With regard to the steady decline in WTC occupancy & other miscellaneous details I included about the WTC buildings, I respectfully withdraw those remarks. I
would like to comment on the link that was posted & referred to several times, though:
In conclusion, we have shown that the World Trade Center did not have tenancy problems; they did not have money problems; and there is no reason to believe that asbestos problems were not manageable.
Not exactly. They clearly showed that tenancy was not a problem, and how the towers had a $200M asbestos problem as opposed to a $1B problem. They also state that
9/11 Mysteries did not cite a source for their claim that the towers were "big money-losers".. but that doesn't mean "they did not have money problems".
As documented in several news articles from the mid-90s, the Port Authority initially decided to sell/lease a portion of the WTC complex to "maximize the benefit" of the properties. There are other thinly veiled references to profitability throughout articles published in the years leading up to the lease finalization. I'm not saying that alone is enough to support the claim that the towers were "big money-losers"; however, I do believe it's enough to require a source if you want to say they
weren't.
Either way- I'm not suggesting that the existence of asbestos in the WTC towers factored (at all) into the initial decision to
plan the 9/11 attacks; although, I do believe it played some role in deciding on
targets for the attacks. A $200M problem is a $200M problem, no matter which way you slice it.
He's got real terrorist threats, but no real terrorist participants in the 9/11 attack.
This was mentioned several times - I'm not sure I understand why this is so unbelievable. They knew there was a threat, and they knew we were vulnerable. The most effective way to address that vulnerability was to react to the actual attack, but that would defeat the purpose.
So instead of letting terrorists execute the attack on their terms, against targets of their choosing, the U.S. government stepped in and executed a similar attack on
their own terms, against targets of
their own choosing. The resulting number of casualties and overall (negative) impact was nowhere near the potentially catastrophic attack the terrorists were planning.
You can use your imagination to determine what those targets were - I'm purposely not suggesting anything in the interest of good taste.
So as a result, we reaped the benefits of a major terrorist attack, while minimizing casualties (in comparison) & eliminating most of the unknowns. The best comparison I can think of right now is giving your son or daughter
the talk about "the birds & the bees". You know that someone is going to talk to them about it at some point, so you want to be that someone to make sure they get an accurate explanation at the right time in their life (but if you wait too long.. it won't matter).