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  • 5 months ago
Disaster Transbian episode 41

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📚
Learning
Transcript
00:00Ready for another attack.
00:06Manhattan?
00:24Oh, I'd love to see New York.
00:26We could all go with the bus company's special Super Center Fair.
00:29Nine bucks? This one's on me!
00:59蝶や梅酒、日本製粉を提供でお送りしました。
01:02アメリカ、ニューヨークの世界貿易センタービルに
01:05日本時間の今夜10時ごろ、現地時間の
01:08コンビニングスプレーションの
01:10悲しさの強さが、世界中の最も一番のパワーを
01:14言われませんが、貿易センタービルからは
01:15黒い煙が立ち上り、爆発も起きています。
01:18The Legion of Doom is about to begin its reign of terror.
01:25And a 9-11 emergency surgical kit with working stethoscope.
01:48The Legion of Doom is about to begin its reign of terror.
02:18Now that is an entirely new dimension in entertainment.
02:25Warplane silent heading for New York City.
02:49Architecture system show stopping.
02:51Mayday! Mayday! New York is under attack!
02:55It is time.
02:59We will now strike at the heart of American defense.
03:04And destroy the Pentagon with one swift and deadly blow.
03:10It's not setting. I can see it all now.
03:13It's high towers. Cold. Cruel. Ominous.
03:17Closer down on you. From every side that you can't breathe.
03:22Closer. Closer.
03:24You can't breathe. The traffic.
03:28Look. It's the towers. They're falling.
03:33I hope I live. I hope I live. It's coming down on me.
03:42Here it comes. I'm getting behind a car.
03:45The conduct of the response in the Gaza Strip has been over the top.
03:54It's bold in terms of jerking people around, but I may have gone too far in a few places.
04:08On Sunday, the Israeli prime minister appeared on two U.S. networks to assure those watching that it has been worth it, and that an assault on Rafa in southern Gaza would be next.
04:23Victory is within reach.
04:24Victory is within reach. We're going to do it. We're going to get the remaining Hamas terrorist battalions in Rafak, which is the last bastion.
04:32But we're going to do it. And in this I agree with the Americans. We're going to do it while providing safe passage for the civilian population so they can leave.
04:41Those plans are among the topics discussed in a call between Joe Biden and Netanyahu on Sunday, the White House saying that Biden reaffirmed his view that a military operation in Rafa should not proceed without a credible and executable plan for ensuring the safety and support for the more than one million people sheltering there.
04:59Netanyahu said that's exactly what the Israeli military is drawing up.
05:02We are working out a detailed plan to do so, and that's what we've done up to now.
05:08More than two million Palestinians live there, crammed in, and they can only leave with Israeli permission, which few people get.
05:15It's often referred to as the world's largest open-air prison.
05:20Are we okay?
05:28Yes? May I help you?
05:30Someone is in trouble.
05:34Something bad is happening!
05:38The enemy will pay the price that he doesn't know his death.
05:43Mr. President, I'd like to take a few minutes to discuss a matter of the enormous consequence that is not being adequately covered in the mainstream media, nor here in the Senate.
05:57And that is that right now, today in Gaza, we are witnessing one of the worst humanitarian disasters in modern history.
06:06It is unfolding before our very eyes, and we must not run away from that reality.
06:16And I am very sorry to say, but we in the United States are deeply complicit in what is happening in Gaza.
06:29What we do in Congress right now could well determine whether tens of thousands of people live or die.
06:41Let us very briefly review what has happened in the last four months.
06:48On October 7th, Hamas launched a horrific terrorist attack that killed 1,200 innocent Israelis and took more than 230 hostages.
07:01And more than 100 of those hostages remain, still remain in captivity today.
07:06That is what started this war.
07:13And as I have said many times, Israel has the right to defend itself against Hamas terrorism.
07:21But it does not have the right to go to war against the entire Palestinian people.
07:30And that, tragically, is what we are seeing.
07:34It was nearly 10 years ago that a bright September day was darkened by the worst attack on the American people in our history.
07:55Hijacked planes cutting through a cloudless September sky.
08:01Our very freedom came under attack in a series of deliberate and deadly terrorist acts.
08:08Go ahead, Frank. Do you have United 93 South the Sharks?
08:11We hear some funny noises we are trying to get you having to know.
08:14I don't know.
08:19I don't know where the hell they're getting married.
08:20I said, Washington didn't even know when I called Washington about it.
