<<<They don't believe a conspiracy involving so many people could be kept secret.>>>
Actually, it hasn't been kept secret, otherwise it wouldn't be possible for so many of us to know about it. What people can't accept is they have been fooled on such a grand scale. At a certain point, it's far more comfortable for them to stay fooled than it is to admit something very terrible happened, especially if it's something terrible enough that something has to be done about it.
<<<They don't believe that the President of the US could be party to a plot which involves murdering his own subjects.>>>
A Republican friend of mine made a similar comment. I pointed out a few items such as the number of persons with knowledge of the Kennedy assassination who died violently shortly after Kennedy was killed, things like Project Northwoods and MK Ultra, evidence that shows Pearl Harbor was an intentional military stand down by FDR, etc.. The funny part is a lot of those items were things he had looked into and was aware of. What it comes down to is about the same as above. People would rather believe a fantasy than accept the fact that something is very wrong.
I think the real issue is there is a great deal of unjustified faith in the media. Most people are completely unaware of just how concentrated media ownership is. They turn on their local TV station and see a story. Their favorite cable channel repeats the same story, as does their favorite radio station and the tabloid that shows up by the front door each morning. They have absolutely no idea that in many cases all of those sources of information are controlled by the same company. Additionally, most folks have no idea of the degree to which government agents have been liberally sprinkled throughout the entire media network.
I've also run across things here and there which strongly suggest the media is using more than a few mind control tactics. That sounds like black helicopter stuff, but some of the techniques are decades old and have been used in the past. Such as one frame showing popcorn in the middle of a movie at a theater. In one CNN clip of the first plane, there is a single frame with a black sillouet of a plane superimposed on the building. In another clip I looked at, that was a amateur video of the aftermath of the attacks, all of the traffic lights were dubbed in red and the soundtrack was loaded up with 14 cycle notes. CNN especially, likes to use streamers across the bottom of the screen with messages that get soaked up along with the pictures being shown.
In the final analysis, a person almost has to wonder if there would actually be a market for news that told the truth. Not that it would be possible to get a license for such a brand of media, but one wonders if anyone would watch it even if it were |