Yes, Incognito is correct. But what you need for experiencing the real thing is this little bag of rainbows which Guiliani and Pataki and Bush hand out to special visitors. I grabbed a bunch of these grandiloquenizers from Red Cross which freely dispenses them to the cadaver bits mongerers. The NY Times reports today how hard it is to get on the WTC site if you are not a celebrity, a friend of the Mayor or Governor, or a source of funds to rebuild the profanely sacred site. Not even the press can break the embargo, unless a press celeb. The terrorism nuttiness extends to the American Institute of Architects who, the Times reports today, is issuing a warning to its members not to disclose building information. I don't belong to that fruitcake-cartel which is about as courageous as City and State and Federal officials when it comes to guarding its nearly worthless information. AIA does only what it takes to get its members jobs. I tried to do volunteer work for the local AIA chapter surveying buildings around WTC, but later learned that its program is open only to members seeking paid work at the disaster. I was at the WTC site following a volunteer inspection of a local terrified office renter who called the AIA for assistance and was given a list of expensive architects whose fees have jumped, and told no volunteers available. Word of mouth got me. And I got to the WTC for excellent payment.