stilicho
Trurl's Electronic Bard
- Joined
- Feb 6, 2007
- Messages
- 4,757
I am pretty new to this board. My first exposure to 9/11 conspiracy theorists was on another forum. I thought at first that the people I was speaking with were joking when they said they'd discovered secret neocon plans to take over the world. Where did they find these secret plans? Why, on-line, on the PNAC site.
That document, famous by now, was created as a central thesis in David Ray Griffin's book about 9/11.
Most of the arguments I've seen on this and other boards have been among what I'd call skilled amateurs. No professional body has ever endorsed any of the 9/11 conspiracy theories and few of them will issue statements opposing them.
The motives of the conspiracy theorists range, of course, since they are only human. But making money is scarcely the chief among them. The ancient American trait (as almost all of the successful CT'rs are from the USA) of ideological nationalism is prominent in most of them. There is fame, of course. And there is the opportunity, afforded by the internet and cheap publishing tools, to influence opinions that mimics Geraldo and Oprah.
I commend the contributors here who have helped me understand more, through resources like internet detectives and the rebuttals to Loose Change. In turn, I recommend books such as those by Ahmed Rashid and John Miller as well as resources like Parameters, the on-line quarterly journal of the US Army War College.
My favourite CT exchange came with what I figured to be an aging hippie type, who repeated the fond mantra that Usama Bin Laden must be a CIA "asset" since he'd gotten money from them once (never really proven) and hadn't been issued a "pink slip". Apart from the obvious ridiculousness of the scenario, I pointed out to him that the Dalai Lama, too, had received CIA money and had never been issued a "pink slip". Ergo, the Dalai Lama is working for the CIA.
The aging hippie CT'r kicked me off his personal "truth forum" shortly after that.
That document, famous by now, was created as a central thesis in David Ray Griffin's book about 9/11.
Most of the arguments I've seen on this and other boards have been among what I'd call skilled amateurs. No professional body has ever endorsed any of the 9/11 conspiracy theories and few of them will issue statements opposing them.
The motives of the conspiracy theorists range, of course, since they are only human. But making money is scarcely the chief among them. The ancient American trait (as almost all of the successful CT'rs are from the USA) of ideological nationalism is prominent in most of them. There is fame, of course. And there is the opportunity, afforded by the internet and cheap publishing tools, to influence opinions that mimics Geraldo and Oprah.
I commend the contributors here who have helped me understand more, through resources like internet detectives and the rebuttals to Loose Change. In turn, I recommend books such as those by Ahmed Rashid and John Miller as well as resources like Parameters, the on-line quarterly journal of the US Army War College.
My favourite CT exchange came with what I figured to be an aging hippie type, who repeated the fond mantra that Usama Bin Laden must be a CIA "asset" since he'd gotten money from them once (never really proven) and hadn't been issued a "pink slip". Apart from the obvious ridiculousness of the scenario, I pointed out to him that the Dalai Lama, too, had received CIA money and had never been issued a "pink slip". Ergo, the Dalai Lama is working for the CIA.
The aging hippie CT'r kicked me off his personal "truth forum" shortly after that.

stilicho and Dave Rogers.