I don't, either. There should be many questions, each of them critical. But I'll settle for one. You'll note I still haven't gotten any.
This is a minor point, since you've stated clearly that there should be many. But if the same person asks, say, 2 critical questions, and you answer one satisfactorily, but not the other, we could have a situation where one concludes that there is both no conspiracy and conspiracy, an obvious contradiction.
I've read and seen commentary from the Jersey Girls, in particular "Press for Truth." Their questions have been answered, but it seems to have had little effect.
Have they actually documented all of their questions, in written form? I was under the impression that they have hundreds of unanswered questions, but I don't know that they've collated them for the public.
FWIW, I was in Manhattan today, and took a flyer from a 911 truth activist. It claims that the 911 Commission failed to answer 70% of the "questions the victims families had". This is a superset of the Jersey girls, which doubtless has some advantages (more manpower) and disadvantages (the Jersey girls are articulate, level-headed, and, if I'm not mistaken, shy away from embracing scientific claims that they have no expertise in. I would not assume that the victim families, in general, are such powerful proponents for a serious investigation.)
Unfortunately, this claim isn't documented.
If you wish to adopt one of their questions as your own critical question, I'll be glad to discuss it with you.
Maybe somebody who has more time than me can get a hold of the Jersey girls and produce some for you.
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Still, from my perspective, the more important question is "How many of the questions which have gone unanswered by the government can we possibly get answered by it as long as only incremental improvements are made in it's integrity?" That's assuming that, in the near term, we get a President Obama, and that there are any improvements, at all.
I correctly predicted that if the Democrats took control of Congress, they would still not do anything wrt 911. A bigger bunch of wusses is hard to imagine. (Even so, I prefer them to Republicans.)
I don't like to discourage activists, even when they pursue goals I don't believe in. However, I hope any activist who reads this will consider this question - does it make sense to a) beg and embarrass public officials to do a serious investigation, to the exclusion of other political activity, or does it
b) in fact make far more sense to focus on replacing unresponsive, cowardly and/or corrupted elected officials with better ones?.
I definitely vote for "b", and would direct activists to dailykos.com as a jumping off place for people investigating how to organize themselves via cyberspace to fund and otherwise support political candidates that they believe in. You can also check out pdamerica.org. For libertarian, populist Republicans, there are certainly groups, though I don't know of any funding success for a non-mainstream Republican candidate, with the notable exception of Ron Paul. Also, unlike bona fide election successes amongst progressive Democrats, there's no way that Ron Paul will get elected as a Republican.
That 911 activists are so poorly organized that they can't scrape together $1 per citizen per month, for research and outreach purposes, where said citizen believes that the US government is hiding something significant and could have prevented the attacks, says a great deal about the immaturity of activism in the US, in general. I don't think that 911 activists are very different from other groups, in this regard. Have you ever heard of an anti-global warming group which effectively uses crowd-funding, ala dailykos, to target any demographic group (e.g., high school students) with their message? I don't know of any.
In any event, there's such a huge resistance to serious 911 investigation on the one hand, and indifference amongst others (who assume the official story is hunky dory), I don't see where getting 911 Truth candidates elected is a viable strategy in the near future. (Let's not even talk about the handicapping effect of our pathetic media.) The only strategy that makes sense to me is to first get honest candidates elected, who actually respect the Constitution, (sufficient to not have any problem impeaching traitors to same, e.g.) and
then, after they've cleaned out the government of more obvious corruption, go after more insidious examples of it. 911 is just one more example, doubtless grander in scope, but it's certainly not the only skeleton in the closet. Like many activists before them, whose efforts ended up getting wasted, many 911 Truth activists assume that their cause is so important, in and of itself, that it alone can carry the day.
I've been around the block enough times to not only see the falsity of single-issue activism, but I've so soured on it that I think it's immoral. Activists don't make laws, Congress does. If you have a corrupt Congress, even if you successfully beg them to do the right thing this year on whatever issue you believe is so essential, what's to prevent them from reversing themselves next year?
So, in the case of 911, if a serious investigation began in '09, e.g., and we find out that pilots were given suspicious orders but were told to keep their mouths shut about it, the investigation may eventually yield a superior who clearly interfered with an effective response, for reasons yet to be divulged. As '10 approached, and the defendant was 'sweated', cowardly politicians comprising Congress lose their nerve, terminate the investigation, perhaps offering up the superior as a sacrificial, traitorous, lamb.
I'm speaking hypothetically, but the point remains - if you have corrupted, cowardly individuals in the seats of power, you can beg them to do the right thing until the cows come home. In the end, they will manifest their inner selves, and if that inner self is a "go along to get along" coward, who wouldn't stick up for the Constitution or what's right if cost them more than 1 hours worry, they will fail to perform their duty, sooner or later.
Judged by the criteria of even getting Congresspersons to talk about 911 critically, even outside the halls of Congress, the 911 Truth movement has failed. Nevertheless, I suspect that by pressing the issue, it has spread awareness amongst Congress critters, military, and intelligence (no "everybody in on it" nonsense, please), who may have done what they can to prevent further false flag attacks. All the more reason for me not to criticize 911 activists too severely, even if some of them rudely interrupt public speeches, and fall into the same single-issue pitfall which is holding back many other activist groups.
IMO, until 911 activists get smarter, and the US government is cleaned up by a responsible citizenry (most of whom probably have little interest in 911, so many years after the event) there is little chance that serious, extant questions,
and obvious followups which become so as the initial questions get answered, will get asked in a serious investigation.