Americans and their black and white, right and left thinking. There is a whole world between that. I like the eastern principle of Yin and yang more. You need a balance and everyone can have good times without it leading to shit.
Who do you want getting you out of a dangerous situation...... someone freaked out by the events or someone who's like "Here eat this, we have to keep moving." The experienced elderly have years of knowledge that is just lost every time they leave the world of the living. It's a trip how much that resource is neglected.
@@kimmallable you reminded my of this quote so I went and found it for you: "The worst part about getting old is having so many amazing stories to tell, but nobody wants to hear them". I'm not sure who said it though, I just had it written down
@@NotMe-ej9yz a long time ago, I worked in an assisted living home that specialized in mental behavioral issues and noticed that no one ever listened to the residents..... even when it took them 20 min to walk down to have a question answered. So I decided to listen. I found that a lot of people were on the level. They just acted crazy because the staff thought they were crazy. But once they realized that someone was listening, they told me all kinds of interesting things about their lives. They also told me about how things are run amongst themselves. They had a little societal system that was harmless. But it made them feel like people rather than patients. The system was quite clever.
I wouldn't even say they were tough, they were just desensitized to murder and a little messed up in the head. Our country is a little fucked up now because they've been running the shit for the past 60 years lol
@Boco Corwin incredible. My grandfathers were there. Here I am 80 years later looking at the world falling apart again. Seeing a lot of weak men these days, so few back then.
There is a case of being stunned. I was in WTC One during the 93 bombing. People did run to the elevators! I was on the 67th flr. Guy I worked with told me grab your bag & coat head for the stairs. Every step down got worse. More people & more black smoke. Eerily quiet, just whimpers & whispers. At the 20th a bunch got out of the stairwell. The entire floor was under construction so it was wide open. We all ran over to the floor to ceiling windows. Looked down on just chaos. Sirens, lights flashing, mobs milling around. After staring out at this for a couple of minutes speechless, the guy next to me, a stranger, said we need to get out of here! Yes & we barged our way back into the smoky stairwell. We still didn’t know what was going on. 🙏🏻
My grandparents were the same way. My father’s parents especially. He served in the Marine Corps in WW I and came home to the Spanish Flu then the depression and then WW II and he was a police officer in Philadelphia. She grew up in Germany on a farm and some of her family (distance relatives) died when the Titanic sank. They survived several big things and it didn’t phase them. Always kind and hard working people. We could use more people like that now.
Yea.....too good to be true story.....like.....you watch an aeroplane hit a building and your first thought is.....no more scissors in aeroplane and no more than 20 ml of liquid ..... NOT. You should be in shock and dont think about yourself and your routines
@@farangforevet1709thank you… put yourself in those shoes. The first dude he talked to a pilot thought it was a Cessna. A Cessna? That’s a small passenger plane they don’t even launch from large airports normally. Yet the artist has the foresight to imagine the changes to TSA? I don’t think so
I was five or six years old when I witness 9/11 and saw the second jet hit. I was also a block away since my school at that time was very close to it. Saw a few jumpers once myself and my mom made it back to her office where I got a good view of people taking their lives. I lost sleep for years and even now at 24 I struggle time to time with night terrors. Shit was wild bro.
Wow. I was a sophomore in college. I cried for the children in Manhattan. I cried for everyone, but the thought of children stuck in daycares, schools, etc - it got to me. I had spent my summer as a camp counselor & I loved kids. I cried for you, I prayed for you. God, I prayed you would be ok. Ty for your post.
Damn. I was the same age as you then and even I remember it so vividly watching it on the television screen in my mom’s arms all the way from Colorado. We would later learn of our neighbor passing, he was one of the pilots on flight 93. I can’t imagine being so close to it so young.
That's horrible for anybody to witness let alone a child. But now imagine how traumatized people and children across the world are where the US and Israel cause havoc and destroy millions of lives. Even 9/11 has been partly if not completely an inside job. I don't understand how can't people just live in fuc king peace and harmony. Always some wars, conspiracies and shit.
