It was scheduled in advance to post on April 19 and has now been published. I’m sorry that some WordPress glitch notified you early about something not yet published.
The year before the Oklahoma City disaster, an idiot in a pickup truck drove through the glass doors of the front entrance at the Federal Building in Ogden, UT, where I worked. He had some incredible plan that by doing so he was taking revenge on IRS workers, a few of whom had offices in the building. That was the same year I retired, so I got only a small taste of the terror those types of events create in people who must go to work in targeted buildings.
All my good thoughts go to the survivors and families of those lost in Oklahoma City on the anniversary of the bombing.
Wish I had a way to pass that on to all concerned. I was lucky that my office was five miles away that day, and yet our building shuddered and we all rushed outside to see what had happened. Not until we went back inside and turned on the TV did we figure it out. Figuratively speaking, the entire city shook that day.
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Date: Thu, 14 Apr 2016 19:59:47 +0000 To: lordbeariofbow@hotmail.com
It was scheduled in advance to post on April 19 and has now been published. I’m sorry that some WordPress glitch notified you early about something not yet published.
The year before the Oklahoma City disaster, an idiot in a pickup truck drove through the glass doors of the front entrance at the Federal Building in Ogden, UT, where I worked. He had some incredible plan that by doing so he was taking revenge on IRS workers, a few of whom had offices in the building. That was the same year I retired, so I got only a small taste of the terror those types of events create in people who must go to work in targeted buildings.
All my good thoughts go to the survivors and families of those lost in Oklahoma City on the anniversary of the bombing.
Wish I had a way to pass that on to all concerned. I was lucky that my office was five miles away that day, and yet our building shuddered and we all rushed outside to see what had happened. Not until we went back inside and turned on the TV did we figure it out. Figuratively speaking, the entire city shook that day.
All the idiotic non news on. Yet here’s something important and left quietly in the corner. At least they could post a picture of the memorial chairs.
It’s history now. The media won’t waste time on it. There’s a whole generation of kids in OKC who haven’t heard about it. I wrote in 2010 “Yet in Oklahoma this month, they actually had to pass a law to ensure the story will be included in basic school curricula because today’s students, most of them too young or still unborn in 1995, had never heard of the bombing.”