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To: Sully- who wrote (22028)8/7/2006 11:50:36 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
The Christians are coming, the Christians are coming!

By Kathleen Parker
Townhall.com
Friday, August 4, 2006

WASHINGTON -- These are rich times for conspiracy theorists, and the mother lode these days may be found in the fevered minds of anti-Christianists.

Among paranoiacs who see a Jerry Falwell or a John Hagee in every burning bush, U.S. support for Israel isn't about protecting the only healthy democracy in the Middle East, but about advancing Armageddon and, yes, the Second Coming.

At last, we'll get to know what Jesus would drive. Most likely, he'd drive out the conspiracy theorists on both sides of this imagined apocalypse.

For those who do not spend their days pulling imaginary bugs out of their eye sockets, ``Christianist'' is a relatively new term that roughly refers to a virulent strain of right-wing political Christianity that, supposedly, parallels Islamist lunacy.

Although both groups may be ``true believers,'' those who try to connect the dots of Christian belief, specifically evangelical Christianity, to Islamism seem willing to overlook the fact that Islamists praise Allah and fly airplanes into buildings while Christianists praise Jesus and pass the mustard.

And though both groups of people may use scripture to shape their approach to the public square, Islamist interpretation of doctrine permits religious expression through suicide-murder, beheadings, public stonings (preferably of women) and Jew-hating, while Christianist doctrine deals in such wimpy notions as forgiveness, tolerance, redemption and cheek-turning. Weirdos.

A slew of new books have emerged with titles like ``American Theocracy,'' and ``Kingdom Coming,'' that tackle the perceived emerging Christocracy, while op-ed-ists opine that right-wing evangelicals are directing foreign policy through the White House. Words like ``theocrats'' and ``American Taliban'' have become commonplace in describing those who fill televangelism's La-Z-Boys.

Certainly, there's an element among some Christians who believe that Armageddon and the Second Coming are related to current events in the Middle East. For instance, John Hagee, televangelist and pastor of an 18,000-member mega-church in San Antonio specifically believes that Israel has to strike Iran's nuclear facilities in order to move things along toward Jesus' new millennial reign.

And though life may get messy for a time, all's well that ends well. Once Jesus gets back on board, Russia and China will have been dealt with, the Garden of Eden will reopen for business, and the righteous will rule the nations of the Earth. ACLU, beware.

Doubtless Hagee holds his audiences in thrall, but that audience does not happen to include George W. Bush or even (cue thunderclouds) Karl Rove. Nor millions of other Christians. Despite what the anti-Christianists seem to believe, the evangelical movement is not monolithic on such issues and Hagee doesn't have an office in the State Department.

In fact, at one White House meeting with about 35 evangelical leaders, one participant told me Hagee said nary a word. Even if he had, no one in the Bush administration is listening.

``You can be sure that Condi Rice is not reading Tim LaHaye books,'' says Michael Cromartie, vice president of the Ethics and Public Policy Center and director of its Evangelicals in Civic Life program. LaHaye is author of the best-selling apocalyptic ``Left Behind'' series.

The Armageddonists, meanwhile, are suffering from what Cromartie calls ``overheated eschatological expectations.''

``That means, they're always looking through world events for some signs of the End Times. ... If they want to spend their time worrying about that, fine. I'm pretty content to sit here and wait it out.''

At least part of what's behind the anti-Christianist movement, of course, is dislike of Bush, who happens to be a born-again Christian, combined with angry opposition to the war in Iraq, as well as contempt for the anti-intellectualism of some on the Christian right -- a perfect storm of secular disgust.

What's missing, however, is a basic understanding of reality: the fact that those who preach an End Times scenario also voted for Bush does not necessarily mean that they have Bush's ear. When someone like Hagee sends a smoke signal to the White House about Israel and Armageddon, the attitude at Pennsylvania Avenue is, ``Oh yeah, John, we're aware of that, thank you.''

In other words, pro-Israel policy decisions are based on our long-standing support of America's democratic ally in the Middle East, not some theological imperative as divined through an eschatological grid. Or even an ``8'' ball.

Nevertheless, Republicans are happy to get votes where they can. Which is to say: If Hagee were urging his congregation to tithe money to fight global warming based on some apocalyptic interpretation of Scripture, does anyone really think that Al Gore would decline the check?

townhall.com!



To: Sully- who wrote (22028)8/7/2006 6:31:24 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Letting Terrorists Off the Hook

Posted by: Michael Medved
TownHall Main Blog

Last night I blogged about the destructive impact of the current popularity of 9/11 conspiracy theories--- on society at large as well as on the people who entertain such paranoid notions. There's one more damaging facet of blaming the government for the most devastating terrorist attacks in history: if US officials were secretly responsible either for orchestrating the incident or allowing it to go forward, then the terrorists themselves are off the hook. By focusing their suspicions and denunciations on American leaders, the conspiratorial demagogues take attention from the Islamo-Nazi killers who brought about so many assaults on our interests and continue to menace US citizens everywhere.

During the debates surrounding the 9/11 commission, arguments raged on how to affix blame: did Bill Clinton or George Bush deserve stronger condemnation for their failure to prevent the al Qaeda attacks? On my radio show at that time, I decried such arguments because the real blame-worthy party wasn't the Bush administration or the Clinton administration: it was al-Qaeda and the radical Isalmist movement it represented.

In the same sense, Americans who become obsessed with bizarre tales of the origins of 9/11, focusing on super-secret accounts of high-level plots involving Skull & Bones, the Illuminati, the Council on Foreign Relations and so forth, help leave us less prepared for the next attack-- whose source will not be some US secret society, but the very public efforts by religious extremists to impose Islamist rule around the world.

It's not some secret club of rich businessmen or conniving "neo-cons" raining deadly rockets on Israeli civilians: it's fanatical Muslim killers who want to destroy the one island of western civilization and representative democracy in their midst. Those same ideologues hate the US with similar intensity and playing games with fanciful, laughably illogical conspiracy theories only distracts needed attention from the very open, fiercely implacable Islamist conspiracy that continues to menace us in the real world.

townhall.com



To: Sully- who wrote (22028)8/10/2006 7:04:07 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
ANN ALTHOUSE:
    "If the 9/11 conspiracy theory were true . . . why wouldn't
the government have found a way to silence the persons who
began to uncover it?"
Her question is answered in the comments, of course.

Via Instapundit

althouse.blogspot.com

feeds.feedburner.com



To: Sully- who wrote (22028)8/16/2006 5:42:24 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Debunking tarted up horror tales

By Austin Bay
Townhall.com
Wednesday, August 16, 2006

Trust that conspiracy theorists will attempt to exploit the fifth anniversary of 9/11 to spread sensational claims and sensational lies.

Moreover, it's a fair bet sensationalist media will collaborate, not because the squawk show host or headline scribbler believes the poisoned foolishness, but because anger, fear and trembling sell. Conspiracy theories are public ghost stories of a sort, campfire horror tales tarted up with government devils, corporate witches and other demons-of-convenience.

However, Popular Mechanics magazine and Hearst Communications have provided a handy antidote to the conspiracy theorists' more noxious rhetorical poisons.

"Debunking 9/11 Myths: Why Conspiracy Theories Can't Stand Up To The Facts" expands to book-length a collection of articles Popular Mechanics published in March 2005. The book contains new appendices and updated analyses.