Geez Joe, you slaughtered it @ 0:10 lol. It goes "Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times."
My grandma picked me up from middle school on 9/11. Born in the 30's and was married to a Vietnam Vet and it was a big event to her but it was not the Nazis or the Japanese... Crazy how different generations process things.
i was in college, the news came on during class, everyone left the class but me, i sat and finished the class as normal, i knew it was big news but college is not free.
9/11 was one of those 'JFK moments'. where you'll always remember where you were when it happened. I was a contractor, in Amherst Massachusetts, & i was on my way to a job listening to the radio & it happened during the radio where you could hear a boom. i went to a job in a apartment complex near Umass Amherst , where i had parked my work van in a courtyard , in the middle of many units, & students were hearing my radio from my van doors being opened & asking if it was really happening. That shit was surreal. My girlfriend at the time was so scared she wanted me to come home cuz she thought there was gonna be a war or something. weird times.
I was 21 , for a brief time that morning , really didnt know what was going to happen next. I remember going to the beach that night with my girlfriend and it was fairly close to an airport and there wasn't a single plane in the sky. We kept kept looking at the sky for a good 15-20 minutes and finally saw a single plane.
I was only six but recall it so vividly. I was brushing my teeth before school and my mom stormed into the bathroom, scooped me into her arms and carried me to her room where she just hugged me in silence pointing at the TV. I didn’t understand it but I had never seen my mom speechless like that. I understood something very, very bad was happening. It’s one of my most vivid childhood memories!
I have shared the first 5mins of this story with everyone I know. It's a crazy world Don't think about the past, we've done that, it doesn't work. Just keep plowing ahead. Best advice known to man, easier said than done tho. Love u Tom pap and Joe rogan
I remember 9/11 like yesterday, it was actually my first day of school ever (pre-K). I remember my teachers crying and watching the TV. My parents came from work to get me since I live in WNY and the 3rd planes path wasn’t far from where we were. What a crazy thing that was.
@@pennydaytreasures8173 99% survival rate would be more convincing if the country only had a few thousand people. We happen to have over 350 million... so 1% is 3.5 MILLION people if the whole country was to catch if. That’s not some insignificant number to just shed off as a proud fact and excuse not to participate in making it safer for your neighbor. Be kind. It’s not about your “rights”. Nobody is trying to control you. Slowly take off your tin foil hat and come sit with the rest of us.
I’m from the UK, used to go to my grandparents after school because my Mum worked until 5pm. I got home and was like “Nan, Grandad what the hell is going on?! Is it gonna be the end of the world?” My Grandad says “It’s a terrible thing, all those poor people, it’s a new type of war. But at least there were people there saving them.” He survived the blitz in Liverpool, where when buildings were destroyed or were burning, they were left to decay. If you got out, you got out, if you survived you survived.
I was 5 years old and visited the towers just a few weeks before 9/11 occurred. Still have the photos in an album of me and my family while we're up top of the south tower. Pretty intense.
Watching this from NYC, my hometown, on 9/11/2021. It happened 2 years before I was born, can’t say I’ve experienced the grief but the people around me have been through it. I’ll visit this every year from now on.
My grandparents were the same. Living through WW2 will make you immune to future catastrophes. Our generation living through 9/11 makes us immune to stuff happening now.
@@DallasLashmet For real, one day of seeing horrible shit? My dads parents lived in London and had to be shipped out to live with families in the countryside because the Germans were bombing the city so much every night.
I worked in an assisted living facility when this happened. The nursing staff had the news coverage on the TV’s, but I can’t remember a single one of the residents acting at all surprised by it all.
It’s really sad, my mother and Aunt where both born on 9/11 my mother was 9/11/64 and my aunt was 9/11/63 and it’s really sad cause my mother can no longer have a good birthday. We can’t celebrate because of a terrorist attack. Rest In Peace everyone who was lost
He wasn't the head of NASA. He was obviously integral in rocket development and was a director for different projects over the years. He was not the head of NASA though.
deancj1 and wasnt a natzi. Fucking rogan should be sued for such slander. Von Braun was forced to make rockets or would be killed by germans. His famous quote was the rockets worked perfectly, just landed on the wrong planet. Referring to the v2 rockets that hitler used against the UK. The soviets stole a lot of the scientists as well. And the German people have always been known for their great mechanical engineering. Without these scientists we would have never landed on the moon.
