| Thank you Willie, I caught the show today and thought it was fabulous. The last bit about the what the air traffic controllers heard on the day of the hijacking I had never heard before. It was sad to hear that so many of them are frightened for their lives and on the run. Maybe Jesse's program might make them be a little less afraid and willing to come forward. A show with such large viewership might actually might give them protection by coming out to such a large audience. One again, great job on this Willie! ~ Camille --- On Thu, 12/10/09, WIlliam_Rodriguez <wtc...@gmail.com> wrote: |
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Taped the show and watched it last night with the family - I am just amazed all of this got through and actually on TV. Building 7 came down, I think, 3 times! Fabulous. The black box info, the witness who saw the black box, and the air traffic controller info were all new to me, as was the hanger at JFK that has evidence in it. With 1.5 million views, very good news for the truth movement. Jesse is very exciting, very brave.
I am looking forward to going into the city today, for the 11th of the Month Truth Action at Powell and Market, and maybe talk to people on the streets who saw it as well.
Thanks to Willie and Jesse,
Kathy
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Watching this first 9/11 show for the second time tonight - it's a
Cliffhanger - they end with (and boy I hope this isn't a giant red
herring) the 'mindblower' that the 'airline people' who wouldn't come
forward, said that they knew there were hijackers in the cockpit
before the American Airlines plane took off (didn't say which one) -
and conjectured the missing black boxes would tell us this and which
language they were speaking if they were found.
Off topic, I found this article on a Semour Hersh / Mondale event
which I should post seperately:
The Iran Contra scandal.
(Hersh said the Reagan administration came to office with a clear
goal of finding a way to finance covert actions, such as the funding
of the Nicaraguan Contras, without appropriations so that Congress
wouldn't know about them. Mondale noted that Reagan had signed a law
barring further aid to the Contras, then participated in a scheme to
keep the aid flowing. Hersh said that two key veterans of Iran-Contra,
Dick Cheney and national security official Elliot Abrams, were
reunited in the George W. Bush White House and decided that the key
lesson from Iran-Contra was that too many people in the administration
knew about it.)
And the Bush-Cheney years.
(Said Hersh: “The contempt for Congress in the Bush-Cheney White
House was extaordinary.” Said Mondale of his successor, Cheney, and
his inner circle: “they ran a government within the government.” Hersh
added: “Eight or nine neoconservatives took over our country.” Mondale
said that the precedents of abuse of vice presidential power by Cheney
would remain "like a loaded pistol that you leave on the dining room
table.")
Jacobs pressed both men on the question of whether the frequent abuses
of power show that the Constitution fails, because these things keep
happening, or whether it works, because these things keep coming to
light.
Mondale stuck with the happy answer. “The system has come through
again and again,” he said. Presidents always think they will get away
with it, but eventually reporters like Hersh bring things to light,
the public “starts smelling this stuff,” the courts and the Congress
get involved. Presidents “always, in the long run, find out that the
system is stronger than they are.”