08:23They didn't know what the hell was going on.
08:27We are dying!
08:30We are dying!
08:34Okay.
08:36That is covered by the White House. It's mounted. It's coming on.
08:44Another one just hit the filming.
08:48Wow.
08:50Wow.
08:51Another one just hit the North State.
08:57Does anybody know what that smoke is in lower Manhattan?
09:00Nobody moved.
09:03We're back today at the Washington.
09:14Wow.
09:15That's theétat.
09:16king of God's did so is rose.
09:17Now that we can have a mate of glass.
09:18We cryete against every two people who iaいて had about their Queensborough name.
09:19He died.
09:20Not sleeping already.
09:21Godms almost.
09:22That's crazy.
09:23To me, we're done.
09:24That's crazy.
09:25That's crazy.
09:26And, though, I אפk to polish my heart.
09:27You're, folks.
09:30Never wanting to walk.
09:31We quit.
09:33Like me, seriously.
09:35And then, if I am well Does anyone know what to say?
09:37That's crazy stupidly and beautiful.
09:39I am serious.
09:41That's crazy stupidly.
09:42Let me beisasc got too stupidly.
09:43That's pretty disgusting.
09:44I don't know.
10:14Here we go.
11:44Look at this dude.
12:04All right here.
12:05That's a parachute on his back.
12:07You hardly notice it.
12:07Now watch what happens here.
12:10Incidentally, if you care, this is illegal.
12:14What are the gloves for?
12:17There's an electric fence we have to climb over.
12:20Really?
12:21Razor wire, Constantine wire down the top.
12:23What is the height of the World Trade Center?
12:251,352 feet.
12:27Okay.
12:28Now watch this.
12:28Look at this little kid saying, what the, what?
12:31You know?
12:32Look at this.
12:33Listen to him yelling at him.
12:36They think it's a suicide.
12:37Yeah.
12:37There was people, these girls were saying, don't do it, don't do it.
12:41Look at this.
12:41That's the wind test, the wind direction.
12:46Yeah, it's just right.
12:47Watch this kid.
12:48Watch the farewell kiss here.
12:49Oh, that's cool.
12:50See you later.
12:52Oh, my.
12:53Whoa.
12:54Hang out here.
12:56Hold it.
12:56Hold it.
12:57Freeze it.
12:58Freeze it.
13:01And here you come, right into Battery Park.
13:04Watch it there.
13:05Kaboom.
13:05Look at that landing.
13:06Well done.
13:07You better hustle now.
13:10Because I'm telling you, these New York cops, man, they'll beat you in a foot race.
13:15You better hurry up.
13:17Now, you'll see it.
13:18Look at this woman.
13:18She can't believe what she's seeing here.
13:2112.33 this afternoon here to Beekman downtown.
13:24And he had blood all over his body.
13:26And he was one of the first patients.
13:27And he told his paramedic that a car seemed to explode in the parking garage of the World Trade Center in Tower A.
13:35And that the force of it threw him out, actually forced him out of the building.
13:40There must have been some gaping hole there.
13:42The lights came back on gradually through the night, as if the giant towers were waking slowly from their worst nightmare.
13:50A 40-year-old firefighter, Bill Chupa, this was a scene that he will never forget.
13:54The lobby of the World Trade Center filled with thick, choking smoke.
13:58It was like an apocalypse, I guess you could say.
14:00You couldn't, it was a very heavy, dense smoke situation.
14:03That place is a death trap.
14:05Let me tell you something.
14:06There was smoke where there shouldn't be smoke.
14:08I was on 107th floor.
14:09And we heard the bang.
14:11And that place filled up in five minutes.
14:12The 1993 World Trade Center bombing was a terrorist attack carried out on February 26, 1993, when a van bomb detonated below the North Tower of the World Trade Center complex in New York City.
14:31The 1,336-pound urea nitrate hydrogen gas-enhanced device was intended to send the North Tower crashing into its twin, the South Tower, taking down both skyscrapers and killing tens of thousands of people.
14:48We are under attack, things so monstrous, terror unleashed from the sacred cotton candy place of our dreams.
14:56If anyone is out there listening, get out of town before it gets to you, and I'm out of here.
15:01While it failed to do so, it killed six people, including a pregnant woman, and caused over 1,000 injuries.
15:14About 50,000 people were evacuated from the buildings that day.
