Remembering 9/11 | 60 Minutes Full Episodes



From 2011, Scott Pelley’s report on the World Trade Center Oral History Project. From 2001, Dan Rather’s visit to the ruins underneath Ground Zero. From 2010, Pelley’s story on the redevelopment process for Ground Zero. And from 2013, Lesley Stahl’s look at the 9/11 Museum.

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0:00 Intro
0:11 Remembering 9/11
16:05 Under Ground Zero
29:13 Redeveloping Ground Zero
41:53 The 9/11 Museum

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41 thoughts on “Remembering 9/11 | 60 Minutes Full Episodes”

  1. It's depressing trying to do a follow-up on the 9/11 first responders. Unfortunately, the hero @ 8:10 is no longer with us: "Captain John T. Gallagher, 70, died on July 26, 2015, from causes related to the recovery efforts at the World Trade Center after September 11, 2001."

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  2. Honestly they all should get some kind of top notch government assistance like housing for free and a yearly/monthly check to live on. No one can’t even come close to conceiving the experience they went through I mean they went through the worst imposed terror event in American history. No one can imagine the fear they felt that day and that’s just the people that are alive the people who had to jump or just couldn’t jump and had to ride it out those people experienced something no one ever has. Just imagine being trapped at the top faced with those decisions to jump or burn.

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  3. I was an infant. I never will understand the horror and terror people were feeling that day. I will never understand…how people felt that lost love ones. It breaks my heart. All I can do is educate myself and thank the first responders for their selflessness and bravery. I wish they had coverage for payment for medical bills as a result of this horrific attack. It is terrible. It is the least we can do as American citizens is to help these people that did everything for NYC that day.

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  4. I was in kindergarten when it happend and I remember watching the first tower going down and then the second tower I watched at home go down. RIP TO EVERYONE WHO PASSED

    I cant imagine having ptsd from it. Re expirincing it over and over

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  5. I feel sorry for the 500,000 children that died starving in the middle east during the US invasion of Iraq. Over a million Iraqi soldiers and civilians were also killed so called operation shock and awe .. But mostly I feel sorry that the US goverment felt justified to pulverize alive almost 3000 New Yorkers so they can get their bloody wars to enrich a few high up in the office .. blood money .. Ask Lary Silverstein what did he meant when he said "We decided to pull it"

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  6. It's hard to believe it was 22 years ago. Although I remember saying that at 5, 10, 15 years etc.
    I have been to the US many times (my dad and stepmum live there) although I haven't had the chance to visit NY I will get there one day.
    My 14 year old daughter was in New Hampshire on a school trip this year, they travelled down to NY and visited ground zero and the museum. We have spoken a lot about 9/11 as she has grown up, she sent me some pictures and said it was the saddest but most beautiful place she had been. It brought tears to my eyes.
    The world was with America that day. We will never forget.

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  7. 9/11 memorials mean so much to me. It happens to be my birthday, I was born as it was happening. The panic that my mom describes she felt and the whole hospital at the time is heart wrenching. It’s hard to even conceive the thought that as those people lost their lives, mines was just beginning. I pray for comfort to the families and friends of those who lost loved ones. For years I would spend my birthday just watching documentaries on 9/11 and they all still hit me differently. May all of their souls rest in peace🤍🙏🏾

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  8. Here we go, regurgitating, old material! When are you guys going to create some new content dealing with current issues? 60 Minutes should do a documentary on all the money we sent to Ukraine and how we can’t even help our own people or our own states recover from disasters like fire or drug abuse or the homeless problem or the rising inflation. Thanks to this incompetent administration.

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  9. Blows my mind how people can say defund the cops. Clearly ALL of THOSE PEOPLE have forgotten. Theyre all too wrapped up in their own selfish BS. Sh*t that, in the grand scheme of things, doesnt matter. These people (and other first reaponders, and helpful "regular" Americans) are heros in the TRUE sense of the word. Those who want to defund the cops? I hope they get all they deserve, and that no one rescues them. Hugs, strength, and peace to all who responded and were involved on 9/11. 😢❤

