Question:

A 9/11 question...conspiracy theories?

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I'm a conspiracy theorist

i believe that the U.S needed a reason to go into the Middle East so they can get their oil and 9/11 was that reason.

i just did my own research and this is what i believe..

but anyway.

A guy once came to my sister and said " i wish i could kill all the dirty Muslims in our country and then blow up their country"...

This made me feel really weird

Why don't people realize that if it really was terrorists on 9/11, all the other Muslim Americans had nothing to do with it...

at school... i sometimes get called a terrorist

On You-tube, when i leave a comment supporting the inside job theory, people curse at me and say that you hate America...I don't hate America...!!

5 years ago...a women was arrested under the Patriot Act which allows the government to arrest any one without a warrant and in secrecy...she was innocent and is still in jail.

* one of her kidneys had been removed while in captivity;

* her teeth had been removed;

* her nose had been broken, and improperly reset;

* her recent gun-shot wound had been incompetently dressed, was oozing blood, leaving her clothes soaked with blood.

This is very sad

what do you guys have to say about all these things?

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6 ANSWERS


  1. Many theories Nutcases like Dylan Avery came up with have already been debunked by many 9/11 debunking videos....

    Watch s***w loose change: Not freaking again addition...

    It will clear your mind right up and prove the real attackers was a terrorist group in Afghanistan..

    However I do agree Bush and his band of idiots took the opportunity to attack Iraq with reason..


  2. It was an inside job to get more oil is what I heard.  

  3. I'm sorry you are being called a terrorist. It is very sad that so many innocent civilians have been killed in Iraq and in other places in the Middle East, when the real culprits are still out there...

  4. Being a "conspiracy theorist" once meant real education, a PhD or Master's degree in an investigative field. It once meant true investigation. It meant researching mysteries for the better good. Now, anyone with access to YouTube can be a "conspiracy theorist".

    I hear the claim that the U.S. invaded Iraq for oil quite often. However, even a knowledgeable history teacher will tell you that's not true. The U.S. has one of the most limited governments in existence. This is the most capitalist country in the world. Companies control our economy, not politicians. This is the #1 mistake that "conspiracy theorists" make in this case: accusing the government of something that corporations control. The second mistake is failing to realize that Iraq's oil is controlled by the Iraqi government, not American corporations. The revenue from the income goes to Iraq. By the end of this year, Iraq will make $79 billion in oil revenue. This triggered U.S. Representative James Walsh (R-NY) to insist that Iraq should reimburse the United States for some of the $49 billion the U.S. has paid to rebuild Iraq's infrastructure. Many leading members of Congress and the White House immediately put down this idea.

    If the U.S. did go into Iraq for oil, it certainly made a big mistake. In fact, you could make the case that going into Iraq has made the oil market more unstable. On top of that, the U.S. government is getting zero money from any Iraqi oil revenue. American oil companies have yet to make any money off of Iraq's oil. Now that was a very general response to a very complex issue, but you get the idea. Oil was not the goal in the invasion of Iraq.

    Now, when you add 9/11 to the equation things get tricky. That's an entirely different issue. So I'll basically give you the rundown of where that conspiracy theory currently stands. There remains no solid evidence for a controlled demolition, etc. during 9/11. The massive amount of 9/11 conspiracy theories should be a warning sign. The YouTube-quality and professionally-done conspiracy theory documentaries on 9/11 are easily disproved by leading engineers and architects.

    I've been very patient with your question, and hopefully I've provided some broad outlook on the absurdity of the conspiracy theories. I get it. Conspiracy theories are interesting, entertaining, and at times, thrilling. Time Magazine considers the 9/11 conspiracy theories to be a perverse type of mourning by Americans. That somehow it makes them feel secure knowing that something or someone is really in control of major events, and has the ability to coverup anything. But the things is, 9/11 was real. It wasn't decades ago in Dealey Plaza in 1963 or almost a century ago in Ekaterinburg in 1917. This was our lifetime, our experience. By insinuating government involvement or a conspiracy theory of some kind in 9/11, a great deal of harm is done to people, like myself, who were deeply disturbed by the events of September 11, and wish that only its victims and survivors were remembered, and not the event itself.

  5. I never heard about the women that was arrested. If you look at the first tower that fell, right before it started to collapse there was a large fireball below where the smoke was coming out of. Coincidental the expected level where the fire came out of was closed for maintenance two days before. The government said the fireball was from the fuel tank finally exploding, but there is no way the fire would have been burning for over an hour before fire found it's way to the tank.

    Also the year before the government was complaining because the towers were money guzzlers.

  6. The very fact that you can be ostrasized for having a personal belief leads me to believe that the attack was 'allowed to happen'.

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