15:17The attack was planned by a group of terrorists, including Ramzi Youssef, Mohamed Abba Halima, Mohamed A. Salameh, Nidal Ayyad, Abdul Rahman Yassin, and Ahmed Ahyaj.
15:32In March 1994, four men were convicted of carrying out the bombing, Abba Halima, Ahmed Ajaj, Ayyad, and Salameh.
15:42The charges included conspiracy, explosive destruction of property, and interstate transportation of explosives.
15:50In November 1997, two more were convicted, Ramzi Youssef, the organizer behind the bombings, and Ayyad Ismail, who drove the van carrying the bomb.
16:01Ahmed Salameh, an FBI informant, and a key witness in the trial of Ramzi Youssef, Abdul Hakim Murad, and Walid Khan Amin Shah, stated that the bomb itself was built under supervision from the FBI.
16:17During his time as an FBI informant, Salameh recorded hours of telephone conversations with his FBI handlers in tapes made after the bombing.
16:27Salameh alleged that an unnamed FBI supervisor declined to move forward on a plan that would have used a phony powder to fool the conspirators into believing that they were working with genuine explosives.
16:43The original plan that we should blow the bomb on December, which Christmas Day, to spoil the American Christmas.
16:51Salameh and the FBI parted ways, but members of the terror cell again reached out to Salameh.
16:57And again, he went to authorities about how the terrorists were speaking in code.
17:02They want me to go finish cooking for the mosque. Something is going on.
17:11On February 26, 1993, a bomb in a rider van exploded, killing six and injuring a thousand.
17:18I just felt a great deal of guilt, and I cried like a little kid, because I know it's going to happen.
17:30So Salameh, a one-time Egyptian military officer, went back to the FBI and agreed to try to get close to the sheikh and his followers.
17:37And he succeeded by offering a blood loyalty oath called a bayat to the terrorist sheikh.
17:43And the sheikh accepted.
17:44I gave him the bayat, and that's when he gave me the order to blow up the American army.
17:51For months, Salameh would work as the sheikh's personal assistant and bodyguard.
17:55I lived with him. I cooked for him. I took him to the bathroom. I put the slipper on his feet.
18:03Salameh worked to try to get the sheikh on tape, issuing his terror orders.
18:08One day at the sheikh's apartment, he brought the sheikh into a small kitchen to talk in private, his recorder hidden in a briefcase.
18:16He started to put his mouth into my ears, to whisper.
18:21Then I have 12 people outside in the front room with weapons and machines.
18:28So I have to raise up the briefcase as much as I could to get it as close as possible to his mouth, to my left ear.
18:36And I know that blind people, or that's what I believe, that they have a very sharp hearing.
18:43So I was afraid that the leather handle of the briefcase will make that noise.
18:49Get it close enough to his mouth when he said, find a plan to blow up the American army.
18:55In that same talk, the sheikh was recorded saying it's permissible to strike New York City landmarks.
19:01Salameh was forced into hiding until this day.
19:06Ramzi Youssef spent time at an Al-Qaeda training camp in Afghanistan before beginning in 1991 to plan a bombing attack within the United States.
19:20Youssef's uncle, Khalif Sheikh Mohammed, who later was considered the principal architect of the September 11th attacks,
19:28gave him advice and tips over the phone, and funded his co-conspirator, Mohammed Salameh, with a $660 U.S. wire transfer.
19:40Youssef arrived illegally in the United States on September 1st, 1992, traveling with Ahmed Ajaj from Pakistan.
19:50Though both sat apart on the flight and acted as though they were traveling separately,
19:54Ajaj tried to enter with a forged Swedish passport, though it had been altered and thus raised suspicions among INS officials at John F. Kennedy International Airport.
20:08When officials put Ajaj through secondary inspection, they discovered bomb-making instructions and other materials in his luggage and arrested him.
20:17The name Abu Barra, an alias of Muhammad Jamal Khalifa, appeared in the manuals.
20:24Youssef tried to enter with a false Iraqi passport, claiming political asylum.
20:30Youssef was allowed into the United States and was given a hearing date.
20:36Youssef set up residence in Jersey City, New Jersey, traveled around New York and New Jersey,
20:42and called Sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman, a controversial blind Muslim cleric, via cell phone.
20:49After being introduced to his co-conspirators by Abdel Rahman at the latter's Al-Farouq Mosque in Brooklyn,
20:57began assembling the 1,500-pound urea nitrate hydrogen gas-enhanced device for delivery to the WTC.
