I'm aware that the promoters of this forum grown upon it; but, the manner in which people respond to "beliefs that they do not share" or otherwise pejoratively called "conspiracy theories" leaves much to be desired. — Posty McPostface
With your permission I will proceed to just asking how you think that building fell? — Posty McPostface
As I mentioned, there was a documentary that was broadcast a long time ago - I can't recall when, it might have been ten years ago. The temperatures triggered by massive amounts of jet fuel in adjacent buildings caused a fire sufficiently intense to melt the steel. — Wayfarer
Any major event will attract a fringe group which seeks to profit financially or advance an agenda by creating a conspiracy. One current example is the speaking tour of Mr Richard Gage who is the founder of “Architects and Engineers for 9/11 Truth.” His current tour is taking him to Canada, where he will address audiences at the University of Toronto, Carleton University and the University of Quebec in Montreal. Mr Gage believes that it was “explosives” that brought down the World Trade Center buildings on 9/11 and not the 400,000 pound airliners travelling at several hundred miles per hour.
Mr Gage would have us believe that a mysterious conspiracy was behind the 9/11 attacks and that it was secret operatives who planted the “explosives.” As with any other conspiracy theory that involves accusations that the “government” or the CIA (or whoever) actually carried out the attack, it is necessary to run down the following checklist of observations. If you can get past all of these tests, then maybe there really was a conspiracy at work. If not, it is simply that, a conspiracy theory dreamt up by fringe individuals.
1. A good conspiracy theory suggests that the government is competent enough to map out the strategy, plan the mission, subvert the individuals required to run the plot and then carry it out without getting caught. For anyone who has ever worked for government, it is known that the level of competency required to create such a conspiracy is beyond that of virtually any government – democratic or otherwise.
2. A conspiracy theory assumes that the government pays its employees enough to remain silent. Given the untold millions that could be made by a single book deal revealing the conspiracy and the relatively low rates of pay in government, this is obviously a ludicrous suggestion.
3. The 9/11 conspiracy theory assumes that the rank and file worker in government who helped carry out the conspiracy would tolerate and assist in the mass murder of their fellow citizens. This might be a fair criticism of senior political leaders in some states, but it is a slanderous accusation for the vast majority of government workers in democratic states.
In addition to these general guidelines, it is useful to keep the principle of Occam’s razor in mind when doing analysis on major events: the simplest solution is usually the correct one. If a large airplane full of jet fuel crashes into an extraordinarily tall building at a high rate of speed, then it was probably the airplane that caused the building to fall, not a cabal of unseen secretive government operatives who committed a mass murder against their own citizens. — Tom Quiggen
For anyone who has ever worked for government, it is known that the level of competency required to create such a conspiracy is beyond that of virtually any government – democratic or otherwise. — Tom Quiggen
3. The 9/11 conspiracy theory assumes that the rank and file worker in government who helped carry out the conspiracy would tolerate and assist in the mass murder of their fellow citizens. This might be a fair criticism of senior political leaders in some states, but it is a slanderous accusation for the vast majority of government workers in democratic states. — Tom Quiggen
In addition to these general guidelines, it is useful to keep the principle of Occam’s razor in mind when doing analysis on major events: the simplest solution is usually the correct one. If a large airplane full of jet fuel crashes into an extraordinarily tall building at a high rate of speed, then it was probably the airplane that caused the building to fall, not a cabal of unseen secretive government operatives who committed a mass murder against their own citizens. — Tom Quiggen
As opposed to some people who see the word "conspiracy" and go straight into saying that whoever wrote it is an ignorant idiot who wears a tin foil hat, has a computer chip in their brain and has insurance against alien abduction.
As I have already said, I think the latter is against the guidelines of the forum which states that evangelicalism is not tolerated. — René Descartes
Russia, on the other hand, and Putin in particular, have a known history of imprisoning and killing opponents at home and abroad, and have suffered little in the way of consequences for it. — Baden
Lip-syncers all. Sad. — Bitter Crank
Fact is that people believe Alex and they think they are intelligently critical when they believe Alex Jones.someone like Alex Jones is an entertainer who deliberately concocts conspiracies to make money. It's his business. Given that, no serious-minded person should pay attention to him except as a source of amusement. — Baden
it's telling how Jones once jumped on the Trump train became the most purebred propagandist for Trump in the style of Goebbels and/or old-style Stalinist propaganda. — ssu
In the case of 9/11 there's a lot of unanswered questions in regards to how a modern steel framed building could have collapsed symmetrically and at free fall speed, with all the steel columns supporting the building turning into cheese. — Posty McPostface
↪charleton If you think I speak like a true trumper, then you have perceived nothing about anything I have written. Plus, you aren't very good with non-literal statements. Kind of a sour-puss, actually. — Bitter Crank
I have to say that it would be a huge risk / gamble if it is false flag from those two countries. Just imagine that the attack failed, or the attacker got captured - great international scale disaster! On the other hand, if it is true flag, it seems somewhat more plausible to me. — Agustino
I love conspiracy theories. They always get people to think more deeply about a problem rather than just listen to the official reports. — René Descartes
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