"Debunking" begins with an insightful and blunt foreword by Sen. John McCain, who observes, "Conspiracy mongering is no small phenomenon. . . . These theories come in nearly infinite variety, but all reach essentially the same conclusion: that the U.S. government, or some shadowy group that controls it, organized the attacks as part of a master plan for global domination. But the truth is more mundane. The philosopher Hannah Arendt described the banality of Nazi evil; the 9/11 hijackers were also ordinary, uninteresting men with twisted beliefs."

Counterterrorism expert Richard Clarke's blurb for the book describes it as "reliable and rational" and that the government "isn't competent enough to pull off such conspiracies and too leaky to keep them secret."

Book editors David Dunbar and Brad Reagan laud former Sen. Pat Moynihan's classic quip: "Everyone is entitled to his own opinion. He is not entitled to his own facts."

With Moynihan as a guide, the book follows a "Claim" and "Fact" format. Here are excerpts from the section entitled "Melted Steel":

"Claim: . . . 'We have been lied to,' announces the Web site AttackOnAmerica.net. 'The first lie was that the load of fuel from the aircraft was the cause of structural failure. No kerosene fire can burn hot enough to melt steel.' The posting is entitled 'Proof Of Controlled Demolition At The WTC.' . . .

"FACT: . . . Jet fuel burns at 1,100 to 1,200 degrees Celsius . . . significantly less than the 1,510 degrees Celsius typically required to melt steel. . . . However, experts agree that for the towers to collapse, their steel frames didn't need to melt, they just had to lose some of their structural strength -- and that required exposure to much less heat . . . "

The "Fact" section includes analysis from structural engineers, a professor of metallurgy and explosives experts.

The 9/11 conspiracy theories have overt and covert promoters. Some are more nuisance than threat. Howard Dean verbally toyed with 9/11 conspiracy theories when he was playing primary election footsie with hard-left constituencies. Others seek nuclear weapons and finance terrorism. "Debunking" notes Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's rambling May 2006 letter to President George W. Bush included "broad hints" that the U.S. organized the attacks.

"Debunking's" afterword, written by Popular Mechanics editor in chief James Meigs, deserves special plaudits. Journalism and rhetoric professors should make use of it in undergraduate classes. The afterword's first sentence sets the stage: "On February 7, 2005, I became a member of the Bush/Halliburton/Zionist/CIA/New World Order/Illuminati conspiracy for global domination." That's the day his magazine's "debunking" issue appeared in print.

Meigs, however, quickly moves from hate mail to a discussion of "conspiracism" techniques. ("Conspiracism" is a term coined by Chip Berlet of the liberal Political Research Associates think tank.)

Meigs analyzes eight 9/11 conspiracy-spinner techniques. I'll mention two:

(1) Attempts to "marginalize opposing views." Meigs says thousands of eyewitness 9/11 accounts and the analyses of numerous universities and professional organizations (including Underwriters Labs and the American Society of Civil Engineers) are dismissed as "the government version."

(2) Circular reasoning. Meigs writes that " . . . among 9/11 theorists, the presence of evidence supporting the mainstream view is also taken as proof of conspiracy." He concludes: "Like doctrinaire Marxists or certain religious extremists, conspiracists enjoy a world view that is immune to refutation."

Meigs' analyses of "demonization" and the "paranoid style" are particularly crisp and compelling.

I also wrote a book blurb, calling "Debunking" "a victory for common sense . . . ." The world deserves more victories just like it.

townhall.com



To: Sully- who wrote (22028)8/22/2006 6:05:38 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Do Electronic Voting Machines Pose A Threat To Democracy?

By Captain Ed on National Politics
Captain's Quarters

Most of the opposition to electronic voting machines comes from the same lunatic left that insisted on replacing punch ballots with high-tech solutions in the wake of the 2000 presidential election. To a nation sick of hearing about pregnant, dimpled, and hanging chads, this appeared to be a good investment in electoral confidence. Now, however, touch-screen voting and the venerable Diebold corporation appear at the center of every paranoid conspiracy theory, the latest version of which came from Cynthia McKinney after Hank Johnson beat her like a bass drum in a marching band.

Marc Danziger argues in today's Washington Examiner that we should not leave the issue with just the conspiracy theorists. He says that electronic voting machines are far less secure than the average nickel slot in Laughlin, a situation that should concern all voters:

<<< Let me be very clear: The machines in use to count your vote aren’t remotely as secure as the video poker machine that you lost $5 to at the airport in Las Vegas. Seriously. You can look it up. Go over to the Gaming Standards Association (www.gamingstandards.com) and surf around. If voting machines were as well-tested, none of us would worry about them.

Bad as the machines’ security is, the voting systems surrounding the voting machines are so laughably insecure that no modern American corporation could use them, for fear of a Sarbanes-Oxley indictment of executives and directors.

Consider the recent special election here in California. The local San Diego County Registrar set up the election by allowing local precinct workers to take the machines home with them the night before.

I don’t think that specific election was hacked. But one of these days, one will be. And worse, as faith in the plumbing of democracy fades, what’s going to happen is that — like the proverbial banana republic — the losers in our elections won’t walk away vowing to do better next time. Instead, they’ll be convinced that the game is fixed, the referees bought, and that there’s no reason to participate in electoral politics.

That’ll lead to a whole other kind of politics, and I don’t think we’ll like it very much. >>>

This entire mess sprang from the insistence on the Left that people could not possibly be relied upon to complete a ballot with punch cards, despite decades of experience telling us otherwise. The "butterfly ballot" that received such universal condemnation (and that was designed in the Florida election by a Democrat) had been used in California for years; I learned to vote with butterfly ballots. It didn't take a rocket scientist to figure it out, and in case anyone got confused, the booth had instructions that reminded voters to make sure their punched holes were free of chads.

As a result of the so-called conspiracy to confuse the voters in several Florida counties, the federal government spent hundreds of millions of dollars on touch-screen voting machines so that voters could select the face of the candidate they wanted. Now that system apparently has too many holes in it to be reliable. Danziger rightly notes that insecure systems will erode confidence in our electoral system, but how many times must we change machines to appease the same tinfoil-hat brigades that determined that a time-tested system of balloting had to be tossed into the garbage?

Here in Minnesota, we use optical-scanned ballots for voting. The voter circles the candidate they desire rather than punch a chad or tap a screen. When complete, the ballot gets fed into a scanner and the voter waits to see if the ballot is accepted. If no double-voting has occurred, then the voter gets a stub from the ballot and goes upon his merry way. This system allows for quick tabulations of votes in all races and still produces a paper trail that can be used for recounts.

Perhaps we can get the rest of the country to adopt the optical-scan system and put all of this nonsense behind us. However, I'm sure that as soon as we do, we will start hearing about conspiracies to replace the optical pens with markers that don't get scanned when certain paranoidal politicians lose elections. Let's just make sure that the rest of us rational people have a system with which we can remain confident.

captainsquartersblog.com

answers.com

examiner.com



To: Sully- who wrote (22028)8/23/2006 2:48:36 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 35834
 
The Truth Behind 9/11

According to a new book from the Presbyterian Publishing Corporation, Bush brought down the towers.

by Mark Tooley
The Weekly Standard
08/23/2006

DID THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION covertly blow-up the World Trade Center, ignite the Pentagon, and shoot down United Flight 93 to pave the way for a new American empire? The answer is "yes," according to a new book printed by the official publishing house of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and written by a theologian at a United Methodist seminary.

