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diabolical globalist
- Joined
- Oct 29, 2006
- Messages
- 10,017
You realise that he almost single-handedly changed the face of 20th century linguistics, right?
I know, I heard that Pol Pot was a big fan.
You realise that he almost single-handedly changed the face of 20th century linguistics, right?
Evidently it is understood that the commission cannot find any real faults with elected politicians and their appointed civil servants. The result will be the usual white wash and elected politicians and their civil servants can carry on as usual. Any politician or civil servant trying to break rank or private citizen for that matter will be intimidated to simply shut up and support the government as a good patriot.
Mirror, mirror, on the wall
Who's the best at giving mechanisms for organizational protection
Against investigations and dissenters
Certainly, not you all
Mirror, mirror, on the wall
Who's the best at giving mechanisms for organizational protection
Against investigations and dissenters
Certainly, not you all
2. I suspect that if someone accused your mother of murder and you knew that she was innocent, I doubt that you'd just sit back, say "live and let live" and forget about it, especially if those same people were trying to take her to court or worse.
Are you going to give specifics on how this theory applies to the 911 Commission? Here's the way I see it: you've got a bi-partisan commission composed of two rival parties vying for power, each would love to see the others' demise. If there was something incriminating to the other party, they would have found it. There's no there there.
I was tempted to give Heiwa 1 point.
I didn't, though, because no strong arguments are presented as to why this is an example of a deceptive whitewash. If the 'World at Risk' document is considered a "big joke" in Europe, certainly there must be reasons given by some serious people who have gone through it, carefully.
Like other 911 Investigations, the approved conclusion was decided on before the investigation began.
Since you didn't bump those other threads and instead started a new one, I fail to see how pointing out Chomsky doesn't believe 9/11 conspiracies in a thread using Chomsky's hypothesis about government to suggest a 9/11 conspiracy is "derailing" it.
I know very, very little about Operation Gladio.
So why do you invoke it as an example?
I invoke it as an example of a hint to be pursued, for the reasons that I gave. There's only a few sentences in the post directly above yours and about half of them answer your question. How did you miss it?
The two questions I posed can be considered to have 3 parts, each. In each and every one of those 6 cases, I have made it clear that the premise involves cause for the protective mechanisms to be invoked.
Since Chomsky rejects the notion of 911 LIHOP and 911 MIHOP completely, his statements for these two 911 related cases of mine, which presuppose LIHOP and MIHOP, are irrelevant, since what they are presupposing is the exact opposite of what Chomsky is claiming. (Not in so many words.)
If we asked Chomsky the question "Well, suppose some parts of the US government did LIHOP 911, what sort of mechanisms would we then expect to see to protect against serious investigations and internal dissent from those parts?", then it would be rather dumb, or at least obviously evasive, of Chomsky to answer "But I think LIHOP is nonsense." That's because Chomsky understands what the word "suppose" means. Do you?
Needless to say, invoking this Chomsky non-argument makes even less sense in the other 4 cases.
Is the US state your Mummy?
No it absolutely doesn't. Chomsky himself understands there are more factors at work than the formula he himself wrote, and that it doesn't apply to 9/11.
The only way one can make it apply is to "suppose," to which I counter "suppose unicorns brought down the towers." In that case I could use childrens' books as evidence as relevant as what you're doing in this thread.
Noam Chomsky, when describing subtle methods of control in academia, journalism, etc. in the book Understanding Power ( p. 242), wrote:
Noam Chomsky said:"I mean, even if it were true, which is extremely unlikely, who cares? It doesn't have any significance. It's a little bit like the huge energy that's put out on trying to figure out who killed John F. Kennedy. Who knows, and who cares? Plenty of people get killed all the time, why does it matter that one of them happened to be John F. Kennedy?"