<<<they want it cooked, pre-digested and simple>>>
For the most part, I believe that is what the majority of researchers have attempted to do on most of the sites devoted to the subject. There are also a few sites which have done an exceptional job of creating a massive database of every known piece of evidence related to the topic. That's important and my hat's off to those who have put in the effort, but I agree it's way too much information for the average person to wade through to get to the bottom line.
I agree distilling the information down to the inescapable minimum is a tough job. There have been quite a few discussions on this board related to "What do you show someone who honestly doesn't know what happened?".
I revised the original post on this board awhile back and at the time was hoping for some feedback. I imagine most folks who visit this thread on a regular basis use the "ignore original post" feature as the message board is unwieldy otherwise. I'd still be interested in seeing any comments anyone may have on the revision. What I was trying to do was boil down the best documented evidence and connect the dots in such a way that a person new to the information would be able to see the pattern with a minimum amount of effort. No doubt it could stand to be cleaned up as far as the literary style is concerned, but after I got it up, I didn't want to keep going back making new revisions just to change a few words here and there. The idea was to show motive, means and opportunity, while also showing the lack of credibility of the "Osama and 19 Arab hijackers done it." story. As much as possible, I tried to avoid side issues, over speculation, and getting bogged down in over documentation. I'm not sure how well I met those ends, but that's about what I think a documentary on 9/11 should try to do. Keep it short and sweet, but fill it out enough to make the case.
IMO, if the truth about what happened on 9/11 is ever going to break beyond a niche tucked away on the Internet, the information will have to find a means of distribution to reach a whole lot more people in mainstream America. The major media outlets won't touch it, at least not before a huge cross section of the population demands the truth. A 30-40 minute movie file that can be easily copied and passed around might be the answer. |