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  10. So sad and unbelievable how they all literally turned to dust in a matter of seconds. Then the responders and citizens, families and friends who endured the effects of all of the trauma, grief, and lies they were expected to believe are amazingly strong themselves. Especially the health problems all will eventually suffer after being exposed to asbestos and carcinogenic dust clouds. They actually labeled something the 9-11 cough?? CTFO Just tell them people they are all part of the depopulation experiment already. I cannot stand the lies officials say out of their mouths. These people actually have labeled some of the victims as jumpers? I see now this is also a psychological warfare thing going on too since mental health issues obviously are going unchecked all over the place. The Nazis reference at the end confirmed to me wtf is going on here as well.. Then the yearly ritualistic like ceremonies are depressive and cause the families the PTSD and grief many cannot work their ways out of. Literally rebuilding on the graves of them families loved ones, with zero thoughts on the rebuild, after billions have been spent somewhere. If there are any buildings there now ran by the port, soon they will be housing all of the immigrants officials are ILLEGALLY letting into the country. Jesus take this wheel because humans cant do it, we failed

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  11. I was in kindergarten in Oklahoma when this happened. Everyone was getting picked up early ( I think they were traumatized from the mural building). By the time school ended there was on 3 of us left in the grade.

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  12. EXAMPLE OF CENSORED INFORMATION. 'The Stuart News News / accent Wednesday, October 15, 1980 D1 John Shaw of Stuart survives and serves in Ireland’s most disastrous train wreck Awarded Army Acclaim medal By MARY ETTINGER News Staff Writer'

    'COUNTY CORK, Ireland — As the train carrying 230 summer passengers approached Buttevant station in southern Ireland traveling more than 70 mph, it suddenly left the main track and collided with a stationary train. The result was the worst rail disaster in Ireland’s history. A Stuart man, John G. Shaw Jr., a passenger in the most critically damaged section of the train, freed himself and other survivors from the wreckage and organized the earliest life-saving first aid at the scene. The United States Army, recognizing his meritorious achievement, awarded Pfc. Shaw the Army Commendation Medal and a commendation citation.'
    'Shaw, stationed near Frankfurt, Germany, but on leave in Stuart because of his father’s death, remembers vividly the disaster of last August 1. He was talking to other passengers, on his way to Cork to see the Blarney Stone.I was thrown against the seat back; there was a loud grating noise and screaming; everything disintegrated around me and things were flying through the air. Then things quieted down and he dug himself out from the rubble. The first thing he saw was a lacerated man pinned under a heavy weight and in pain. Shaw freed the man and moved to another section of the train wreckage where he found a woman with her leg chopped off below the knee and a man in the same situation.'
    'County Cork newspapers reported that many of the eighteen bodies recovered were horribly mutilated some having been cut in half, from being crushed beneath the tangled wreckage. Several of the coaches just behind the engine jack-knifed and ricocheted across four sets of track, totally demolishing the dining car and two coaches. Only three of the passenger carriages remained upright on the main track after the crash.”
    'Shaw treated victims for shock and organized small groups of able survivors to care for the injured, quickly teaching them basic first aid measures. When medical personnel arrived, he familiarized them with the crash scene by leading them to the most seriously injured people.The Army citation states that Shaw carried supplies and injured passengers helping to restore a semblance of order in a tragic and chaotic situation. His prompt, direct, and keen sense of duty reflects great credit upon him and the United States Army. The soldier says he learned ways to handle emergency situations in his advanced individual combat training at Fort Dix, N.J. The Army’s training really works. He explains that the basic training most personnel go through builds stamina and gives hands-on training in shock treatment, splints, and survival, in addition to methods of firing various small arms.'
    'More than 50 people were injured in the crash, many seriously, prompting the biggest rescue operation ever undertaken in the state, according to Shaw. Rescue workers were ready because because of the Southern Health Board’s major disaster plan drawn up some ten years ago and kept current with twice-a-year drills. A fleet of twenty ambulances, helicopters, and teams of doctors and nurses sped to the station from several area hospitals. The country’s largest mobile crane, weighing 115 tons, and a 75-ton crane were brought in to help clear the wreckage, freeing survivors and uncovering bodies.'
    'The cause of the accident was not clear, and Shaw is still trying to find out the results of the investigation. He said it probably was due to some work being done on the tracks near the station and subsequent failure to divert the train to the proper track in time. '
    'Shaw, 30, is a native of Stuart. He is the son of Inez Shaw and the late John Gobin Shaw. He is in the transportation section of the 21st Replacement Battalion in Frankfurt. Shaw is working on a degree through the University of Maryland majoring in history. He says he is getting a real sense of history while traveling through Europe.'
    'Shaw's family goes back through a long line of ancestors who served the country. An early forefather was a captain in a battalion of Berks County Associates in the Jersey campaign of the Revolution in the summer of 1780, and later commanded a company of militia sent to protect the settlers. A later relative was a Pennsylvania state senator and chaplain of the 110th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, and another served in the War of 1812. Shaw’s great-uncle, John Peter Shindel Gobin, was a brigadier general in the U.S. Army, state senator and lieutenant governor of Pennsylvania, and major general commanding the Pennsylvania National Guard.'