"Christian Faith and the Truth Behind 9/11", published by Westminster John Knox Press, is fairly succinct in its conspiracy theory. In fact, only the first half of the book is devoted to dissecting the conspiracy, the facts being so obvious that elaboration is hardly required. The second half is focused on the theological implications of America as empire, and why Christians should stand against it.

David Ray Griffin, professor emeritus of philosophy and theology at Claremont School of Theology in California, is the author of what is now his third book on 9/11. "If we believe that our political and military leaders are acting on the basis of policies that are diametrically opposed to divine purposes, it is incumbent upon us to say so," he explains in the preface. A "process" theologian who believes that God is constantly evolving, Griffin is a member of "Scholars for 9/11 Truth," a non-partisan group that is "dedicated to exposing falsehoods and to revealing truths behind 9/11."

The book is blurbed by the late Rev. William Sloane Coffin, United Methodist theologian Catherine Keller of Drew University, Episcopal theologian Carter Heyward of Episcopal Divinity School, and Roman Catholic dissident feminist
theologian Rosemary Radford Ruether. Griffin explains that parts of the book are based on lectures he delivered in June 2003 on behalf of the Episcopal Diocese of Kentucky. The project in revisionist history seems to be ecumenical.

Expecting controversy, the Presbyterian publishing house issued a news release, insisting that "Professor Griffin's thorough research and intellectually rigorous arguments have persuaded us that this book should have a place in that conversation, regardless of the conclusions readers come to accept." The Presbyterians are printing more than 7000 copies of Griffin's latest work.

Griffin's thesis is pretty straightforward: The events of 9/11 were a false flag operation undertaken by U.S. intelligence and police agencies at the behest of the Bush administration. Examples of other successful false flag operations cited by the author are the 1931 Mukden Incident, in which the Japanese blew up their own railway in Manchuria and blamed it on Chinese troops to justify further invasion; the 1933 Reichstag Fire that the Nazis ignited and blamed on communists to justify their dictatorship; and Operation Himmler, in which Germans posing as Polish troops "attacked" German border stations in order to justify the subsequent Nazi invasion of Poland.

American examples of false flag operations, as outlined by Griffin, include provocations that led to the Mexican-American War, the Spanish-American War, the Philippines War, and the Vietnam War. More recently, Griffin tells us, the United States staged terrorist operations in Italy, Turkey and Belgium during the 1970s and 1980s to create a backlash against the left. So Griffin does not see the false flag attack of 9/11 as an aberration, a devious plan that only the Bush administration would devise.

Quite simply, "central members of the Bush administration, including Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld, came into office intent on attacking Iraq, an Arab Muslim nation." For several months preceding 9/11, the administration was also planning to attack Afghanistan. Accordingly, the administration planted explosives in the basement of the World Trade Center, to ensure their collapse by "controlled demolition."

The laws of physics alone cannot explain why steel-reinforced towers would implode as a result of mere airplanes crashes, Griffin insists. Also, the company in charge of security for the World Trade Center was conveniently headed by a cousin of President Bush. Mayor Giuliani had advance knowledge of the impending collapse, as revealed by his public statements after the first plane hit. The supposed crash of Flight 77 into the Pentagon was a fabrication, and the U.S. Air Force shot down Flight 93 over Pennsylvania, though Griffin does not provide much detail to substantiate either claim. As evidence, he dwells only on perceived inconsistencies in FAA reports.

"The implications are indeed disturbing," Griffin writes of his "assumption that 9/11 was orchestrated by members of the Bush-Cheney administration." "The effect of 9/11 . . . was to allow the agenda developed in the 1990s by the neoconservatives . . . to be implemented," he explains. He is careful to assure that though "some people think that Jewishness is a necessary condition for being a neoconservative, this is not so." Cheney and Rumsfeld are prime examples of non-Jewish neocons, he observes, and he focuses on them as the culprits.

Griffin graciously acknowledges that neocons outside the government were likely not complicit in the 9/11 attacks, even if those attacks furthered their agenda. But those in power, like Bush and Rumsfeld, openly and ominously spoke of 9/11 as an "opportunity."

"The motives behind this false-flag operation were imperial motives, oriented around the dream of extending the American empire so that it is an all-inclusive global empire, resulting in a global Pax Americana," Griffin writes. Obviously this has profound spiritual implications for Christians, Griffin observes, having already concluded that Jesus Christ's primary goal on earth was to overturn the Roman Empire of His day. Unfortunately, Griffin opines, the early church, including some Gospel writers, covered up this truth, claiming that salvation was eternal rather than a political liberation. These revisionists persuaded Christians that the empire would "facilitate, not hinder, the coming of the kingdom of God." Christianity then went from being anti-empire to an imperial religion.

Bush and his neocon supporters have now revived notions that empire can further the kingdom of God through the "universal values" of democracy and freedom, Griffin asserts. The language of empire was present with the Founders, but the power for America to implement it was not present until Second World War. During the Cold War, the United States spread its empire through covert action and military intimidation: Iran in 1953; Guatemala in 1954; Greece in 1967; and Indonesia in 1965. Strangely, Griffin omits Chile in 1973 in his catalog of supposed crimes.

Replacing Great Britain as the world's dominant imperial power, the United States has presided over a "global apartheid" that keeps Western white people wealthy while impoverishing everybody else, Griffin writes. In this role, the United States heads a world capitalist system that "denies the right of life to people on a massive scale, resulting in 180 million people dying each decade from poverty-related causes."

Whereas the Nazis and Soviets only killed 50 million people each, and were labeled "evil," the United States is killing 180 million people every ten years, Griffin writes, not including the millions more the United States killed in its various military interventions over the last 60 years. The United States has overthrown more governments than the Nazis and Soviets ever did. Therefore, Griffin feels justified in labeling the United States as an "evil, even demonic empire."

America's nuclear arsenal and its contribution to global warming only compound the evil. "Demonic power is now firmly lodged in the United States, especially in its government, its corporate heads, the 'defense' industries, its plutocratic class more generally, and its ideologies," Griffin complains. Given the scope of America's satanic accomplishments and ambitions, the crimes of 9/11 appear trivial.

"The U.S. government was planning . . . to use the deaths of some three thousands people (whom itself had killed) to justify wars that would most likely kill and maim many hundreds of thousands of people, perhaps millions," Griffin concludes, rather anti-climatically. His solution: a global government to replace nation states. In the interim, he hopes Protestant denominations and the Catholic bishops will investigate how 9/11 was precipitated by "U.S. imperial interests."

On the left, it is common to explain the Bush administration's "imperial" policies as the work of whacky "Left-Behind" evangelicals who supposedly think that the Second Coming will be precipitated by war in the Middle East. But those people on the right, if they actually exist, are almost dull when compared to the nuttiness of Professor Griffin and his colleagues in the curia of old-line Protestantism who agree with his theories.

Mark D. Tooley directs the United Methodist committee at the Institute on Religion and Democracy.

weeklystandard.com



To: Sully- who wrote (22028)9/1/2006 2:49:26 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
9/11 Conspiracies

By John on Conspiracies
Common Sense and Wonder

Mark Steyn surveys the current crop of conspiracy theories about 9/11. I’ve actually read several books by Dewdney, which just goes to prove that being bright and seemingly lucid doesn’t prevent you from being a complete and raving nutjob. (Not that there’s not a lot of evidence of that already, can you say ‘Chomsky’, ‘Krugman’ or ‘Shockley’, I knew you could).

