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Politics : Bush-The Mastermind behind 9/11? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Raymond Duray who wrote (4331)12/7/2003 8:05:31 PM
From: MSI  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 20039
 
The origin of the victims is already listed. Do a ^F search for "Israel" on the page.

Found none at the WTC.

One victim on Flight 175

Alona Avraham, 30, Asdod, Israel
Worked for Applied Materials and was on a visit



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (4331)12/7/2003 8:19:08 PM
From: MSI  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 20039
 
There's a saying, that "witnesses may dissemble by accident or design, but circumstances do not lie".

What we have here is a powerful sort of circumstantial evidence.

Next question is the origins of the other tenant-employees of the WTC.

A similar sort of circumstance occured at the OK bombing, when the ATF department with a couple dozen agents was completely empty.



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (4331)12/7/2003 8:31:46 PM
From: MSI  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 20039
 
Bush Leaguers now starting nuclear scare-mongering:

observer.guardian.co.uk

Bush plans new nuclear weapons

'Bunker-buster' bombs set to end 10-year research ban

Paul Harris in New York
Sunday November 30, 2003
The Observer

The United States is embarking on a multimillion-dollar expansion of its nuclear arsenal, prompting fears it may lead the world into a new arms race.
The Bush administration is pushing ahead with the development of a new generation of weapons, dubbed 'mini-nukes', that use nuclear warheads to penetrate underground bunkers.

Last week, it gave a quiet yet final go-ahead to a controversial research project into the bunker-buster. The move effectively ends a 10-year ban on research into 'low-yield' nuclear weapons. Critics fear it may lead other countries to push ahead with developing such weapons. It also comes at a highly sensitive time diplomatically, with the US lobbying countries such as Iran and North Korea to abandon their nuclear plans.

'The United States is spurring a new global arms race with our own development of a new generation of nuclear weapons,' said Democrat Ellen Tauscher, who led an unsuccessful bid in Congress to have the programme scrapped.