[ARTICLE LINK]
September 10, 2025
Language, Mind Control, and
9/11
Edward Curtin
“An example that shows the radical
devaluation of thought is the transformation of words in propaganda;
there, language, the instrument of the mind, become ‘pure sound,’ a
symbol directly evoking feelings and reflexes.”
Jacques Ellul, Propaganda
“A leader or an interest that can
make itself master of current symbols is the master of the current
situation.” Walter Lippman, Public
Opinion
Tuesday, September 11, 2001, was a non-teaching day for me. I was
home in Massachusetts when the phone rang at 9 A.M. It was my daughter
who lived and worked in New York City and was on a week’s vacation with
her future husband. “Turn on the TV,” she said. “Why?” I asked.
“Haven’t you heard? A plane hit the World Trade Tower.”
I turned the TV on and watched a plane crash into the Tower. I said,
“They just showed a replay.” She quickly corrected me, “No, that’s
another plane.” And we talked as we watched in horror, learning that it
was the South Tower this time.
Sitting next to my daughter was my future son-in-law; he had not had a
day off from work in a year. He had finally taken a week’s vacation so
they could go to Cape Cod. He worked on the 100th floor of the
South Tower. By chance, he had escaped the death that claimed 176 of his
co-workers. My father’s good friend, retired from a NYC job and living in
Pennsylvania, had a one-day-a-month consultancy job at the Twin Tower.
Tuesday the 11th was his day to die in the North
Tower.
That was my introduction to the attacks. Twenty-four years have
disappeared behind us, yet it seems like yesterday. And yet again,
it seems like long, long ago. But long ago is today when the
repercussions of what happened then “lie” behind today’s terrible events,
as they do because Bush, Jr.’s Global War on Terror continues on its mad
and doleful way under three more presidents and different linguistic mind
control narratives.
As I type these words, I look down on my desk at my grandfather’s gold
badge: Deputy Chief of the New York City Fire Department. Two of his
brothers, my great-uncles, were members of the Fire Department and
another a NYC cop, a sister a public school teacher. My other
grandfather, my cousins, niece and her husband were NYC Police Officers.
My grandfather’s nightstick hangs on a nail in another room. A
great-great grandfather owned a popular tavern in the West 40s and
another a livery stable on the West Side. Having grown up in the Bronx,
gone to high school and graduate school in Manhattan, I have long and
deep family roots in NYC. My Irish immigrant ancestors were sandhogs who
dug the tunnels for the subways, the tunnels bringing water down to the
city, and the foundations for the skyscrapers. This history goes deep and
high, for my niece was a detective and her husband an anti-terrorism
detective who flew over the Twin Towers in a helicopter on that fateful
morning, taking so many of the famous photographs of the devastation
below.
I tell you this to emphasize how the city, where my family goes back 175
years, is in my blood, and the news my daughter conveyed to me affected
me deeply. No matter where you roam in later life, as many native New
Yorkers will attest, such bonds tie you back to what we call The City,
and when its foundations are shaken as they were on September 11, 2001,
so are you at a very deep level.
Thus the truth of how and why these tragic events happened on a glorious
September morning became my quest. It began emotionally but soon turned
logical and objective as I followed my academic training in the sociology
of knowledge and propaganda.
Over the next few days, as the government and the media accused Osama bin
Laden and 19 Arabs of being responsible for the attacks, I told a friend
that what I was hearing wasn’t believable; the official story as reported
by the media was full of holes. It was a reaction that I couldn’t fully
explain, but it set me on a search for the truth. I proceeded in fits and
starts, but by the fall of 2004, with the help of the extraordinary work
of David Ray Griffin and other early skeptics, I could articulate the
reasons for my initial intuition. My specialty throughout my long
university teaching career has been propaganda, so I set about creating
and teaching a college course on what had come to be called 9/11, on what
I had learned.
But I no longer refer to the events of that day by those numbers –
9/11.
Let me explain why.