<<< Who is A. K. Dewdney? He’s an adjunct professor of biology at the University of Western Ontario, and he has pieced together the truth about what happened on 9/11. You may be familiar with the official version: “To account for the events of Sept. 11, 2001, the Bush White House has produced a scenario involving Arab hijackers flying large aircraft into American landmarks,” writes the eminent Ontario academic. “We, like millions of other 9/11 skeptics, have found this explanation to be inconsistent with the facts of the matter.”

Instead, he argues, a mid-air plane switch took place on three of the jets.
“The passengers of one of the flights died in an aerial explosion over Shanksville, Pa.,” he writes, “and the remaining passengers (and aircraft) were disposed of in the Atlantic Ocean.” Most of us swallowed “the Bush-Cheney scenario” because we were unaware that, when two planes are less than half a kilometre apart, they appear as a single blip on the radar screen. Thus, the covert switch. Instead of crashing into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, the flights were diverted by FBI agents on board to Harrisburg, Pa., where the passengers from all three planes were herded onto UA Flight 175 and flown on to Cleveland Hopkins and their deaths. By then, unmanned Predator drones had been substituted for the passenger jets and directed into their high-profile targets. The original planes and their passengers were finished off over the Atlantic.

But what about all those phone calls, especially from Flight 93?
Ha, scoffs Dewdney. “Cellphone calls made by passengers were highly unlikely to impossible. Flight UA93 was not in the air when most of the alleged calls were made. The calls themselves were all faked.” Michel Chossudovsky, of Quebec’s Centre for Research on Globalization, agrees: “It was extremely difficult, if not impossible, to place a wireless cell call from an aircraft travelling at high speed above 8,000 feet.”

So all the “Let’s roll” stuff was cooked up by the government spooks. So, presumably, were the calls from the other planes.
Flight 175 passenger Peter Hanson to his father: “Passengers are throwing up and getting sick. The plane is making jerky movements.” This at a time when, according to professor Dewdney, Flight 175 was preparing to land smoothly at Harrisburg. Or Flight 11 stewardess Madeline Sweeney: “We are flying very, very low. We are flying way too low. Oh my God, we are way too low.” Two minutes later, Flight 11 supposedly crashed into the north tower of the World Trade Center — though, as professor Dewdney has demonstrated, by then the plane wasn’t even in the state. These so-called “calls” all used state-of-the art voice modification technology to make family members believe they were talking to loved ones rather than vocally disguised government agents. In the case of Todd Beamer’s “Let’s roll!” the spooks had gone to the trouble of researching and identifying individual passengers’ distinctive conversational expressions.

In the end, says Dewdney, Flight 93 was shot down by a “military-looking all-white aircraft.” It was an A-10 Thunderbolt cunningly repainted to . . . well, the professor doesn’t provide a rationale for why you’d go to the trouble to paint a military aircraft. But the point is, several eyewitnesses reported seeing a white jet in the vicinity of the Flight 93 Pennsylvania crash site, so naturally conspiracy theorists regard that as supporting evidence that the plane was brought down by the U.S. military rather than after a heroic passenger uprising against their jihadist hijackers. “It was taken out by the North Dakota Air Guard,” announced retired army Col. Donn de Grand Pre. “I know the pilot who fired those two missiles to take down 93.” It was Maj. Rick Gibney, who destroyed the aircraft with a pair of Sidewinders at precisely 9:58 a.m.

Ooooo-kay. We now turn to a brand-new book edited by David Dunbar and Brad Reagan called Debunking 9/11 Myths: Why Conspiracy Theories Can’t Stand Up to the Facts. Brad Reagan? There’s a name for conspiracy theorists to ponder, notwithstanding his cover as a “contributing editor” for Popular Mechanics. First things first: Maj. Rick Gibney is a lieutenant-colonel. At 9:58 a.m. he wasn’t in Shanksville, Pa., but in Fargo, N.D. At 10:45, he took off for Bozeman, Mont., where he picked up Edward Jacoby, Jr., director of the New York State Emergency Management Office, and flew him back to Albany, N.Y., in a two-seat F-16B, unarmed — i.e., no Sidewinders. The white plane was not an attractively painted A-10 Thunderbolt but a Dassault Falcon 20 corporate jet belonging to the company that owns Wrangler, North Face and other clothing lines. It was coming into Johnstown, near Shanksville, when Flight 93 disappeared and the FAA radioed to ask them if they could look around. “The plane circled the crash site twice,” write Dunbar and Reagan, “and then flew directly over it to mark the exact latitude and longitude on the plane’s navigation system.”

Just for the record, I believe that a cell of Islamist terrorists led by Mohammed Atta carried out the 9/11 attacks. But that puts me in a fast-shrinking minority. In the fall of 2001, a coast-to-coast survey of Canadian imams found all but two insistent that there was no Muslim involvement in 9/11.

Oh, well. It was just after 9/11, everyone was still in shock.

Five years later, a poll in the United Kingdom found that only 17 per cent of British Muslims believe there was any Arab involvement in 9/11.

Ah, but it’s a sensitive issue over there, what with Tony Blair being so close to Bush and all.

Professor Dewdney’s plane-swap theory?

Come on, if you already live in Canada, it’s not such a leap to live in an alternative universe.

But what are we to make of the Scripps Howard poll taken this month in which 36 per cent of those surveyed thought it “somewhat likely” or “very likely” that federal officials either participated in the attacks or had knowledge of them beforehand?

Debunking 9/11 Myths does a grand job of explaining such popular conspiracy-website mainstays as how a 125-foot-wide plane leaves a 16-foot hole in the Pentagon. Answer: it didn’t. The 16-foot hole in the Pentagon’s Ring C was made by the plane’s landing gear. But the problem isn’t scientific, it’s psychological: if you’re prepared to believe that government agents went to the trouble of researching, say, gay rugby player Mark Bingham’s family background and vocal characteristics so they could fake cellphone calls back to his mom, then clearly you’re not going to be deterred by mere facts. As James B. Meigs, the editor-in-chief of Popular Mechanics, remarks toward the end of this book, the overwhelming nature of the evidence is, to the conspiratorially inclined, only further evidence of a cover-up: “One forum posting that has multiplied across the Internet includes a long list of the physical evidence linking the 19 hijackers to the crime: the rental car left behind at Boston’s Logan airport, Mohammed Atta’s suitcase, passports recovered at the crash sites, and so on. ‘HOW CONVENIENT!’ the author notes after each citation. In the heads-I-win-tails-you-lose logic of conspiracism, there is no piece of information that cannot be incorporated into one’s pet theory.”

When I was on the Rush Limbaugh show a couple of months back, a listener called up to insist that 9/11 was an inside job. I asked him whether that meant Bali and Madrid and London and Istanbul were also inside jobs. Because that’s one expensive operation to hide even in the great sucking maw of the federal budget. But the Toronto blogger Kathy Shaidle made a much sharper point:

    “I wonder if the nuts even believe what they are saying. 
Because if something like 9/11 happened in Canada, and I
believed with all my heart that, say, Stephen Harper was
involved, I don’t think I could still live here. I’m not
sure I could stop myself from running screaming to another
country. How can you believe that your President killed
2,000 people, and in between bitching about this, just
carry on buying your vente latte and so forth?”
Over to you, Col. de Grand Pre, and Charlie Sheen, and Alan Colmes.

