9/11 Commission Report is a Lie
Tuesday, May 16th, 2006 by RLRFrom The Seattle PI
By Richard Curtis
Writing about a speech by one of the members of the 9/11 Commission, P-I columnist Joel Connelly claimed: “Each of us needs to understand why we are doing what we are doing.” (”Sept. 11 show the flaws with protocol,”May
Indeed! The problem is that the “why” we have been told appears to be a complete fiction.
Connelly seems to assume that because the 9/11 Commission was bipartisan that we should accept its conclusions and recommendations. But is that true? Is the commission’s story credible?
The commission’s conclusions and recommendations should be totally rejected. Its story is full of lies, distortions and omissions of fact. Following are two of the more than 40 reasons why the official story about what happened on 9/11 is untrue.
First, who were the hijackers? We do not know. None of those named appear on any of the passenger lists released by the airlines. Most important, six of the men named by the government are still alive and have never even been to the United States. We know that because European media (as reported by The Associated Press, the London Telegraph and the BBC) have interviewed them. It is not a matter of mistaken identity not being noticed or someone using a false passport. The commission insists that the people they named were the hijackers but that claim is demonstrably false.
Read more Lies
Finally, people ae beginning to ask questions about 9/11. Previously, one ran the risk of being called unpatriotic for even presenting the idea that things didn’t add up. This is why I won’t go see “United 93″, it smacks of Goebbels-style propaganda. No one knows for sure what happened on that plane, but my guess is that it’s not what’s being presented. Those people, and 3000+ others, were murdered that day, but there’s nothing heroic about it. At best, Bush’s administration looked the other way….at worst, they were actively involved. Either way, we need to ask the tough questions and get to the truth-we don’t need a show commission that glosses over things, and wraps it all up in a neat little package