21:05He ordered chemicals from his hospital room when he had been injured in a car crash,
21:12one of three accidents caused by Salome in late 1992 and early 1993.
21:20El Saeed Noser, one of the blind sheikh's men, was arrested in 1991 for the murder of Rabbi Meir Kahani.
21:28Born in Brooklyn in 1932, Kahani first found fame when he created the Jewish Defense League in 1968.
21:35as a response to anti-Semitism that Jewish people were facing in the streets of New York.
21:40The JDL gained significant fame throughout America because of its militant activities and violent methods.
21:45But this fame brought with it attention from the FBI.
21:48Kahani was indicted for weapon smuggling and possession of explosives in 1971.
21:53Once in Israel, Kahani began to forge a political career and founded the Koch Party,
21:58which throughout the 1970s and early 1980s was largely unsuccessful.
22:03According to Israeli historian Tom Segev,
22:05Kahani was seen as nothing more than an eccentric troublemaker,
22:09destined to hold no more sway than lavatory graffiti.
22:12Segev's statement refers to the extremity of Kahani's views,
22:15which to many at the time within Israel were unpalatable.
22:18Kahani's disdain for the Palestinians went further than what was acceptable at the time.
22:23He referred to Arabs as cancer and called for their expulsion from Israel.
22:26If we continue in this way, the Arabs, by their birth rate, not to any intifada,
22:31we'll be the majority here and God help us then.
22:34They must go. That is the message. They must go.
22:37In 1984, Kahani showed that he was no joke when his Koch Party received 25,000 votes in the Israeli parliamentary elections,
22:46enough received in the Knesset.
22:48In the Knesset, Kahani pushed bills that proposed slavery and expulsion for non-Jewish people who would not accept Jewish supremacy,
22:55segregation of public spaces such as beaches, and the separation of marriages between Jews and non-Jews.
23:02Other members of the Knesset would frequently walk out when Kahani spoke,
23:05and one member compared Kahani's bills to the Nuremberg laws and found striking similarities.
23:11Kahani ultimately could not hide his extensive racism towards the Palestinians,
23:15and in July of 1985, the Knesset passed a law which banned candidates with racist acts or goals from standing in elections,
23:23spelling the end of Kahani's own political career.
23:26Kahani was banned from the 1988 elections, and in 1990, whilst in New York, he was assassinated.
23:32According to the prosecutors, the Red Mahmoud Abu Halima, also convicted in the bombing,
23:38told Wadi al-Hajj to buy the .357-caliber revolver used by Nasser in the Kahani shooting.
23:46In the initial court case, in the NYS Criminal Court, Nasser was acquitted of murder, but convicted of gun charges.
23:55In a related and follow-up case in federal courts, he was convicted.
24:00Dozens of Arabic bomb-making manuals and documents related to terrorist plots were found in Nasser's New Jersey apartment,
24:09with manuals from Army Special Warfare Center at Fort Bragg, North Carolina.
24:15Secret memos leaked to the Joint Chiefs of Staff and 1,440 rounds of ammunition.
24:22According to the transcript of his trial, Youssef hoped that his explosion would topple Tower 1, which would fall into Tower 2, killing the occupants of both buildings,
24:35which he estimated to be about 250,000 people, in revenge for the U.S. support for Israel against Palestine.
24:45According to journalist Steve Cole, Youssef mailed letters to various New York newspapers just before the attack,
24:52in which he claimed he belonged to Liberation Army, 5th Battalion.
24:58These letters made three demands, an end to all U.S. aid to Israel, an end to U.S. diplomatic relations with Israel,
25:06and a pledge by the United States to end interference with any of the Middle East countries' interior affairs.
25:14He stated that the attack on the World Trade Center would be merely the first of such attacks if his demands were not met.
25:22Youssef did not make any religious justifications for the bombing.
25:27When asked about his religious views, he was evasive.
25:40On Friday, February 26, 1993, Ramzi Youssef and a Jordanian friend, Ayyad Ismail,
25:48drove a yellow Ford Conoline rider van into Lower Manhattan and pulled into the public parking garage beneath the World Trade Center around noon.
25:58They parked on the underground B-2 level. Youssef ignited the 20-foot fuse and fled.
26:0612 minutes later, at 12.18 p.m., the bomb exploded in the underground garage,
26:12generating an estimated pressure of 150,000 pounds per square inch.
26:18The bomb opened a 100-foot wide hole through four sublevels of concrete.