The sad reality is that never before has an enemy hidden in such plain sight. Osama bin Laden declared a jihad against America in 1998. Iran’s nuclear president vows to wipe Israel off the map. A year before the tube bombings, radical Brit imam Omar Bakri announced that a group of London Islamists are “ready to launch a big operation” on British soil. “We don’t make a distinction between civilians and non-civilians, innocents and non-innocents,” he added, clarifying the ground rules. “Only between Muslims and unbelievers. And the life of an unbeliever has no value.”

Our enemies hang their shingles on Main Street, and a University of Western Ontario professor puts it down to a carefully planned substitution of transponder codes. >>>

commonsensewonder.com

macleans.ca




To: Sully- who wrote (22028)9/8/2006 7:47:38 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Bad News For the Conspiracy Nuts

Jonah Goldberg
The Corner

Al-Jazeera airs pre-9/11 tape showing Bin Laden meeting with hijackers. How'd they get Paul Wolfowitz to release the video? And how did they disguise the fact it's shot in his rumpus room?

corner.nationalreview.com

news.yahoo.com



To: Sully- who wrote (22028)9/11/2006 4:07:16 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Debunking 9/11

It's time to finally put the conspiracy theories to rest.

by Sonny Bunch
The Weekly Standard
09/11/2006

Debunking 9/11 Myths: Why Conspiracy Theories Can't Stand Up to the Facts
Edited by David Dunbar and Brad Reagan
Hearst Books, 170 pp., $14.95

ONE OF THE MORE unpleasant reactions to the terrorist attacks of 9/11 was the nearly spontaneous birth of a community of skeptics questioning the "official" storyline of events. Somehow these theories seem to have gathered steam in recent years.

The conspiracy theories are legion: the twin towers were brought down by a controlled demolition and not airplanes; the towers were brought down by airplanes, but the airplanes were laden with explosives; the Pentagon was struck not by a passenger jet, but by a missile; United Flight 93 did not crash, but was shot down by an F-16. All of these theories incorporate tiny pieces of "evidence" (or the absence of evidence) and lead to the same conclusion: that a massive conspiracy was orchestrated by a shadowy faction of the United States government in order to draw the country into a global conflict with Islam.

While composing their report, the 9/11 Commission was faced with the difficult decision of how to deal with these rumors. "We discussed the theories," the commission's executive director, Philip Zelikow, told the Washington Post. "When we wrote the report, we were also careful not to answer all the theories. It's like playing Whack-A-Mole. You're never going to whack them all. . . . The hardcore conspiracy theorists are totally committed. They'd have to repudiate much of their life identity in order not to accept some of that stuff. [They're] not our worry. Our worry is when things become infectious, as happened with the [John F. Kennedy] assassination. Then this stuff can be deeply corrosive to public understanding."

Popular Mechanics decided to step into the void created by the 9/11 Commission and definitively answer the whacky ideas. In March of 2005, the magazine's cover story was "9/11: Debunking the Myths. PM examines the evidence and consults the experts to refute the most persistent conspiracy theories of September 11." The magazine spent 11 pages carefully deconstructing the conspiracies--including theories that the planes that crashed into the World Trade Center couldn't have been passenger jets because they had no windows, puffs of smoke from the towers proved controlled demolitions were used, and that seismographs indicated that the "strongest jolts were all registered at the beginning of the collapse," showing conclusively that explosives must have been used--and explaining why they are incorrect.

The magazine has now expanded that 11 page feature from 18 months ago into a more comprehensive 170 page book. Edited by David Dunbar and Brad Reagan, the book features a foreword by John McCain and contains reports by the National Institute of Standards and Technology on the World Trade Center's collapse and the American Society of Civil Engineers's "Pentagon Building Performance Report." Debunking 9/11 Myths will quickly become the go-to reference for fighting the madness found on the Internet in relation to 9/11. Do you have a friend who emails you the most recent documentary "proving" that a missile impacted the Pentagon or that timed explosions brought down WTC-7? Buy him a copy of this book. He'll thank you later.

Take, for example, the claim that the collapse of the World Trade Center was caused by a controlled demolition. Conspiracy Theorists assert that burning jet fuel is not hot enough to melt steel, so explosions must have been the culprit. As Debunking 9/11 Myths explains, jet fuel burns between 1,100 and 1,200 degrees Celsius, well below the 1,510 degrees necessary to melt steel. But the steel supports of the WTC did not need to melt for the buildings to come down. "Steel begins to lose strength at temperatures as low as 400 degrees Celsius (750 degrees Fahrenheit)," the authors inform us, "and loses roughly 50 percent of its strength at approximately 600 degrees Celsius (1,100 degrees Fahrenheit). At 980 degrees Celsius (1,800 degrees Fahrenheit), it retains less than 10 percent, says Farid Alfawakhiri, the senior engineer of construction codes and standards at the American Iron and Steel Institute." Combined with the fact that the airplanes severed a large number of the load bearing columns in the initial impacts into the twin towers, this weakening of the steel would have done more than enough damage to bring them down. Indeed, engineers are shocked the buildings stood as long as they did.

The book's afterword admits that convincing the "9/11 Truth" community of their waywardness is probably impossible. As James B. Meigs, the editor in chief of Popular Mechanics states, "In a few short weeks, Popular Mechanics had gone from being a 100-year-old journal about science, engineering, car maintenance, and home improvement to being a
pivotal player in a global conspiracy on a par with Nazi Germany."

Meigs also laments the "argument by anomaly" fallacy on which conspiracy theorists so often rely: They "generally ignore the mass of evidence that supports the mainstream view and focus strictly on tiny anomalies. . . . If researchers can't 'prove' exactly how the building fell, they say, then there is only one other possible conclusion: Someone blew it up."

As the past five years have shown, simply ignoring the conspiracy theorists will not do the trick; on the internet, in particular, they multiply like mosquitoes. Debunking 9/11 Myths does much to drain the swamp and stop the spread of the crazy theories from propagating through the ether.

Sonny Bunch is an assistant editor at The Weekly Standard.

weeklystandard.com



To: Sully- who wrote (22028)9/12/2006 10:41:10 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
CONSPIRACY CRANKS

CREATING CRAZED '9/11 TRUTH'

By JAMES B. MEIGS
NEW YORK POST
Opinion
September 12, 2006

ON Feb. 7, 2005, I became a member of the Bush/Halliburton/Zionist/CIA/New World Order/Illuminati conspiracy for world domination. That day, Popular Mechanics, the magazine I edit, hit newsstands with a story debunking 9/11 conspiracy theories. Within hours, the online community of 9/11 conspiracy buffs - which calls itself the "9/11 Truth Movement" - was aflame with wild fantasies about me, my staff and the article we had published. Conspiracy Web sites labeled Popular Mechanics a "CIA front organization" and compared us to Nazis and war criminals.

For a 104-year-old magazine about science, technology, home improvement and car maintenance, this was pretty extreme stuff. What had we done to provoke such outrage?

Research.

Conspiracy theories alleging that 9/11 was a U.S. government operation are rapidly infiltrating the mainstream. These notions are advanced by hundreds of books, over a million Web pages and even in some college classrooms. The movie "Loose Change," a slick roundup of popular conspiracy claims, has become an Internet sensation.

Worse, these fantasies are gaining influence on the international stage. French author Thierry Meyssan's "The Big Lie," which argues that the U.S. military orchestrated the attacks, was a bestseller in France, and his claims have been widely repeated in European and Middle Eastern media. And recent surveys reveal that, even in moderate Muslim countries such as Turkey and Jordan, majorities of the public believe that no Arab terrorists were involved in the attacks.

