Slogans and terms derived from the September 11, 2001 attack
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Sept. 11, 2001 attacks |
Timeline |
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Background history |
Planning |
September 11, 2001 |
Rest of September |
October |
Aftermath |
Victims |
Survivors |
Foreign casualties |
Hijacked airliners |
American Airlines Flight 11 |
United Airlines Flight 175 |
American Airlines Flight 77 |
United Airlines Flight 93 |
Sites of destruction |
World Trade Center |
The Pentagon |
Shanksville |
Effects |
World political effects |
World economic effects |
Detentions |
Airport security |
Closings and cancellations |
Audiovisual entertainment |
Response |
Government response |
Rescue and recovery effort |
Financial assistance |
Memorials and services |
Perpetrators |
Responsibility |
Organizers |
Miscellaneous |
Communication |
Tower collapse |
Slogans and terms |
Conspiracy theories |
Opportunists |
Inquiries |
U.S. Congressional Inquiry |
9/11 Commission |
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Various terms and catchphrases
- Nine-eleven (or 9/11 in the US date notation for September 11th)
- There's not enough dust to cloud our love for freedom.---Fernando Zamore, Columbia University student.
- "Let's roll" – the last known words of Todd Beamer. (According to the 9/11 Commission report, he actually said, "roll it.")
- Threatcon Delta – the highest state of terrorist alert issued by the U.S. Armed Forces
- Jumper – or WTC jumper, reference to people leaping from the towers.
from the recovery workers:
- Ground Zero – the area of the disaster recovery effort, covering Lower Manhattan around the site of the World Trade Center complex
- The Bathtub – the excavated foundations of the World Trade Center
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Media slogans
Various slogans and captions appeared on various media to brand coverage of the terrorist attack, its after-effects, and the response. The slogans for United States media appeared on the bottom of the television screen, in a patriotic red, white, and blue motif, sometimes with an explicit graphic of the American flag.
Examples:
- "America Attacked", "A Nation United" (ABC)
- "Attack on America", "A Nation Challenged", "Day of Terror", "Portraits of Grief" (The New York Times)
- "America's New War", "War Against Terror" (CNN)
- "War on Terror" (FOX News)
- "America on Alert" (MSNBC)
The Onion parodied this phenomenon with their own slogan, "Holy Fucking Shit: Attack On America" and a fake TV schedule parodying the coverage.
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US government
- Enduring Freedom – name for US-led military response
- Infinite Justice – original name for US-led military response, dropped after religious overtones were pointed out by a reporter at a press briefing