Save the Sphere (Koenig's Sphere, WTC)

Save the Sphere (Koenig's Sphere, WTC) Please sign the petition to include the Sphere as part of the 9/11 Memorial:

http://www.petitiononline.com/CptBurke/petition.html

https://nypost.com/2025/08/23/us-news/exec-salaries-skyrocket-while-cash-strapped-9-11-museum-continues-to-bleed-red-sla...
08/24/2025

https://nypost.com/2025/08/23/us-news/exec-salaries-skyrocket-while-cash-strapped-9-11-museum-continues-to-bleed-red-slap-in-the-face/

Here’s an idea for the perpetual in the red memorial and museum foundation: return the iconic Koenig Sphere to the site and sell little bronze spheres in the gift shop. In fact, make it your brand icon and sell t-shirts and caps with it. Just think that maybe a symbol of strength and resilience would work better than two immense, ever draining nihilistic “voids.”

08/24/2025

Not sure that managing at the Nat’l September 11 Museum and Memorial should put you in the top 2% of American income. Some of these salaries are more than the combined salaries of many of the fire companies that were wiped out in response, 9/11.

It was recently revealed that the Port Authority will install lights in Liberty Park so the iconic sculpture the Koenig ...
07/28/2025

It was recently revealed that the Port Authority will install lights in Liberty Park so the iconic sculpture the Koenig Sphere, the sole artifact of the WTC to survive the attacks intact, can be lit at night. However, the question is: why is the Sphere in Liberty Park in the first place? Why isn't it on the memorial plaza? Why wasn't it returned to where it stood for nearly 30 years, to where miraculously survived the attacks in place? To where it was embraced by Ground Zero workers as a reverent symbol of strength and resilience? So that it might stand at the memorial as an authentic reminder of the attacks? The answer, as they say, will surprise you.

Please see!
04/28/2023

Please see!

Each year since 2015, the Tunnel to Towers Foundation has held the Tunnel to Towers Tower Climb NYC at One World Observatory at One World Trade Center in New York City. One thousand participants climb 104 stories, symbolizing strength, hope and the resiliency of the American spirit. The event celebr...

The zeal, courage and good behavior of the officers and men of September 11 was commendable to the extreme. A heavy task...
03/09/2022

The zeal, courage and good behavior of the officers and men of September 11 was commendable to the extreme. A heavy task was before them, they were equal to it and we shall remember with pride that at the WTC they did their country much service.

Today is the birthday of FDNY Capt. William Burke. He was born on March 9, 1956, and would have been 66 years old today. We will never forget the ultimate sacrifice that he made on September 11, 2001.

William F. Burke Jr., captain‚ FDNY‚ Engine 21. Burke‚ who was known as Billy‚ was with the FDNY for more than two decades‚ following in the footsteps of his father‚ an FDNY officer. A natural leader and mentor‚ Burke was an instructor at the Fire Academy. He also spent many summers working as a lifeguard at Robert Moses State Park on Long Island. Burke loved Elvis Presley and Frank Sinatra. Civil War history fascinated him and he had visited Gettysburg several times.

He always made everything better.

(National Fallen Firefighters Foundation)
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Please see, sign and share:
08/14/2020

Please see, sign and share:

9/11 Tribute In Lights

08/14/2020

The 9/11 Memorial and Museum have unilaterally announced that there will be no “Tribute in Lights” this year due to Covid concerns. See: Tribute in Light

Tribute in Light, the world’s beloved twin beams of light, will not shine over lower Manhattan as part of this year’s 9/11 commemoration. This incredibly difficult decision was reached in consultation with our partners after concluding the health risks during the pandemic were far too great for the large crew required to produce the annual Tribute in Light. We hope to resume this iconic tribute for the 20th anniversary. In a spirit of unity and remembrance, the city will come together for a “Tribute in Lights” initiative to inspire the world and honor the promise to never forget.