"Everyone is entitled to his own opinion," Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan was fond of saying. "He is not entitled to his own facts." Yet conspiracy theorists want to pick and choose which facts to believe.

Rather than grapple with the huge preponderance of evidence in support of the mainstream view of 9/11, they tend to focus on a handful of small anomalies that they believe cast doubt on the conventional account. These anomalies include the claim that the hole in the Pentagon was too small to have been made by a commercial jet (but just right for a cruise missile); that the Twin Towers were too robustly built to have been destroyed by the jet impacts and fires (so they must have been felled by explosives), and more. If true, these and similar assertions would cast serious doubt on the mainstream account of 9/11.

But they're not true. Popular Mechanics has been fact-checking such claims since late 2004, and recently published a book on the topic. We've pored over transcripts, flight logs and blueprints, and interviewed more than 300 sources - including engineers, aviation experts, military officials, eyewitnesses and members of investigative teams.

In every single case, we found that the very facts used by conspiracy theorists to support their fantasies are mistaken, misunderstood or deliberately falsified.

Here's one example: Meyssan and hundreds of Web sites cite an eyewitness who said the craft that hit the Pentagon looked "like a cruise missile with wings." Here's what that witness, a Washington, D.C., broadcaster named Mike Walter, actually told CNN: "I looked out my window and I saw this plane, this jet, an American Airlines jet, coming. And I thought, 'This doesn't add up. It's really low.' And I saw it. I mean, it was like a cruise missile with wings. It went right there and slammed right into the Pentagon."

We talked to Walter and, like so many of the experts and witnesses widely quoted by conspiracy theorists, he told us he is heartsick to see the way his words have been twisted: "I struggle with the fact that my comments will forever be taken out of context."

Here's another: An article in the American Free Press claims that a seismograph at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory picked up signals indicating that large bombs were detonated in the towers. The article quotes Columbia geologist Won-Young Kim and certainly looks authoritative. Yet the truth on this issue is not hard to find. A published Lamont-Doherty report on the seismic record of 9/11 says no such thing. Kim told Popular Mechanics that the publication's interpretation of his research was "categorically incorrect." Yet the claim is repeated verbatim on more than 50 Web sites as well as in the film "Loose Change."

Every 9/11 conspiracy theory we investigated was based on similarly shoddy evidence. Most of these falsehoods are easy to refute simply by checking the original source material or talking to experts in the relevant fields. And yet even the flimsiest claims are repeated constantly in conspiracy circles, passed from Web site to book to Web site in an endless daisy chain. And any witness, expert - or publication - that tries to set the record straight is immediately vilified as being part of the conspiracy.

The American public has every right to ask hard questions about 9/11. And informed skepticism about government and media can be healthy. But skepticism needs to be based on facts, not fallacies. Unfortunately, for all too many, conspiratorial fantasies offer a seductive alternative to grappling with the hard realities of a post-9/11 world.

James B. Meigs is editor-in-chief of Popular Mechanics. The magazine's new book, "Debunking 9/11 Myths: Why Conspiracy Theories Can't Stand up to the Facts," is just out.

nypost.com
_b__meigs.htm



To: Sully- who wrote (22028)9/13/2006 4:35:11 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Conspiracy nation

By Jonah Goldberg
Townhall.com Columnist
Wednesday, September 13, 2006

There is a virulent form of unpatriotism festering in America today. Like an algae bloom that deprives life of oxygen, it starves democracy of the air of reason. It now thrives on what we call the far left, but like a dead zone off the coast, it moves with the tides.

I am referring to the seditious dementia of conspiracy theories, the death of faith not in some mere administration or Congress but in America itself.

Haven’t you heard? The U.S. government blew up the World Trade Center. Oh, sorry, that’s not right. The planes did knock down those buildings, but the White House was in on it. Oh, no, sorry again, that’s not what happened. It was the Jews. They razed it without leaving any fingerprints — save for the 4,000 Zionist co-conspirators who were tipped off in advance — in order to frame the peace-loving Muslims of al-Qaida. (Those crafty Hebrews are always coming up with clever ways to make Islamic fanatics look bad, like getting blown up.) Bin Laden’s admission that he did it? Well, of course. He’s in on it.

Presumably, Bush’s demolition experts applied the same expertise to the levees in New Orleans. That’s another theory in wide circulation today thanks in no small part to Spike Lee, who gave it a fair airing in an HBO documentary.

The metaphysical, ontological stupidity of all this defies rational rebuttal. It would be like proving I didn’t have unicorn for dinner in late December of 1987.

Here’s a question: How is a president willing — and able! — to bring down the World Trade Center, murdering nearly 3,000 Americans without inspiring a single whistle-blower or attracting a solitary eyewitness, somehow morally or logistically incapable of planting some exculpatory WMDs in Iraq?

As for Spike & Co., what took Bush so long? Why wait for a hurricane? Oh, how he must have yearned, his men and equipment long in place, to cleanse America of the Big Easy. Oh joyous St. Katrina’s Day! And yet, Bush failed to plan for the aftermath in a way that wouldn’t defenestrate his poll numbers.

Stupidity isn’t the right word for these dark imaginings, because some of these conspiracy theorists are very smart people. Nor is it fair to say they are all left-wingers. Indeed, two prominent 9/11 conspiracy theorists — Morgan Reynolds and Paul Craig Roberts — worked in Republican administrations and have strong conservative credentials. And let us not forget that in the 1990s, sweaty fingers pointed right-to-left. Under Clinton, it was the United Nations — with its satellite office at the Rose Law Firm — that imposed order with its fleet of black helicopters.

“Conspiracy theorist” isn’t quite right either. These are priests of the Church of Conspiracy, a heresy of Gnostic heresy which holds that man is the ruler of history, the demiurge of all events that befall us. Powerful and unseen forces lurk in the shadows. The conspiracy theorists know they’re out there, even as the enemy’s name changes almost daily: Big Oil, capitalists, Republicans, or perhaps those eternal pullers of mankind’s puppet strings, the Jews.

The masons of dementia build upon a bedrock of one absolute truth: Bad things happen, and someone must be responsible. Upon this bedrock they pile convenient and selective facts like bricks. Contradictory facts are clever lies. When Popular Mechanics debunked 9/11 hokum, the immediate response from conspiratorialists was “cover-up!” and “CIA front!” because in this perverted faith, denying the ultimate truth must be proof of a lie.

This rough beast slouches toward sedition because it assumes not that our leaders are knaves or even mere criminals, but that they are murderous Supermen with no loyalty to nation, decency or law. Our Constitution is a fraud, a charade for the rubes some of us naively call citizens. If you disagree, you’re either fool or “in on it.” In his 1964 essay, “The Paranoid Style in American Politics,” Richard Hofstadter demonstrated that this fever of the mind is as old as America itself and its outbreaks flare up across the ideological landscape. What is so sad and frightening is that this diseased thinking is reaching epidemic proportions. More than a third of Americans believe the U.S. government was likely to have been involved in 9/11.

In the past, when these outbreaks occurred on the political right, liberal hand-wringers fretted about incipient fascism and rising McCarthyism. Today, the best we get from them is a bemused and sterile chuckle.

townhall.com



To: Sully- who wrote (22028)9/13/2006 6:58:33 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
    Truthers are professors and Democrat candidates for Congress.

Beware the Truthers. Don't Ignore Them.

