46% Of Americans Suspect 9/11 Was An *Inside Job*
On this 12th Anniversary of what a lot of people (including myself) believe was an inside job, I am literally dumbfounded by people who are still drinking the kool aid that was served up the by the Bush administration all those years ago. I hope that one day the smoking gun evidence will eventually be found or someone will blow the whistle… cause that is what it is likely going to take for a lot of people to wake up and realize what really happened that day.
A lot more people are starting to suspect what many of us have thought for a while. This act was not committed by 19 Saudis with box cutters. At the bottom of this article, I am going to post a few videos that present questions that poke holes into the government’s weak explanation. It’s quite an interesting piece that take the time to connect a few dots and make the puzzle a little more clear.
Basically I dare you to watch the video and then try to tell me with a straight face that it wasn’t an inside job. I double dare you!
Peter
Why 46% Of Americans Suspect 9/11 Was An Inside Job
On the 12th anniversary of the attacks that forever changed this country, a new poll came out by the internet market research group YouGov. The poll dealt with governmental claims concerning what happened on September eleven, and how much the public has bought into them. After being shown a 30-second video of the Building 7 collapse, respondents were then asked how they interpreted the source of the building collapse.
An amazing 46% said they thought the building collapsed as the result of a controlled demolition, compared to just 28% who believe the official account of a fire. Additionally, 38% of respondents said they had trouble believing the government’s broader account of what happened on that fateful day, 10% do not believe the government at all, and 12% don’t know what to believe. But this extends beyond September 1. What this poll and others like it point to is a profound breakdown in Americans’ trust for major institutions. Americans have simply lost faith in the institutions that have historically secured the trust of large amounts of people, whether it’s the government, the church, the media, corporations, or even vaccination programs. Gross abuses within these institutions by U.S. leaders has spurred major contempt and distrust, and with each abuse made public, the level of paranoia appears to grow.
And this cannot be characterized as totally irrational or excessively paranoid. After all, these are the same institutions that led us into an unnecessary, expensive, and bloody war all built on a lie. These are the same institutions that defrauded homeowners through lending practices and foreclosure fraud. These are the same institutions that have proven that they are more interested in covering the skin of their own, and shielding themselves from prosecution, than investigating serious crimes like child rape. Stories like the more recent NSA revelations, as important as they are, have become less and less surprising. Americans have simply lost faith in the ability of major institutions and their leaders to tell the truth.
Faced with a mountain of evidence implicating major institutions, American distrust can in fact be characterized as rational. In that light, it becomes easier (but not too much easier) to comprehend the strange Sandy Hook conspiracies that were floating around. It may explain some of the visceral opposition to a Syrian strike as well. If you are out long enough, you can feel the levels of paranoia in the air. It becomes readily apparent when you tell someone that you are studying political science, and they take the time to convey to you their seemingly whacky conspiracy theory about one issue or another. Of course there has always been groups of people that have held fast to the conspiracy theory model of explanation. But as this.
People feel like they don’t have much to hold on to. This feeling was articulated in an op-ed by Thomas Day on the heels of the Jerry Sandusky revelations. Day, an Iraq war veteran, Penn State graduate, Catholic, and a member of the now infamous second mile program, appears to be the poster boy of this phenomenon on resume alone. Day states:
“This week the world found the very worst of human nature in my idyllic Central Pennsylvania home. I found that a man my community anointed a teacher and nurturer of children, instead reportedly had them hiding in his basement. The anger and humiliation were more than I could bear. I can’t wait for my parents’ generation’s Joshua any longer. They’ve lost my faith.”
While the characters within the story may be different, this larger story of distrust when it comes to leaders and institutions to do right is becoming increasingly shared. Crumbling trust in major institutions is not a desirable feature of any society.
To paraphrase Robert De Niro, once you break that circle of trust, you are out — and that appears to be where our major institutions are headed at the moment.
Yes, it sound pretty much impossible for Tower 7 to collapse on its own given it not been hit and was not on fire. The bad thing is that 12 years later there is no exposure.
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I doubt it was an inside job. With that said I think it was handled poorly and the intelligence our government here in America received was not taken seriously enough.
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I heard nothing about Building 7 in Australia at the time. I know noone died in that building but not even hearing a passing mention of it collapsing was just the beginning of my doubting of the version of events everyone was fed by the govts and mainstream media. Looked up basic scientific facts and that was it.
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http://www.policymic.com/articles/63215/building-7-why-conspiracy-theorists-get-it-wrong http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2056088/Footage-kills-conspiracy-theories-Rare-footage-shows-WTC-7-consumed-fire.html Furthermore, the Bush Administration was incompetent, corrupt, and unprepared in every major crisis from Iraq to Katrina. But you believe they pulled the greatest deception in US
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history (with no leaks or chatter in the ensuing years). THEN instead of using it to facilitate war in Iraq they started a ground war in Afghanistan, also known as the Graveyard of Empires. And who crashed the planes into the WTC?
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The laws of probability, thermodynamics and thermochemistry dictate that military-grade un-reacted nano-thermite does not form spontaneously, and office fires of hydrocarbons burning in air of up to 21% oxygen CANNOT melt iron or steel. The time evolution of a spontaneous process will be in the direction of increasing entropy; thus, a sophisticated, highly energetic, nano-engineered accelerant comprising 40 nm-thick aluminum plates and 100 nm iron oxide grains requires a ‘creator’ – therefore an accelerant was planted, which couldn’t have been done by foreign terrorists. In other words, it was planted by someone on the inside. And by inside job, we don’t mean the Bush Administration, it’s a reference to someone who is not foreign. That this act was committed by an American, not Al Queda.
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My issue is that there still doesn’t seem to be a consensus — even the professional opinion is split right down the middle, on whether it was an inside job or not, which isn’t exactly assuring. However, my grain of salt is this: when did the Bush Administration EVER show enough cunning and intelligence to stage a massive terrorist attack AND destroy highly visible buildings AND (according to some) re-locate everyone supposedly killed on the planes AND manage to keep it all quiet, especially with tens of thousands of civilians involved? Especially so in America, a country that talks about its farts with disturbing candor. I’m POSITIVE that by now, at least one low guy on the totem pole would have said something, if it was an inside job, just for the attention.
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