>>1591053 (lb)
Frame that photo if you haven't already.
"Man On Wire" - Gymnopédie No. 1
>#2001-9-11 We Will Never Forget Edition
Explosiv: Donald Trump Interview on 11. September 2001 -
@5:05 -
INTERVIEWER: "At some point, we're gonna put this all behind us. And you as an visionary, what are we to do as a city, as a people, when the mourning stops, when the dead are honored, when we found what caused it and maybe corrected it. What do we need to do?"
DJT : Well, I guess the big thing you'll have to do is
N_ F__.
https://hooktube.com/watch?v=vJqcD-fozYw
>- Explosiv: Donald Trump Interview on 11. September 2001 -
@0:39 -
INTERVIEWER : "…or possibly by bombs or aftershocks. Do you have any thoughts on that?
DJT : "Well, there was an architectual defect. The World Trade Center was always known as a very, very strong building. Don't forget, there was that big bomb in the basement. Now the basement is your most vulnerable place because that's your foundation…and it withstood that.
And I got to see that area about 3 or 4 days after it took place because one of my structural engineers actually took me for a tour… because HE DID THE BUILDING…
>>>1591054
>>>1591063
>>>1591077
>>>1591175
Brown Brothers Harriman Building
aka Marine Midland Building
140 Broadway btw Cedar and Liberty, NYC
–1 block away from the former World Trade Center.
The building, completed in 1967, is 688 feet tall and is known for the distinctive sculpture at its entrance, Isamu Noguchi's Cube.
Gordon Bunshaft of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, the man who designed the building, had originally proposed a monolith type sculpture, but it was deemed to be too expensive.
>https://infogalactic.com/info/Brown_Brothers_Harriman_%26_Co.
Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. (BBH) is the oldest and largest private bank in the United States.[2][3]
In 1931, the merger of Brown Brothers & Co. (founded in 1818) and Harriman Brothers & Co. formed the current BBH.
Brown Brothers Harriman is also notable for the number of influential American politicians, government appointees, and Cabinet members who have worked at the company, such as W. Averell Harriman, Prescott Bush,
Robert A. Lovett, Richard W. Fisher, Robert Roosa, and Alan Greenspan.