By Mary Katharine Ham
Townhall.com Columnist
Monday, September 11, 2006

Last night, I was headed home from the city around 9 p.m. I was driving over the 14th St. Bridge when I saw, on the other side of the Potomac, hundreds of fingers of light reaching for the sky. As I got closer, I saw they were coming from the center of the Pentagon.

I rounded the Pentagon on Washington Blvd. and saw an entire side of the building illuminated in blue, a giant American flag draped over the solid concrete wall of the nation’s military nerve center.

Flight 77 careened over that same road on the morning of Sept. 11, 2001 moments before slamming into the Pentagon and taking the lives of 184 people. Last night, a beam of light shone for each of those victims, rising toward the moon on a clear September night.

Hani Hanjour, a 29-year-old Saudi, flew that plane into the Pentagon in a suicidal strike on the “Great Satan,” America , driven by a sick Islamofascist ideology.

But there are some who don’t believe that. There are some who call that the “official story.” They say they seek the “truth” about what really happened on 9/11. The “truth,” according to them, is that a sinister cabal of neocon politicians arranged for a missile to hit the Pentagon and for a controlled demolition to bring down the Twin Towers.

These neocons killed almost 3,000 Americans in a bid to increase both the power of the Bush administration and the willingness of American citizens to support military action in the Middle East, according to the conspiracy theorists. They subsequently covered it up with the “official story” of bin Laden and 19 hijackers, according to members of the “9/11 Truth Movement.”

The head of this tinfoil hat brigade is Dylan Avery, a 22-year-old conspiracy theorist who has parlayed his creative version of history into two very popular Internet films, “Loose Change” and “Loose Change 2nd Edition.”

Avery and his cohorts’ research, theories, and “evidence” are so laughable that it can be easy to laugh off the movement itself. That was my reaction to this crowd until I took the time to watch “Screw Loose Change,” this weekend. “Screw Loose Change” is an extensive, three-hour-long debunking of Avery’s claims, which allows you to view Avery’s film along with a powerful presentation of all the evidence he distorts and omits.

Until I watched it and really let the Avery crowd’s accusations sink in, my reaction to the 9/11 Truthers was to say, “wow, they’re crazy. Moving on.” But I shouldn’t have moved on. I should have stopped and looked at the Truthers and listened to them a lot sooner.

It’s important for those of us who know what took the lives of 3,000 Americans five years ago today—four commercial planes with full loads of jet fuel and passengers driven by 19 murderous maniacs—to understand that there is a disturbingly large and vocal segment of the American population that doesn’t believe that.

A recent Scripps poll found that more than a third of Americans believe 9/11 was an “inside job.”

Truthers are professors and Democrat candidates for Congress.

The Truthers believe the American government planned and carried out the carnage of Sept. 11 on its own people, and they’re determined to tell the rest of us all about it. Today, the “Loose Change” kids planned to be at Ground Zero handing out free DVDs. On their website, they offer a free DVD to anyone who lost someone in the 9/11 attacks, and proclaim it everyone’s “duty” to watch the film.

I’m sure the relatives of the victims Avery mocks with his “theories” appreciate that.

Among Avery’s tributes to those victims is the part of the film where he alleges that Mark Bingham, a Flight 93 passenger, never talked to his mother from the plane that day, despite the fact that there’s a recording of the call. He alleges that the phone calls that came from the plane that day were somehow created by voice simulators, possibly with the collusion of the Flight 93 passengers.

He alleges that Flight 93 never crashed in Pennsylvania, but landed in Ohio. We are left to wonder just what the dastardly government did with the passengers on that plane if they were on the ground safely in Ohio on the morning of Sept. 11.

In a radio clip promoting “Loose Change,” Avery laughs at the “official story” about men with boxcutters and knives being capable of taking over a plane. He also alleges that Bernard Brown, a Pentagon employee, put his 11-year-old son on Flight 77 that morning knowing that it was destined to take him to his death while he took the day off to go golfing as the carnage unfolded.

Take some time to watch “Screw Loose Change.” It is long, but it’s worth it to truly understand the dangerous deniers we’re facing in our own country. Read the “Screw Loose Change” blog and Popular Mechanics’ book, “Debunking 9/11 Myths.”

But you might want to hold off until tomorrow. On this day, it will make you too angry.

<<< "I think what happened to the World Trade Center is simple enough. It was brought down in a carefully planned, controlled demolition. It was a psychological attack on the American people, and it was pulled off with military precision." – “Loose Change 2nd Edition” >>>

Be prepared with the actual truth when you meet up with one of these guys.

townhall.com

washingtontimes.com

video.google.ca

michaelmedved.townhall.com

michellemalkin.com

mypetjawa.mu.nu

hotair.com

video.google.ca

screwloosechange.blogspot.com

instapundit.com



To: Sully- who wrote (22028)9/13/2006 10:36:56 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
9/11 Conspiracy Monkey House

In Moonbats
Little Green Footballs

The 9/11 conspiracy monkeys really were out in force yesterday at Ground Zero. LGF reader El Marco has a great (well, “great” isn’t really the word) collection of photos showing these odd self-deluding primates in their natural habitat: 9/11 Five Years After - a photoset on Flickr.

Now with extra monks.



littlegreenfootballs.com

flickr.com



To: Sully- who wrote (22028)9/14/2006 3:12:47 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Day by Day

Chris Muir



daybydaycartoon.com



To: Sully- who wrote (22028)9/15/2006 9:00:58 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
The New Desecraters

Cox & Forkum



coxandforkum.com



To: Sully- who wrote (22028)9/18/2006 1:57:09 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
'False flag' theologians

September 11 and conspiracy theories

By Chuck Colson
Townhall.com Columnist
Monday, September 18, 2006

If he knew, John Knox, the great Scottish cleric, would be turning over in his grave.

A publishing company bearing his name has just released a book that links a September 11 conspiracy theory with claims that Jesus was a political activist intent on overthrowing the Roman Empire. It’s a warning of what can happen when Christians drift away from Christian beliefs.

The book is titled "Christian Faith and the Truth behind 9/11: A Call to Reflection and Action". It is published by Westminster John Knox Press, the publishing arm of the Presbyterian Church-USA. The author is liberal theologian David Griffin.

Griffin claims the Bush administration orchestrated the attacks, bringing down the Twin Towers with controlled demolitions. It was, Griffin claims, part of a “false flag” operation to provoke war in the Middle East and expand the American global empire.

Griffin views the United States as a “demonic” power, responsible for starving millions of people every year. His solution: one-world government in order to “bring the kingdom of God to earth,” as he told Heather Wilhelm in the Wall Street Journal. We should do this, he says, in imitation of Jesus, the original political activist who tried to overthrow the Roman Empire.

Of course, as Wilhelm dryly observes, that would make the testimony of Jesus that “my kingdom is not of this world” the original “false flag” operation.

While Griffin’s publisher incredibly claims the book “advances religious scholarship” and “inspires faithful living,” rank-and-file Presbyterians know better: They have called Griffin everything from “irresponsible” to “a total wing nut.” And as a reviewer on Amazon.com sarcastically wrote, “Actually, the 9/11 attacks were planned and coordinated by Martians, in conjunction with survivors from Atlantis.”

Griffin, of course, is far from alone in pushing September 11 conspiracy theories. What makes his theory so disturbing is the fact that he drags a twisted view Jesus into his fantasies — and that the Presbyterian Church publishers would aid and abet him. One of the fundamental truths of the Christian faith is that Jesus did not come to lead an overthrow of earthly powers, but to announce the kingdom and to prepare people for it.

