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Was 9/11 an 'inside job'?
Posted on Thursday, August 10, 2006 (CDT) by Thoth
More than a third of the American public suspects that federal officials assisted in the 9/11 terrorist attacks or took no action to stop them so the United States could go to war in the Middle East, according to a new Scripps Howard/Ohio University poll.
The national survey of 1,010 adults also found that anger against the federal government is at record levels, with 54 percent saying they "personally are more angry" at the government than they used to be.
Widespread resentment and alienation toward the national government appear to be fueling a growing acceptance of conspiracy theories about the 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
Suspicions
that the 9/11 attacks were "an inside job" -- the common phrase used by
conspiracy theorists on the Internet -- quickly have become nearly as
popular as decades-old conspiracy theories that the federal government
was responsible for President John F. Kennedy's assassination and that
it has covered up proof of space aliens.
Seventy percent of people
who give credence to these theories also say they've become angrier
with the federal government than they used to be.
Thirty-six percent of
respondents overall said it is "very likely" or "somewhat likely" that
federal officials either participated in the attacks on the World Trade
Center and the Pentagon or took no action to stop them "because they
wanted the United States to go to war in the Middle East."
"One out of three sounds
high, but that may very well be right," said Lee Hamilton, former vice
chairman of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the
United States (also called the 9/11 Commission). His congressionally
appointed investigation concluded that federal officials bungled their
attempts to prevent, but did not participate in, the attacks by
al-Qaida five years ago.
"A lot of people I've encountered believe the U.S. government was involved," Hamilton said.
"Many say the government planned the whole thing," he said. "Of course, we don't think the evidence leads that way at all."
The poll also found that 16
percent of Americans speculate that secretly planted explosives, not
burning passenger jets, were the real reason the massive twin towers of
the World Trade Center collapsed.
Conspiracy groups for at
least two years have also questioned why the World Trade Center
collapsed when fires that heavily damaged similar skyscrapers around
the world did not cause such destruction. Sixteen percent said it's
"very likely" or "somewhat likely" that "the collapse of the twin
towers in New York was aided by explosives secretly planted in the two
buildings."
Twelve percent suspect the
Pentagon was struck by a military cruise missile in 2001 rather than by
an airliner captured by terrorists.
University of Florida law
professor Mark Fenster, author of the book "Conspiracy Theories:
Secrecy and Power in American Culture," said the poll's findings
reflect public anger at the unpopular Iraq war, realization that Saddam
Hussein did not have weapons of mass destruction and growing doubts of
the veracity of the Bush administration.
"What has amazed me is not
that there are conspiracy theories, but that they didn't seem to be
getting any purchase among the American public until the last year or
so," Fenster said. "Although the Iraq war was not directly related to
the 9/11 attacks, people are now looking back at 9/11 with much more
skepticism than they used to."
The Scripps Survey Research
Center at Ohio University has tracked the level of resentment people
feel toward the federal government since 1995, starting shortly after
Timothy McVeigh bombed the federal building in Oklahoma City.
Forty-seven percent then said they, personally, feel "more angry at the
federal government" than they used to. That percentage dropped to 42
percent in 1997, 34 percent in 1998 and only 12 percent shortly after
9/11 during the groundswell of patriotism and support for the
government after the attacks.
But the new survey found
that 77 percent say their friends and acquaintances have become angrier
with the government recently and 54 percent say they, themselves, have
become angrier -- both record levels.
The survey also found that
people who regularly use the Internet but who do not regularly use
so-called "mainstream" media are significantly more likely to believe
in 9/11 conspiracies. People who regularly read daily newspapers or
listen to radio newscasts were especially unlikely to believe in the
conspiracies.
"We know that there are a
lot of people now asking questions," said Janice Matthews, executive
director of 911Truth.org, one of the most sophisticated Internet sites
raising doubts about official explanations of the attacks. "We didn't
have the Internet after Pearl Harbor, the Gulf of Tonkin or the Kennedy
assassination. But we live in different times now."
The survey was conducted by
telephone from July 6-24 at the Scripps Survey Research Center at the
University of Ohio under a grant from the Scripps Howard Foundation.
The poll has a margin of error of 4 percentage points.
Copyright: Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Re: Was 9/11 an 'inside job'? by zoarian on Thursday, August 10, 2006 (CDT) (User Info | Send a Message) http://fairiejewelry.com | | Of course it was; I knew the day it happened, the moment i saw it on the news that morning that it was an inside job. So was OK bombing, the trains in Spain, and then again the train bombings in Britain, all inside jobs. We would actually live in a rather peaceful world if it wasnt for the 'inside job terrorists' that keep escalating the fear to hurd the 'sheeple'. |
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Re: Was 9/11 an 'inside job'? by Greg_Gourdian on Thursday, August 10, 2006 (CDT) (User Info | Send a Message) http://tangledintime.blogspot.com/ | I agree that this was an inside job, the point was two-fold...
One - to go to war
Two - to create the Homeland Security fiasco
In my opinion the true purpose of the Homeland Security bureacracy is to find and aid more terrorists so that more restrictions on our civil liberties and more wars overseas may be justified.
Coming next: a short term improvement in our economy as the 2008 elections approach, another terrorist event around the same time if the polls still show poorly for the republicans, or shortly after the inauguration if the republicans can fool the public into re-electing their candidate.
Their agenda has been war, is still war, and will continue to be war. |
Re: Was 9/11 an 'inside job'? (Score: 1) by on Friday, August 11, 2006 (CDT) (User Info | Send a Message) http://fairiejewelry.com | | And this new staged terrorist attack with the planes is just one more thing to escalate this war. There will more than likely be more staged attacks to bring us even closer to marshall law and NWO. |
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Re: Was 9/11 an 'inside job'? (Score: 1) by mabung on Thursday, August 17, 2006 (CDT) (User Info | Send a Message) | The direct forensic evidence was removed off shore with obscene haste, leaving only the circumstantial, and Gov. documents as to action/inactions on the day.
All circumstantial evidence points to an inside job, along with the Video and Audio tapes which were heard/seen once, before being confiscated by the FBI, etc., with the paper work from the airlines being strange, as 2 of the aircraft involved were listed as flying the following day. |
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