He was director of nasa but was a member of the nazi party as all industrial leaders had to be in that period. He was however also a member of the SS which is slightly harder to explain. - time.com/5627637/nasa-nazi-von-braun/
@@JamesKetchell1 He wasn't the director of NASA - he was the director of the Marshall Space Flight Center in Alabama during the 1960s and served under several people including the ACTUAL directors of NASA, T. Keith Glennan, Dr. Hugh L. Dryden, James E. Webb, Dr. Thomas O. Paine, Dr. George M. Low, and Dr. James C. Fletcher. Saying "Wernher von Braun was the head of NASA" is like saying "Ronald McDonald is the CEO of McDonald's."
@@user-ob1rh3cz7h 😂😂😂😂😂 von braun was a kid with a dream he loved rockets, hitler was the only person in Germany with enough means for braun to fulfill his dream. So braun contacted hitler and he gave him means, that was after ww1 before ww2. Germany was banned to make tanks ship and planes and hitler seen the rocket as a great weapon, utilising a loophole in a contract..
I used to work in a pharmacy and we have brutally cold winters in MN, the only people who would show up on the twenty below days were the old people. They just acted like it was just another day, while everyone else was like nope, not today
Don't know about the blades part, that part seems like B.S. but as for the terrorist thing, one plane an accident. But two planes is definitely something going on. It's obvious for that.
Don’t get me wrong that quote Tim Kennedy told Rogan is a very cool quote, But that shit that Tom’s Grandma said about tomorrow’s another day we gotta keep moving...... it’s true shit happens in life that we can’t explain but we gotta keep moving on and stop focusing on shit.....
True. But also the distance between hard and soft is relative. The difference isn't even visible when you look at a tsunami that wipes out 100k people in an hour, or the heart disease that's responsible for 1 in 4 of all deaths. Just saying to point out that being tough is important but it's a weak point of pride.
And? It's a valid question, especially when you consider the news clip of the female news reporter talking about how it had fallen yet it was in the back ground behind her still standing. Or even better the clips of the firemen covered in dust just after the first plane hit, building had yet to collapse but they talked about how they were blown across the lobby. Find them, and you'll only be left with one conclusion.
Wernher von Braun wasn't the director of NASA - he was the director of the Marshall Space Flight Center in Alabama during the 1960s and served under several people including the ACTUAL directors of NASA, T. Keith Glennan, Dr. Hugh L. Dryden, James E. Webb, Dr. Thomas O. Paine, Dr. George M. Low, and Dr. James C. Fletcher. Saying "Wernher von Braun was the head of NASA" is like saying "Ronald McDonald is the CEO of McDonald's." Also, Rogan has his "facts" all mixed up about the German rocket facility. Those war crimes happened at Mittelwerk. Wernher von Braun worked at Peenemünde Army Research Center - a completely different facility. He did visit Mittelwerk at least once, and publicly called what he saw there "repulsive". The allegations that he had anything to do with the hangings of Jewish workers did not originate until 1995, and that allegation was made by a single person, and has never been verified by any other survivor of that facility.
@@7ali7 no. Humans are humans. And when the war was happening fear was in the air. You can't expect every. Single. Person. To just get up and leave their home country. We aren't defending Nazis. We're defending humans. Scientists don't care about politics. They care about science because it's their passion. But who knows maybe he was an insane nazi racist but at the same time he could've been a good human; a good scientist just wrapped up in a situation hard to get out of. The fact that he willingly worked for the USA kind of proves he didn't completely conform to the German ideology and proves he just cared about science. It sucks because my family left Germany before the war and there was a lot of truely good people who had to stay and suffer through the tough times
King Alfonso the 10th son of Ferdinand the 3rd of Castile/Leon. He tried hard to live up to his father's legacy and a bust of his head hangs above the president during the State of the Union. Granted that's just one example.
