April Gallop is making a career as a military person. She was working in the Pentagon on 9/11/01 and had her infant child in daycare within the Pentagon. Both she and her child were injured by the explosion seen to have occurred there.
Sloppy.
"... were injured by the plane crash seen to have occurred there."
Gallop lost her case based on a judge's use of legal ju jit su that required, on the one hand, that the judge accept all well-pleaded (that is to say, well said) claims in the complaint as true;
Sloppy.
The judge did not accept her pleadings as "true".
He made it exquisitely clear that he did NOT believe her assertions, when he said:
"... the fact that she did not see any sign of a plane, assuming that to be true, does NOT mean that no plane hit the Pentagon." [Emphasis added.]
He also made it clear that he did not believe her when he wrote his note at the bottom of page 10. "It should be noted that in a prior lawsuit, Gallop took the position that a passenger airliner did crash into the Pentagon."
He said that even if he assumed to be true the VERY FEW factual assertions that Gallop made (specifically that "gov't officials missed warnings & fighter jets had time to intercept the hijacked airplanes but failed to do so"), she STILL would have no case. Because she had presented zero evidence of any of the conspiracy that she alleged.
The only thing she presented were her wild, unsupported speculations.
Those who support the common storyline do not allow themselves to imagine that storyline is not credible, let alone true, and never proven.
Horse pucky.
More of your sloppiness.
We can easily allow that some people might be evil enough to try to do something like this. We find that there is zero evidence in favor of your speculations. And mountains of evidence against it.
And that, right there, - The Total Absence of Evidence - is what makes your (& Ms. Gallop's) speculation "factually frivolous", "fanciful", "fantastic" AND "delusional".
Although I would have tossed in "brain-dead" myself...
I would say that April Gallop should have a good chance on appeal, based on law and legal theory.
Yeah, but there are three thing that
1. You say lots of things. None of them seem to bear the slightest resemblance to the real world.
2. You appear to have zero appreciation of either law or legal theory.
3. As evidence of 2. above, you don't appear to understand what the phrase "with prejudice" means.
Still, when the real story of 9/11 is revealed and the question is asked whether there were people living in this era who figured out that the delusion was the other way around, the answer will by "yes" and April Gallop will be an example.
Sure thing. When your "Rebel Alliance" defeats the Empire...
Whatever you say, Luke.
Posters, we do not know what the Vice President did on 9/11 do we? After all, he was not obliged to say what he did on 9/11 to the Commission appointed to investigate the event and whatever he did say was not recorded.
What Cheney did on 9/11 is documented down to the minute.
Your repeated assertion that "unless it is proven in a trial, then it didn't happen" is your personal delusion.
Thus, the judge's opinion of what the vice president did or did not do is simply based on the judge's buy-in, hook, line and sinker, no less, to the common storyline and the judge's incredulity that someone who was present and injured could question that storyline.
More of your delusions.
The judge's ruling was based precisely, not "approximately", precisely, to zero extent on the actions of Dick Cheney on 9/11.
The fact that this is the BESTEST delusion that you can come up with for your Merry Pason moment shows how pathetically lame your contentions really are.
beachnut, the day of reckoning is coming. That day will likely be a difficult one for you as your world view will then come undone.
Big talk from small boys.