In his classic 1923 book, Christianity and Liberalism, the great Presbyterian scholar and Princeton Professor Jay Gresham Machen reminds us that people who deny the fundamentals of the Christian faith are not just liberal Christians; they belong to another religion entirely. When it comes to liberalism, Machen wrote, Christianity “is battling against a totally diverse type of religious belief,” rooted in naturalism. Despite its use of Christian terminology, “liberalism not only is a different religion from Christianity but belongs in a totally different class of religions.”

If I ever saw evidence of this writ large, it is the willingness of Presbyterian publishers to publish such a heretical book.

The Bible warns us that false prophets and teachers will always be among us, introducing destructive heresies and maligning the way of the truth. We need to be on guard against them — and willing to speak out against those who attempt to lead Christ’s flock astray. Bible-believing Presbyterians, take note and clean house.

For Further Reading and Information

Apply today for the 2007 Centurions Program and study Biblical worldview for a year with Chuck Colson! Deadline for applications is November 30.

breakpoint.org

Heather Wilhelm, “Anything Goes: The Presbyterian Church Gets into 9/11 Conspiracy Theory Business,” Wall Street Journal, 8 September 2006.

opinionjournal.com

“9/11: Debunking the Myths,” Popular Mechanics, March 2005.

popularmechanics.com

David Dunbar, et al., eds., Debunking 9/11 Myths: Why Conspiracy Theories Can’t Stand Up to the Facts (Popular Mechanics, 2005).

popularmechanics.com

townhall.com

amazon.com



To: Sully- who wrote (22028)9/19/2006 3:36:32 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Conspiracy theories trump economics

Betsy's Page

My husband had predicted that it wouldn't take long for people to start blaming the drop in gas prices on the Republicans' manipulating the market. And sure enough, as he indicates, CNN's Bill Schneider was quickly out the door floating that story.

Now that prices are coming down, the media is noticing the drop. USA Today has a story on how the average price is now below $2.50 a gallon and some gas stations are even starting price wars to lower their prices. However, they also show a Gallup poll result to show that conspiracy crazies have not given up blaming everything on those evil Republicans.


<<< A hefty 42% of Americans polled over the weekend said they think fuel prices are being manipulated by the Bush administration to help Republicans in an election year. The USA TODAY/Gallup Poll has a margin of error of 3 percentage points. >>>


USA Today is quick to report that this is just malarkey.


<<< Petroleum analysts say the reasons are less Machiavellian: Supplies are above average, partly because summer's high prices attracted record imports. Hurricanes haven't knocked out Gulf of Mexico production. U.S. regulations permit a cheaper-to-make fuel blend in fall and winter.

“Without a shadow of a doubt, there is not any manipulation, and it has nothing to do with the approaching election,” says Peter Beutel, head of energy-price consultant Cameron Hanover. The petroleum market is “too big a market to manipulate. The price just … could not sustain itself.” >>>


It just goes to show how ignorant of simple economic principles the mass of the American people are. And of simple logic. If the Republicans had such massive powers over the market price, why would they have allowed it to go up so sharply the past 12 months. Undoubtedly, those high prices contributed to the funk and anti-incumbent mood that many voters seemed to have been in. Why couldn't the Republicans have waved their wizard wands and kept the prices low in the first place? Of course, if the media and irresponsible politicians hadn't spread the word in the first place that there was some evil cabal behind the price increase in the first place, perhaps people wouldn't be so ready to believe the Republicans were behind every fluctuation. But then that wouldn't suit the blame Republicans for everything.

betsyspage.blogspot.com

newmarksdoor.typepad.com

newsbusters.org

usatoday.com



To: Sully- who wrote (22028)9/27/2006 2:28:51 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
This is just sick It was fully embraced by lib leadership in Ariz. They've completely lost it IMO.

Arizona’s Moonbat Memorial

Hot Air TV
featuring "Vent"

hotair.com



To: Sully- who wrote (22028)4/17/2007 4:31:09 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
GONZO THEORIES

CHUCK'S UNREAL 'REASONING'

By RICH LOWRY
NEW YORK POST
Opinion

April 17, 2007 -- IN "A Beautiful Mind," her bestselling biography of mathematician John Nash, Sylvia Nasar describes the process whereby he went mad. He spun coincidences and unrelated incidents into a pattern utterly detached from reality.

Nash's example suggests that if Attorney General Alberto Gonzales is at risk of losing his job in the flap over the firings of U.S. attorneys, New York Sen. Chuck Schumer might be at risk of losing his mind. He and his fellow Democrats leap from one hypothesis of wrongdoing to another, all in the service of their grand paranoid theory: that Karl Rove orchestrated the firings for nefarious reasons yet to be determined.

Former Secretary of Defense Don Rumsfeld liked to say that the absence of evidence isn't evidence of absence. Democrats have a simpler axiom in the U.S. attorneys case - the absence of evidence is evidence. With every Justice Department document drop that shows no evidence of anything illegal or unethical, Democrats seem more convinced that there is a cover- up of some ill-defined wrongdoing.

A few weeks ago, Schumer was on TV - when is he not? - saying that the firing of Carol Lam, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of California, was the "most notorious" of the eight firings. Lam had prosecuted corrupt Republican Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham, who now is in jail. Schumer said that it was known Lam was going to prosecute more Republicans, so the Justice Department shut her down.

Put aside for the moment that the firing of a U.S. attorney alone won't shut down a particular corruption prosecution, which will be carried on by career prosecutors. As National Review reporter Byron York relates, in all the thousands of e-mails released by the Justice Department, there is no mention of Cunningham in connection to Lam, and the concerns about her performance centered on lax immigration prosecutions, which pre-dated the Cunningham case.

So much for the "most notorious" firing. Schumer has shifted of late to saying that the shifting explanations of the firings by Gonzales imply that he is "hiding something." From what we know of Gonzales' incompetent operation at the Justice Department, however, we can be certain that if he were actually trying to hide something, he would have revealed it by now.

Gonzales' statements about the firings have been wrong and inconsistent, but that appears to have more to do with his sloppiness with facts and language than anything else. A month ago, if Gonzales had been called upon to summarize the Anna Nicole Smith case, he probably would have messed it up - but that wouldn't have meant he was the father of her baby.

In a novel theory, Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin now says the scandal might be that there was an implicit, corrupt deal to keep the non-fired attorneys in place. So it wasn't the firings but the non-firings that are the potential outrage. Lately, Democrats also have focused on the missing Rove e-mails from his Republican National Committee account, figuring that if they are missing, they ipso facto are part of a cover-up of something or other.

The U.S. attorneys inherently are political positions. They serve at the pleasure of the president and often are recommended by senators. This obviously doesn't mean that they should be partisan in their administration of justice, but they must share the administration's law-enforcement agenda, and the reasons for their selection might have a lot to do with politics.

The most troubling firing is that of New Mexico U.S. Attorney David Iglesias, whom Republican Sen. Pete Domenici complained prior to the election wasn't pursuing a corruption case against Democrats quickly enough. If his termination was for explicitly partisan reasons, that would be inappropriate, but a senator complaining about a U.S. attorney is not in itself a scandal.

Whatever the wrongdoing is supposed to be at this particular moment in the U.S. attorney controversy, it no doubt will change. As he maneuvers to keep the story alive, let's just hope Chuck Schumer keeps his hold on reality.

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