Friday, March 23, 2007

Two YouTubes About The Morning Of 9/11

One thing that I've come across again and again over the years is that when a blockbuster story breaks the most important information is gleaned in the first few moments. Something awful happens, say the explosion at the Murrah building in Oklahoma City, and news crews rushed to the scene get raw, emotionally intense, breaking information. In that case just moments after the explosion(s) there were reports of more bombs found inside the structure and everybody quite understandably panicked. More bombs? The later official story said it was Timothy McVeigh and a Ryder truck.

On 9/11 I heard about the attacks on my car radio on my way to a grocery store. Immediately I sped home and settled in for a media marathon, mostly monitoring the internets. It took about an hour until I sensed something very wrong with the coverage. I remember yelling out to my wife who was watching TV in the living room "What's this Osama Bin Laden crap all about?" While the towers burned and ABC showed the falling bodies, they relentlessly intoned OBL's name over and over like it was a mantra.

You see our overlords know that the first moments are crucial. Especially with a lollapalooza extravaganza like Black Tuesday, a black government psy op that they wanted to blame on the designated patsies. From the very first few moments after the first plane hit the cover story needed to be rammed into our vulnerable psyches over and over by well prepared operatives using compliant media outlets. Television coverage was the most important to them, being the medium most used by americans for news and being the best way to play those shocking images over and over again while planting the official fairy tale.



But something happened to flight 93 and it needed to be blown out of the sky over Pennsylvania. The cover story wasn't prepared for a crash at Shanksville and an impact site was hurriedly dug. There was a big problem with all the debris, scattered over an eight mile area, and nothing at the 'impact' crater. Initial reports in this case weren't planted like on the streets of NYC and only later did they come up with the 'Let's Roll' idiocy.



9/11 was sloppily done. The fascists counted on 'shock and awe' which initially worked for the most part in duping Foxified americans, which is why they touted it so smugly before the Iraq invasion. But time isn't going to be so kind to the mass murdering scum. The official fairy tale was shot through with gaping holes the minute they presented it and it fares worse with each new revelation. Like me, thousands of people saw there was something wrong with the picture that day and started saving data for posterity. It's not going away.

3 Comments:

Blogger LesleyinNM said...

Mass murdering scum, a perfect description.
However, I admit falling for it. I hate to admit that, but it is true. I even totally understand people who still won't believe it was anything other than terrorism by Osama and his crew. Nobody wants to know or believe that. It sucks! I held out for the longest time and even though I believed in many other conspiracies, it wasn't until we went into Iraq that I really started to doubt anything and everything the Bushies had to say. Once you know that people have lied to your face, you start examining everything they ever said.

24/3/07 3:43 AM  
Blogger nolocontendere said...

It's positively true, Lesley, anytime one of them opens their piehole, if we believe the opposite of what they say we'll all be better off.

24/3/07 5:18 AM  
Blogger Nina said...

i still remember that day. i was in shock for a long while. however, after a few hours, i began to ask "why do they keep saying osama bin laden and how do they know he's responsible at this early in the game? how come the buildings collapsed the way they did and how could airplanes crashing into them cause such a collapse?" something just didn't feel right inside. i couldn't put my finger on it but i knew i wasn't being shown the truth. in time shock turned to horror and disbelief and ultimately a very depressed sense of acceptance as i began to awaken more and pay attention to those who run this country. an ugly way to learn a lesson. i wrote a song about that day and shared it with the public weeks later. my family came to watch and wept as they heard the song, as they heard me speak about peace. later in the day, we went out for a bite to eat and i was verbally attacked and threatened by my father and his wife for questioning the government. dad was so angry, he had a vein sticking out of his forehead. his wife said it is people like "me" who scare her, knowing i vote. i realized i couldn't even trust my own family with my concerns and suspicions. i ended the conversation by saying "you didn't listen to one word of my lyrics."

for those who continue to believe the official osama story, i don't understand why they aren't showing some public outrage, demanding his capture.

26/3/07 5:09 PM  

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