26:24The detonation of velocity of this bomb was about 15,000 feet per second, 10,000 miles per hour.
26:32Initial news reports indicated a main transformer might have blown before it became clear that a bomb had exploded in the basement.
26:42The bomb instantly cut off the World Trade Center's main electrical power line,
26:48knocking out the emergency lighting system.
26:51The bomb caused smoke to rise to the 93rd floor of both towers,
26:56including through the stairwells, which were not pressurized,
27:00and smoke went up the damaged elevators in both towers.
27:04With thick smoke filling the stairwells, evacuation was difficult for building occupants
27:12and led to many smoke inhalation injuries.
27:16Hundreds were trapped in elevators in the towers when the power was cut,
27:21including a group of 17 kindergarteners on their way down from the south tower observation deck,
27:27who were trapped between the 35th and 36th floors for five hours.
27:41The two kindergarten classes were finally home after a day filled with worried parents and frightened kids,
28:02some of whom spent three hours on the frigid, snowy World Trade Center roof, 110 floors above Manhattan,
28:09before walking the entire way down the stairs.
28:12But the other class was trapped in a dark and smoky elevator, unable to let anybody know where they were.
28:17It was terrible. We got on it and we got like the toilet on the 70th floor, it got stuck,
28:22and then it was pitch black. We was in the dark like for five hours.
28:25Just you and the kids in the elevator?
28:27All the kids. We had 17 kids and five adults.
28:29The only thing I was thinking about was my child.
28:33That's all.
28:33What did you think when you saw her coming off the bus?
28:36I was happy that she was all right.
28:39And I'm glad she wanted me today.
28:42First I hear they're outside waiting for the bus. The bus can't get to them.
28:44Then I hear that it's not confirmed they're out of the building, that they're in the building.
28:47Now I hear they're being escorted down the stairs.
28:49All afternoon, parents sorted through the misinformation and waited not so patiently
28:53inside the lunchroom. No one had a clue what had happened to the kids.
28:56Until the bus pulled up, we all heard their amazing story.
29:00The elevator broke down, so we had to stay there for about six hours.
29:04When you were in it?
29:06Yeah.
29:06What did you do in there for six hours?
29:08We, we got, we panicked.
29:10The kids told their parents how they were packed in like sardines, all 50 of them.
29:14Three chaperones and two tourists from California in one elevator in pitch darkness.
29:20They had cigarette lighters and on and off they would give us light.
29:23And that's all the kids wanted was a little bit of light.
29:26You couldn't see a hand in front of your face.
29:28I wanted a little bit of light, then we shut it off.
29:31And thank God that we were able to get the elevator doors open for air.
29:36Evelyn says the group prayed, sang songs, cried some tears, but never broke down.
29:41The children were so brave.
29:43I couldn't believe it.
29:44We had some crying jegs here and there.
29:46We had a couple of kids with asthma, but all in all, they were really unbelievable.
29:51Six people were killed.
29:53Five Port Authority employees, one of whom was pregnant and a businessman whose car was in the parking garage.
30:00Additionally, over 1,000 people were injured, most during the evacuation that followed the blast.
30:07A report from the U.S. Fire Administration states that among the scores of people who fled to the roofs of the towers, 28 with medical problems were airlifted by New York City police helicopters.
30:22It is known that 15 people received traumatic injuries from the blast and 20 complained of cardiac problems.
30:29One firefighter was hospitalized, while 87 others, 35 police officers and an EMS worker were also injured in dealing with the fires and other aftermath.
30:42Also, as a result of the loss of power, most of New York City's radio and television stations, say for one, WCBS-TV Channel 2, lost their over-the-air broadcast signal for almost a week.
30:55With television stations only being able to broadcast via cable and satellite via a microwave hookup in three of the New York area's largest cable companies, Cablevision, Comcast, and Time Warner Cable, telephone service for much of lower Manhattan was also disrupted.
31:15Youssef's plan was that the north tower would fall into the south tower, collapsing them both.
31:22The tower did not collapse, but the garage was severely damaged in the explosion.
31:28Had the van been parked closer to the WTC's poured concrete foundations, Youssef's plan might have succeeded.
31:36Youssef escaped to Pakistan several hours after the bombing.
31:45Have a good day.
31:47Shit you auch.
31:48Nothing.
31:49That's no one thing you can tell again.
31:54It is!
32:02devices
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32:06v
32:07v
32:12v
32:12v
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32:14v
32:15h
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