By 2004 I was convinced that the U.S. government’s claims (and
The 9/11 Commission
Report) were
fictitious. After meticulous study and research, they seemed so
blatantly false that I concluded the attacks were an intelligence
operation led by the neoconservatives – Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, et
al. – who had become central elements within the George W. Bush
administration and whose purpose was to initiate a national state of
emergency (that is still in effect in 2025) to justify wars of
aggression, known euphemistically as “the war on terror.” The
sophistication of the attacks, and the lack of any proffered real
evidence except hyperbolic empty accusations for the government’s claims,
suggested that a great deal of planning had been involved and a coverup
was underway.
Yet I was chagrined and amazed by so many people’s insouciant lack of
interest in researching arguably the most important world event since the
assassination of President Kennedy. I understood the various
psychological dimensions of this denial, the fear, cognitive dissonance,
etc., but I sensed something else as well. For so many people their
minds seemed to have been “made up” from the start. I found that many
young people were the exceptions, while most of their elders dared not
question the official narrative. This included many prominent leftist
critics of American foreign policy. Now that twenty-four years have
elapsed, this seems truer than ever.
So with the promptings of people like Graeme MacQueen, Lance de
Haven-Smith, T.H. Meyer, Jacques Ellul, et al., I have concluded that a
process of linguistic mind-control was in place before, during, and after
the attacks. As with all good propaganda, the language had to be
insinuated over time and introduced through intermediaries. It had to
seem “natural” and to flow out of events, not to precede them. And it had
to be repeated over and over again. All of this was carried out by the
corporate mainstream media.
In summary form, I will list the language I believe “made up the minds”
of those who have refused to examine the government’s claims about the
September 11th attacks and the subsequent anthrax attacks.
- Pearl Harbor. As pointed out by David Ray Griffin and others,
this term was used in September 2000 in The Project for the New American
Century’s report,
“Rebuilding America’s Defenses” (p.51). Its neo-con authors
argued that the U.S. wouldn’t be able to attack Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria,
Lebanon, Libya, Iran, Somalia, and Sudan, etc. “absent some catastrophic
and catalyzing event – like a new Pearl Harbor.”
Coincidentally or not,
the film
Pearl
Harbor, made with Pentagon assistance and a massive budget, was
released on May 25, 2001 and was a box office hit. It was in the theaters
throughout the summer. The thought of the attack on Pearl Harbor (not a
surprise to the U.S. government, but presented as such) was in the air
despite the fact that the 60th anniversary of that attack was
not until December 7, 2001, a more likely release date. Once the
September 11th attacks occurred, the Pearl Harbor comparison
was “plucked out” of the social atmosphere and used innumerable times,
beginning immediately. Even George W. Bush was reported to have had the
time to allegedly use it in his diary that night. The examples of this
comparison are manifold, but I am summarizing, so I will skip giving
them. Any casual researcher can confirm this.
- Homeland. This strange un-American term, another WW II word
associated with another enemy – Nazi Germany – was also used (in a
Freudian Slip
faux pas) many times by the neo-con authors of “Rebuilding
America’s Defenses.” I doubt any average American referred to this
country by that term before. Of course it became the moniker for
The Department of Homeland Security, marrying home with security to form
a comforting name that simultaneously and unconsciously suggests a
defense against Hitler-like evil coming from the outside. Not
coincidentally, Hitler introduced it into the Nazi propaganda vernacular
at the 1934 Nuremberg rally. Both usages conjured up images of a home
besieged by alien forces intent on its destruction; thus preemptive
action was in order.
- Ground Zero. This is a third WWII (“the good war”) term first
used at 11:55 A.M. on September 11th by Mark Walsh (aka “the
Harley Guy” because he was wearing a Harley-Davidson tee shirt) in an
interview on the street by a Fox News reporter, Rick Leventhal.
Identified as a Fox free-lancer, Walsh also explained the Twin Towers
collapse in a precise, well-rehearsed manner that would be the same
illogical explanation later given by the government: “mostly due to
structural failure because the fire was too intense.” Ground zero – a
nuclear bomb term first used by U.S. scientists to refer to the spot
where they exploded the first nuclear bomb in New Mexico in 1945 – became
another meme adopted by the media that suggested a nuclear attack had
occurred or might in the future if the U.S. didn’t act. The nuclear scare
was raised again and again by George W. Bush and U.S. officials in the
days and months following the attacks, although nuclear weapons were
beside the point. But the conjoining of “nuclear” with “ground zero”
served to raise the fear factor dramatically. Ironically, the project to
develop the nuclear bomb was called the Manhattan Project and was
headquartered at 270 Broadway, NYC, a few short blocks north of the
World Trade Center.