Construction crews are in fact working all across the City. Hundreds were housed at the Sheraton NY Times Square for the past week in response to the storm. They were bused from the hotel to place of work. The infection rate in NYC has dropped to less than 1%. New cases as of two days numbered about 60, with 4 new hospitalizations city wide and 0 deaths. And 40 workers cannot assemble the lights without fear of contamination? Sorry, but this smells like a cost saving effort. IDK how much it costs but DeBlasio and Cuomo, both of whom who have mastered the art of obnoxious politicking during the pandemic, need to step up and get this done. NYC owe it to the memory of the lost and to our City to ensure that those lights happen.

A humble suggestion for Amazon:
02/26/2019

A humble suggestion for Amazon:

Queens campus is lost, but there's a feel-good alternative in Lower Manhattan

Look at your program, that picture of Billy. Do you see the confidence with which he looks back at you? Even a glint of ...
09/11/2018

Look at your program, that picture of Billy. Do you see the confidence with which he looks back at you? Even a glint of the devil in his eye? He knows something we don’t. What is it he knows?

On June 30th and July 1st, 1863, at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, General John Buford of the Union forces, against overwhelming odds and with great acts of courage, led his men to victory. It was the decisive days of the decisive battle of the decisive war in this nation’s history.

I know this because Billy knew this and could stand on a hillside in Gettysburg and describe it all to you, in detail. He loved great stories of ordinary men rising to extraordinary valor when faced with extreme conditions. He was fond of telling friends: “I am John Buford.”

Honor survives.

So, therefore, this is not about who Billy was but rather who Billy is. The men of Bunker Hill, Gettysburg and Iwo Jima have never died. The Honor and Courage of the men of Bunker Hill lived on in the men of Gettysburg, and that the men of Gettysburg lived on in those of Iwo Jima, and that men of Iwo Jima lived on, and lives on, in the men of September 11th.

Honor lives on but grief does not. Grief fades as surely as we, each of us (in this church), must all face some day. And in the years to come, when the last loved one is gone -- so goes the grief. But their honor survives. And so those who sacrificed, the ones we now mourn, survive the survivors. Long after we are forgotten they shall be remembered.

Future generations of firefighters and many others will remember them and speak their names aloud; they shall be passed on from father to son -- and good and proud men will swear they know the men of September 11th as well as they know their own hearts. They will swear (probably over a pint) that they are those men of September 11th.

“Billy McGinn, Paddy Brown, Billy Burke.” And perhaps the especially astute one, the real student, like Billy, will go further back and remember the men of the South Bronx who fought hundreds of fires and saved countless lives -- Deputy Chief William F. Burke, Sr., Al Niemchek, Frankie Burns, Jim Corcoran.

And these future generations, some not yet born, when tested under fire will use them, these men of September 11th, these God’s handful, as their courage and their honor.

And when we have become dust, they live on.

Weeks after the battle of Gettysburg, this is what John Buford wrote:

“The zeal, bravery and good behavior of the officers and men on the night of June 30th and during July 1st, was commendable to the extreme. A heavy task was before us; we were equal to it and shall remember with pride that at Gettysburg we did our country much service.”

“The zeal, bravery, and good behavior of the officers and men of September 11th was commendable to the extreme. A heavy task was before them; they were equal to it and we shall remember with pride that at New York City they did their country much service.”

Billy had a rendezvous with destiny. Look at that picture again.

This is what he knows: A hundred years from now a young man will stare intently at his girlfriend and rap his knuckles against the table and say: “I am Captain Billy Burke.”

Eulogy, St. Patrick’s Cathedral, NYC, October 25, 2001.

Wow. This is some job. If you’re in NYC for the anniversary you owe it to yourself to see it: 49th St and Third Ave. It’...
09/07/2018

Wow. This is some job. If you’re in NYC for the anniversary you owe it to yourself to see it: 49th St and Third Ave. It’s even more impressive live. Great work. Stop by; photograph and post.

Billy and Woody came into together at the academy in ‘81. Woody passed away 2016 due to 9/11, Ground Zero related cancer...
08/05/2018

Billy and Woody came into together at the academy in ‘81. Woody passed away 2016 due to 9/11, Ground Zero related cancer.

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Liberty Park, 155 Cedar Street
New York, NY
10006

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