I never realized when I was a kid growing up in the 2000s, 9/11 had basically JUST happened. I’m afraid of kids now losing that knowledge and not being taught the impact it had on Americans since it’s basically history at this point. Never forget!!!
I remember I was in school, we had a free day, so we chose to watch tv. We turned in to spongebob, and at the bottom of the screen, a red banner kept going across saying something about pretty much "turn on the news, tell your parents to watch for a possible terrorist attack" and my teacher turned it to the news and we seen people jumping from the building and fire, and she started crying and turned the channel really fast and said something horrible happened in another state. We went on with our day like any other, and after school my dad told me it was terrorists and that theyve never done anything like this and how many ppl are dying. My little mind was blown that people could be dead at others, that theyd steal a plane and crash into a building lol
Joe botched the quote. Here’s how it goes: “Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. Weak men create hard times."
I was in around 8 years old when the towers hit and living in Jersey City. Growing up I always had a great view of nyc skyline from my bedroom window. I used to love staring at the twin towers with my binoculars. On that day my school allowed everyone’s parents come pick them up early to go home, my parents told me what happened and I just couldn’t believe it, I had to see it with my own eyes. I went home and immediately looked out my window and in the spot where the twin towers had always been all my life, there was just black smoke for weeks. I’ll never forget that day.
I was in college and was stupid enough to drive out to class on 9/11. My sister came home from work early and I was just waking up. I asked why she was home. She said "we're at war" or something. I said "that's nice" and hopped in the shower then drove out to school like it was any other day. I have no idea why I did that. At the least I should have just rolled over and went back to sleep. My dumb ass went to school.
I saw the plane that hit the pentagon, it flew over us, we were on foot walking on the *key* *bridge* that links Roslyn, VA with George Town, at that time the city’s public transportation had been shutdown and taxis were hard to get. I was walking alongside hundreds of other people on that morning, I saw the belly of the plane flying at low altitude, then about three seconds later it hit the pentagon, the explosion wave expansion shook the surrounding area, I saw a mushroom of fire emanating from the pentagon, I couldn’t hear anything but a high pitch humming noise for a while, it was so surreal and scary, I remember questioning myself, “is this reality happening right now?” It was like a bad dream, I am not a *9/11* *truther,* but I respect their skepticism, I don’t know if it was a real terrorist attack or a government inside job, we all can just speculate, but we saw the plane that crushed into the pentagon building. Whether it was Al-Queda or the Bush administration who did it, it was a damn comercial airplane.
Thank you for your story. I’ve never been a 9/11 truther but I’ve always questioned the pentagon crash. It just seemed sketchy, so it’s nice to hear a story from someone who was actually there and saw it.
Dude you need to be EXTREMELY vocal about what you saw, contact your local TV stations every year on 9/11 and try to get on. Because the “missile” people will never stop spewing their bulls***. There used to be a gas station security camera video that clearly showed a plane closing on on the pentagon but I haven’t been able to find that footage in years. So you might be one of the only people who can go on TV and swear that you saw a plane.
@2:19 How would the artist guy have known that? If all this was happening in realtime for you guys, how was it possible for any lay-person to even think, imagine that there was some foul play involved on the part of passengers or crew or anyone on board other than the pilot? Too weird. Something's off about this story.
I call b.s. the artist pulled out his razor blades moments after the planes impact the buildings and said he would no longer be able to carry them on planes??? horseshit
Warner von Braun was not a monster. He's just really wanted to build rockets and go to the moon, Hitler gave him unlimited resources. .......... What you going to do??
It is not the ends; it is the means. The US Government hid him from Americans by putting them in New Mexico, and later in nowhere Alabama, because it was embarrassed to be colluding with Nazi.
I think he is lying about seeing the 2nd tower hit with his own eyes cause from his point of view the UA 175 would have been flying from right to left and not in the direction he demonstrated.