- The Unthinkable. This is another nuclear term whose usage as
linguistic mind control and propaganda is analyzed by Graeme MacQueen in
the penultimate chapter of
The 2001
Anthrax Deception. He notes the patterned use of this
term before and after September 11th, while saying “the
pattern may not signify a grand plan …. It deserves investigation and
contemplation.” He then presents a convincing case that the use of this
term couldn’t be accidental. He notes how George W. Bush, in a
major foreign policy speech on May 1, 2001, “gave informal public
notice that the United States intended to withdraw unilaterally from the
ABM Treaty”; Bush said the U.S. must be willing to
“
rethink the unthinkable.” This was necessary because of terrorism and
rogue states with “weapons of mass destruction.” PNAC also argued that
the U.S. should withdraw from the treaty. A signatory to the treaty could
only withdraw after giving six months’ notice and because of
“extraordinary events” that “jeopardized its supreme interests.” Once the
September 11th attacks occurred, Bush rethought the
unthinkable and officially gave formal notice on December 13th
to withdraw the U.S. from the ABM Treaty.
MacQueen specifies the many times different media used the term
“unthinkable” in October 2001 in reference to the anthrax attacks.
He explicates its usage in one of the anthrax letters – “The Unthinkabel”
[sic]. He explains how the media that used the term so often were
at the time unaware of its usage in the anthrax letter since that
letter’s content had not yet been revealed, and how the letter writer had
mailed the letter before the media started using the word. He makes
a rock solid case showing the U.S. government’s complicity in the anthrax
attacks and therefore in those of 11 September While calling the
use of the term “unthinkable” in all its iterations “problematic,” he
writes, “The truth is that the employment of ‘the unthinkable’ in this
letter, when weight is given both to the meaning of this term in U.S.
strategic circles and to the other relevant uses of the term in 2001,
points us in the direction of the U.S. military and intelligence
communities.” I am reminded of Orwell’s point in 1984:
“a
heretical thought – that is, a thought diverging from the principles
of Ingsoc – should be literally unthinkable, at least as far as
thought is dependent on words.” Thus the government and media’s use
of “unthinkable” becomes a classic case of “doublethink.” The
unthinkable is unthinkable.
- 9/11. This is the key usage that has reverberated down the
years around which the others revolve. It is an anomalous numerical
designation with no precedent applied to an historical event, and
obviously also the emergency telephone number. Try to think of another
numerical appellation for an important event in American history. The
future editor of The New York Times and Iraq war promoter, Bill
Keller, introduced this connection the following morning in a NY Times
op-ed
piece,
“America’s Emergency Line: 9/11.” The linkage of the attacks to a
permanent national emergency was thus subliminally introduced, as Keller
mentioned Israel nine times and seven times compared the U.S. situation
to that of Israel as a target for terrorists. His first sentence reads:
“An Israeli response to America’s aptly dated wake-up call might well be,
‘Now you know.’” By referring to September 11th as 9/11,
an endless national emergency became wedded to an endless war on “terror”
aimed at preventing Hitler-like terrorists from obliterating us with
nuclear weapons that could create another ground zero or holocaust. It is
a term that pushes all the right buttons evoking unending social fear and
anxiety. It is language as sorcery; it is propaganda at its best. Even
those who dissent from the official narrative continue to use the term
that has become a fixture of public consciousness through endless
repetition. As George W. Bush
would later put it as he connected Saddam Hussein to “9/11” and
pushed for the Iraq war, “We don’t want the smoking gun to be a mushroom
cloud.” All the ingredients for a linguistic mind-control smoothie
had been blended.
