would hope at least that much to be understandable.
It wasn't something loved, it was just a pair of towers. What made it so important was the devastation and casualties. Rebuilding the towers would have meant building on top of thousands of graves, would have meant building over all the memorials erected for lost loved ones. People involved in the incident that survived are still feeling the effects today. Too many people would feel an attempt to rebuild the towers to be disrespectful both to those that died and to those that survived.
I know no one outside the US cares about that event, but I would hope at least that much to be understandable.
blindVigil said:
It wasn't something loved, it was just a pair of towers. What made it so important was the devastation and casualties. Rebuilding the towers would have meant building on top of thousands of graves, would have meant building over all the memorials erected for lost loved ones. People involved in the incident that survived are still feeling the effects today. Too many people would feel an attempt to rebuild the towers to be disrespectful both to those that died and to those that survived.
I know no one outside the US cares about that event, but I would hope at least that much to be understandable.
It wasn’t loved until it was destroyed. Personally I think those cement blocks were the beauty of lower manhattan
It wasn't something loved, it was just a pair of towers. What made it so important was the devastation and casualties. Rebuilding the towers would have meant building on top of thousands of graves, would have meant building over all the memorials erected for lost loved ones. People involved in the incident that survived are still feeling the effects today. Too many people would feel an attempt to rebuild the towers to be disrespectful both to those that died and to those that survived.
Of course people would complain, they always do. But the message I get from the outside is that you CAN hit the US, and it DOES hurt them. Also you should know better than to presume knowing how others "outside the US" feel, because when that happened, we were all shocked. Class that day was cancelled and we just talked about the attack for the rest of the day. You don't need to be American to be horrified by such an event. I hope the concept of empathy is understandable.
Also you should know better than to presume knowing how others "outside the US" feel, because when that happened, we were all shocked. Class that day was cancelled and we just talked about the attack for the rest of the day. You don't need to be American to be horrified by such an event.
To be honest, it depends on where are you from. In ex-USSR countries (at least Ukraine and Russia, from personal experience) quite a few people were actually not sad at all. Mostly older folks who grew up during the Cold War. I was a freshman at university at the time and no classes were canceled, our professor just told us what happened and proceeded to lecture.
I know no one outside the US cares about that event, but I would hope at least that much to be understandable.
As much as we like to joke about it, I imagine most people outside of the US can still appreciate the importance of 911, and that is was an attack not only against the US, but West as a whole. Similar to the Trump assassination, if it can happen in the US, it can happen anywhere. Which is why foreign politicians were so quick to condemn it.
Horus called out Malcador for erasing the Two Missing Primarchs, as Horus was furious about what was done to his brothers. Malcador used his powers to choke Horus yet Horus gritted his teeth and bared it. Jaghatai and Alpharius looked on in horror at it all.
The lower half of the pic is Horus holding Eugen Temba, after the latter was corrupted by Nurgle and tried to kill the Warmaster. The two were good friends.
We can say Nurgle is the very first Chaos god introduced in the series. Also, Temba is the one who wounded Horus, after which he got "healed" by the Serpent's Lodge and the galaxy burned.
What's funny to me about this image is just how far against Walhart's character this is. The entire point of his conquest was to stop Grima's revival at all costs, and by all means he almost succeeded.
I dont think the dress tags can be used if you literally can just see the upper body, you would have to have knowledge from outside the picture to know that this is supposed to be a dress. I remove the china dress tag and just let be the chinese clothes tag.
Some people can't handle the truth and so downvoted me. Good to see that this place hasn't changed. :MococoWhaet:
Some people can't handle getting downvoted and so they invent bullshit like "you know I'm right but can't admit it". Good to see that this place hasn't changed. :MococoWhaet:
Amusingly enough, Jane's summon line is "Are you ready to get cuffed? Give me your hands~". And her trailers are interrogations. This artist was ahead of their time by a couple of weeks.