realitybites
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Jun 1, 2006
- Messages
- 1,066
You've got to appreciate the New World Order's willingness to leave clues.
!Wait, back up. So in Alex Jones' worldview, the Red Cross is in on the conspiracy? They're part of the NWO?
Who isn't part of it?
Jason Bermas

So...we're supposed to be scared of the fear-mongering? What kind of mongering is that?
I don't know about that. I mean, the words "terrorist strike" are right there and the small print says "bio-chemical weapon".
I imagine that's not exactly how most people would go about raising concern about the aftermath of a hurricane.
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I'd also like to point out the billboard and website were apparently created by/for the Greater Buffalo Red Cross. Infowars claims these billboards "have been going up across America recently", but predictably fails to provide evidence to support this.
I have to differ with you. A storm like Katrina was going to eventually hit New Orleans, a city built below sea level. Everyone knew this for decades. Katrina was a complete collapase of city, state and federal government who knew this was going to happen for 50 years and failed to act. Yes there is alot of pointing fingers because none of them took responsibility. All 3 levels of government were exposed for the frauds that they are.Point 2: I can't imagine a better object lesson or illustration of the complete and total lack of preparedness for *any* form of large-scale emergency than the aftermath of Katrina. I think it showed that the type of intra-national cooperation and volunteerism that we saw immediately after 9/11 is long gone. After Katrina, we went back to doing what Americans do best, which apparently is avoiding accountability, shifting blame, pointing fingers, and playing politics. I have no doubt that it made for a very instructive chapter in Ayman al-Zawahiri's notebook. But that's a topic for a different subforum.
http://dukenews.duke.edu/2006/07/katrina.htmlBUSH ADMINISTRATION INCOMPETENCE DURING KATRINA, 9/11 -- As significant anniversaries for Katrina and Sept. 11 approach, historian William Chafe says the two events will be remembered as moments that define the Bush administration as incompetent. “Looking back, Katrina and Sept. 11 will be bookends for an administration that has failed to appreciate and respond effectively to the information it receives,” says Chafe, a former president of the Organization of American Historians. Chafe is currently drafting the sixth edition of his book “The Unfinished Journey: America Since WWII,” which will include events up through Katrina. “Both disasters were marked by failure to appropriately deal with intelligence,” Chafe says. “With Sept. 11, you had the Aug. 6 memo warning of terrorist plans to hijack airplanes that was ignored. With Katrina, you had a National Weather Service report delivered to the White House the night before the hurricane hit. In both cases, the officials responsible for handling the information resigned, but neither George Tenet nor Michael Brown was an aberration in the Bush administration. The administration as a whole was characterized by an inability to identify the seriousness of a situation and then respond decisively and effectively.”
Back on the woo juice, Perry?The same incompetence that let 9/11 happen also let New Orleans be destroyed:
http://dukenews.duke.edu/2006/07/katrina.html
This incompetence is also the best proof possible that 9/11 was not an inside job.
Worst President Ever™. Everybody knows it. If this Administration had planned 9/11, 9/11 would never have happened.Back on the woo juice, Perry?
DR
The same incompetence that let 9/11 happen also let New Orleans be destroyed:
By not destroying FEMA. Bush has filled the Federal government with incompetents and political lackeys. He has injected corruption into every cell of the Federal government.This doesn't make sense. Are you saying the US Government could have stopped New Orleans from being destroyed?
How?
By moving it?