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A nuclear plant strung with "fencing topped by razor wire" to show the public is safe from terrorist planes and bombs?
Mr. Miller, the Somerset County coroner, is the featured speaker at this year's Fourth of July gathering over in Shanksville, the one-store hamlet where one of the terrorist planes of Sept. 11 crashed to earth.
That once it is used for the one-time only circumstance, e.g., where terrorist planes aimed at the Sears Tower are only three hours away, it will vanish.
It's not this top copper's only claim to fame: Kelly recently let out word that in its ongoing war on Al-Qaeda, the NYPD now has the ability to blast terrorist planes from the sky.
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She spent time, daily, with a social studies teacher who saw the terrorist plane hit the exact spot where his older brother worked at the World Trade Center, yet stayed with his pupils until the last was safely at home.
Reading Girl on a Plane, and experiencing first-hand the terrifying event of a terrorist plane-attack, made me hate planes even more, kept me reading on until the last page in one sitting, but still didn't really interest me in any way.
I pretty much believed myself when I said things like, "Honey, a terrorist plane is not going to hit our house".
This taste of heaven and hope on earth was shattered by hate and hell on earth as my friend Andrew Young met me at the door with the news of terrorists' planes crashing into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
But the acts of Palestinian terrorists — plane hijackings; the massacre of Israeli athletes at the 1972 Olympics in Munich — are not ignored.
It turns out that we exaggerate the risks of events that are beyond our control, that cause many deaths at once or that kill in spectacular ways — crazy gunmen, terrorists, plane crashes, nuclear radiation, genetically modified crops.
It's meant to keep terrorists or suspected terrorists off planes.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com