    WHAT WAS CONCEALED FROM PUBLIC NOTICE 1. 6 month long series on explicit, detailed, felony, terrorist threats. 2. Terrorists protected from arrest and prosecution. 3. Extortion–Witnesses threatened with retaliation against their families and children. 4. Two people in wreckage
    talking about second event and bomb. 5. Next morning, 8/2/80, bomb kills 86 and injures 200 in other train station. 6. Threats made very clear, two events "arranged and guaranteed" one covert and the other an obvious act of terrorism. One a derailment. 7. Two terrorists, John P. Vogel and specialist Stavrinakis, named many many times the group that had arranged the first attack. The name they insisted no fewer than 50 times matched the name of the group that derailed the train. 8. A woman in Frankfurt, Germany warmed me not to go on a train trip that summer because of a bomb. 9. I told my room mate, Jimmy Rowe, they would derail my train. We both said it would happen in Ireland, and this 3 months before it happened. 10. When boarding the train I made a conscious, deliberate effort to position myself to survive it. 11. On the way to the train station that morning I told two women from Australia, Clare Lawrence and Enid Pasco, that something bad was going to happen, and to position themselves as far to the rear of the train with backs facing direction of travel. Later, they told someone what I had told them and that got me interrogated about connections with terrorists. 12. There is much more to it. That should give some indication of mass media in the USA.

    POST 9-11-01
    Does anyone remember after 9-11? They insisted in almost all media, countless times, for fully one year, and from the highest offices in the land. They persisted that nobody knew those attacks would happen.
    In 1997 I got detailed, accurate, explicit intelligence about the attacks of September 11, 2001. For four years at least 100 people got this information from me, free, no strings attached, right up to and through the night of September 10, 2001. This means law enforcement were given the details in time ( 1997, 1998, early 2001 ) to act and prevent. For more detailed facts, search in you tube—-John Shaw Attacks of September 11, 2001.

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  13. I worked at a VA hospital not in NY. What I went through being evacuated due to a bomb threat that day was minimal compared to what these frightened people went through. I heard about the towers but hadn’t taken a break to go up to a TV and look. So I had no idea until after we were evacuated and I called my husband to pick me up. When I got home and saw it I was horrified. I remember wondering if I was going to die while the bomb sniffing dogs and their handlers went in the door as we were leaving. Years later I ended up living in New Jersey for a year and my adult son came to visit me. We spent a whole weekend in Manhattan and had a great time. The last thing we did was to visit the pools with all the names on them where the towers used to stand and then to the 911 Museum. It was a very sobering experience and one I will never forget. There was all kinds of things they found there of importance. Emergency vehicles, the emergency calls that were made, rebar, some of the walls, steel bars signed by firefighters, and a couple things that just got to me were the destroyed elevator motor, communications towers destroyed, concrete stairs that were mangled. The people who got out were very lucky and I feel for the people who didn’t and their families. On the way back to NJ there was a beautiful pink sky and a double rainbow. It had rained while we were in the museum. I felt it as a sign of hope. I recommend to anyone who visits NYC to go to the pools and the museum.

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  14. I was a freshman in college… about 30 minutes north of NYC. We had cellphones, but nothing like today. My friend and I always walked down into town after class, about 10-15 minutes walk. All the shopkeepers were standing on the street, talking amongst themselves quietly. Nobody was around. It was eerie, we just instinctively knew something was wrong. Later that day, we all wanted to donate blood…. But they turned us away, told us there was nobody alive who could use it. Damn somber day.

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  15. I teared up when they talked about the family members talking about their deceased loved ones. Especially the the flight attendant 's final message to her husband. That stung real bad…

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  16. 911 – blowing up the twin towers was designed to accomplish several goals of the Satanists who control Earth wholeheartedly today.
    1) Religious Human Sacrifice for Satan.
    2) Taking down the two columns (Boaz and Tammuz) is explained in many levels of Freemasonry. For midlevels it signals their complete takeover of Earth – Mothers of Darkness * First Earth Battalion * Hermetic Order of Golden Dawn – first 'known to the public' group that practices human sacrifice including Alistar Crowley (Pierce).
    3) The detonation of building 7 in New York taking out the Securities Exchange Commission who had the information of the Dot Com Fraud (investors scammed out of billions building the internet – quadruple lines when only one line is needed/used – preventing Illuminati from being convicted.

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