To: Raymond Duray who wrote (10014 ) 2/17/2005 11:40:18 AM From: Don Earl Respond to of 20039 I'd go along with most of Kubiak's basic contentions. If the truth of 9/11 ever becomes common knowledge in America, the potential to return America to the people strikes me as a very real possibility. Never the less, the continuing mantra that we need another official investigations leaves me cold. Anyone with half a brain has to know it'll never happen simply by wishing it were so, if it happens at all. For that matter, anyone with half a brain knew the first investigation was a dead end from day one. So everyone gets a warm fuzzy feeling from sending a letter to the New York Attorney General. For a group of people insisting America needs a wake up call, the level of delusionary thinking that persists in the so called 9/11 truth movement is staggering. The front door is closed. Standing around knocking on it just makes these clowns look like a bunch of simpletons. At this late date it should be obvious to even the least intellectually gifted that the only way in is through the back door. There are only two ways another investigation will take place and it will not be a Federal investigation in either case; 1. A privately funded investigation. or 2. A state investigation created by a referendum ballot. Off hand, I'd say collecting signatures, in any State that allows grass roots legislation, would be one honey of a way to draw attention to a lot of the issues. Getting a 9/11 investigation on State ballots might actually have a chance of accomplishing something. Additionally, it would go a long way toward creating a vehicle to increase public awareness of the issues. As things stand, the entire 9/11 "truth movement" is characterized by a state of pure anarchy. How does a concerned citizen participate in such? By sending a donation to help cover bandwidth costs on several million sites? I think there's a point where continuing to define the problem is counter productive. If anyone really wants to see something happen, it's time to define solutions.