I have concluded – and this is impossible to prove definitively at this
time because of the nature of such propagandistic techniques and
documents that take many decades to be discovered and perhaps released –
that the use of all these words/numbers is part of a highly sophisticated
linguistic mind-control campaign waged to create a narrative that has
lodged in the minds of hundreds of millions of people and is very hard to
dislodge. It is why I don’t speak of “9/11” any more. I refer to those
events as the attacks of September 11, 2001. But I am not sure how to
undo the damage.
Lance de Haven-Smith puts it well in
Conspiracy Theory in America:
- The rapidity with which the new language of the war on terror
appeared and took hold; the synergy between terms and their mutual
connections to WW II nomenclatures; and above all the connections between
many terms and the emergency motif of “9/11” and “9-1-1” – any one of
these factors alone, but certainly all of them together – raise the
possibility that work on this linguistic construct began long before
9/11….It turns out that elite political crime, even treason, may actually
be official policy.
Needless to say, his use of the words “possibility” and “may” are in
order when one sticks to strict empiricism. However, when one reads his
full text, it is apparent to me that he considers these “coincidences”
part of a government conspiracy. I have also reached that conclusion. As
Thoreau put in his underappreciated humorous way, “Some circumstantial
evidence is very strong, as when you find a trout in the milk.”
The evidence for linguistic mind control, while the subject of this
essay, does not stand alone, of course. It underpins the actual attacks
of September 11 and the subsequent anthrax attacks that are linked. The
official explanations for these events by themselves do not stand up to
elementary logic and are
patently false, as proven by thousands of well-respected professional
researchers from all walks of life – i.e. engineers, pilots,
architects, and
scholars from many disciplines. To paraphrase the prescient
Philadelphia lawyer Vince Salandria, who said it long ago concerning
the assassination of President Kennedy, the attacks of 2001 are
“
a false mystery concealing state crimes.”
If one objectively studies the 2001 attacks together with the language
adopted to explain and preserve them in social memory, the “mystery”
emerges from the realm of the unthinkable and becomes unutterable. “There
is no mystery.” How to communicate this when the corporate mainstream
media serve the function of the government’s mockingbird (as in
Operation Mockingbird) repeating and repeating the same narrative in
the same language; that is the difficult task we are faced with.
The anthrax attacks that followed those of 9/11 have disappeared from
public memory in ways analogous to the pulverization of the Twin Towers
and World Trade Center Building 7. For the towers, at least, ghostly
afterimages persist, albeit fading like last night’s nightmare. But the
anthrax attacks, clearly linked to 9/11 and the Patriot Act, are like
lost letters, sent, but long forgotten. Such disappearing acts are a
staple of American life these days. Memory has come upon hard times in
amnesiac nation.
With The 2001 Anthrax Deception, Graeme MacQueen, founding Director of
the Center for Peace Studies at McMaster University, calls us back to a
careful reconsideration of the anthrax attacks. It is an eloquent and
pellucid lesson in inductive reasoning and deserves to stand with David
Ray Griffin’s
brilliant multi-volume dissection of the truth of that tragic
September 11 day and its consequences. MacQueen makes a powerful case for
the linkage of both events, a tie that binds both to insider elements
deep within the U.S. government, perhaps in coordination with foreign
elements. His book should be required reading.
MacQueen’s thesis is as follows: The criminal anthrax attacks were
conducted by a group of conspirators deep within the U.S. government who
are linked to, or identical with, the 9/11 perpetrators. Their purpose
was to redefine the Cold War into the Global War on Terror and in doing
so weaken civil liberties in the United States and attack other
nations.
Words have a power to enchant and mesmerize. Linguistic mind-control –
language as sorcery – especially when linked to traumatic events such as
the September 11th and anthrax attacks, can strike people dumb and blind.
It often makes some subjects “unthinkable” and “unspeakable” (to quote
James
W. Douglass quoting the Trappist monk Thomas Merton in
JFK
and the Unspeakable: the unspeakable “is the void that contradicts
everything that is spoken even before the words are said; the void that
gets into the language of public and official declarations at the very
moment when they are pronounced, and makes them ring dead with the
hollowness of the abyss. It is the void out of which Eichmann drew the
punctilious exactitude of his obedience . . .”).
We need a new vocabulary to speak of these terrible things.