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The Direct Connection between 911 and Muslim deaths


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Western Nations are doing what they have long done best, irrationally blame other nations and peoples simply to justify wars and conquest. These "free", "honest", "open", "we discuss everything, no topic is off the table", [and a host of other deeply hypocritical and nonsensical ideas] people have jumped on the "let's root out evil" bandwagon again. 

And once again, the powers that be have managed to dupe, badly, the gullible masses. 

This thread is for discussing 911, the big lies of 911, the NIST lies on science and how they are all responsible for the illegal invasions, the murders of countless Muslims and other innocents who had nothing whatsoever to do with 911.

Discussions of previous US lies/false flags are welcome because they point up the criminal pattern of the USA and the connivance of their western partners in these crimes.

 

 

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1) The NIST study is false. Why? Because their science isn't science. It's dry labbing. 

  1. The act of supplying fictional yet plausible results in lieu of performing an assigned experiment.
  2. https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/dry_labbing

2) NIST first lied about free fall for WTC7, [and when caught in those lies, the lying scientists looked like deer caught in vehicle headlights] then NIST admitted free fall had occurred. That means controlled demolition. 

3) Controlled demolition means that 911 was not the result of the alleged hijackers, it can only be a US false flag operation.

4) Has the US ever done this kind of thing, false flag operations, before? Yes, many times. 

Edited by hot enough
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18 minutes ago, eyeball said:

Oh ffs...here we go again.

Go away why don't you?

I hardly expected you to be the first denier of reality, eyeball, but surprises do come in funny packages.

My guess is that you know nothing about the science of 911, but you are dead sure you know what happened.

Why would you tell someone who brings forward scientific evidence to go away? It makes no logical sense, at all.

It illustrates a great disdain for the fundamental principles that *our military has fought and died for*.

[*...* registered propaganda]

Edited by hot enough
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Every day, honest people, honest westerners sleep, rise, eat, go to work, love their children, have sex, watch TV, read a newspaper, ... live their ordinary lives. Why should it be different for Iraqis, Afghans, Vietnamese, Nicaraguans, Laotians, ... ?

WikiLeaks' Collateral Murder: U.S. Soldier Ethan McCord

http://www.thecanary.co/2016/07/13/many-iraqis-actually-kill-likely-million-chilcot-part-1/

 

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This is/was and always has been everyday stuff, whether it was Iraq or Vietnam or Korea or Afghanistan or Nicaragua or Indonesia or Cambodia or Libya or Panama or ... and we aren't anywhere close to the over 70 times this has happened - the US illegally invading sovereign nations - Grenada or Cuba or Guatemala or Honduras or Iran or Brazil or El Salvador or ...

In the Philippines,

Guy Williams, of the Iowa Regiment:

The soldiers made short work of the whole thing. They looted every house, and found almost everything, from a pair of wooden shoes up to a piano, and they carried everything off or destroyed it. Talk of the natives plundering the towns: I don’t think they are in it with the Fiftieth Iowa.

Fred D. Sweet, of the Utah Light Battery:

The scene reminded me of the shooting of jack-rabbits in Utah, only the rabbits sometimes got away, but the insurgents did not.

Capt. Albert Otis, describes his exploits at Santa Ana:

I have six horses and three carriages in my yard, and enough small plunder for a family of six. The house I had at Santa Ana had five pianos. I couldn’t take them, so I put a big grand piano out of a second-story window. You can guess its finish. Everything is pretty quiet about here now. I expect we will not be kept here very long now. Give my love to all.

 

Arthur Minkler, of the Kansas Regiment says:

We advanced four miles and we fought every inch of the way; . . . saw twenty-five dead insurgents in one place and twenty-seven in another, besides a whole lot of them scattered along that I did not count. . . . It was like hunting rabbits; an insurgent would jump out of a hole or the brush and run; he would not get very far. . . . I suppose you are not interested in the way we do the job. We do not take prisoners. At least the Twentieth Kansas do not.

Read on at, 

http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/58/

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Quote

Hot Enough

In the Philippines,

Guy Williams, of the Iowa Regiment:

The soldiers made short work of the whole thing. They looted every house, and found almost everything, from a pair of wooden shoes up to a piano, and they carried everything off or destroyed it. Talk of the natives plundering the towns: I don’t think they are in it with the Fiftieth Iowa.

 

What war doesn't have an ugly side? 

You're giving disinformation.

 

Thank God for the USA who'd helped liberate the Philippines from Spain, otherwise its peoples wouldn't be so educated and fluent in English (which makes them desirable for employment overseas).

 

Quote

 

Education became a very important issue for the United States colonial government, since it allowed it to spread their cultural values, particularly the English language, to the Filipino people.[2] Instruction in English language, and American history, lead to forming of a national identity and Filipino nationalism.[3]

 

Every child from age 7 was required to register in schools located in their own town or province. The students were given free school materials. There were three levels of education during the American period. The "elementary" level consisted of four primary years and 3 intermediate years. The "secondary" or high school level consisted of four years; and the third was the "college" or tertiary level. Religion was not part of the curriculum of the schools. as it had been during the Spanish period.

 

In some cases those students who excelled academically were sent to the U.S. to continue their studies and to become experts in their desired fields or professions. They were called "scholars", and "pensionados" because the government covered all their expenses.[4] In return, they were to teach or work in government offices after they finished their studies. Some examples of these successful Filipino scholars were Judge José Abad Santos, Francisco Benitez, Dr. Honoria Sison and Francisco Delgado.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_in_the_Philippines_during_the_American_rule

 

Edited by betsy
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War is a very powerful event , it can bring out the worst of people and the best of people......nobody knows how they are going to react to this environment, from one day to another....I say this because i have seen it first hand and read many accounts from Victoria cross and medal of honor winners that showed heroic accounts on one day, but also cowardly accounts on another....it was very common in WWII for soldiers to just wonder off during combat, and travel back to the big cities for a rest, get caught or give up to MP's and return to their unit.....The human brain can only take so much horror....before it does something, such as puts the body into a catatonic state, to the point you might hear voices or do something not in your nature, such as gun down civilians...you may be alright one day, and then totally dysfunctional the next....the longer you are in a combat zone, exposed to death and destruction, they worst your condition will be....So it is easy to judge those that have had these conditions.....by others who do not understand...They did not create this monster.....Our governments did....

While not much good comes out of conflict......it does not mean there is none.....below are a small sample of soldiers who tried to do some good, Goggle is full of them....all one has to do is look.....Now the examples i used were US troops, there are plenty of examples of Canadians soldiers doing this as well...out of their own pockets, and donations from home, meaning moms or moms friends....there was a moms group from NFLD that knit over a thousand little hats a mittens for the children in Afghanistan....there are thousands of examples....of our soldiers making a difference in a foreign country,  

 

https://www.dvidshub.net/news/2828/iraqi-us-soldiers-bring-goodwill-horajeb

https://www.dvidshub.net/news/11709/toy-story-soldier-mission-goodwill-iraqi-children

 

http://rense.com/general48/troopss.htm

https://www.stripes.com/news/u-s-troops-work-with-afghan-officials-to-open-schools-in-remote-villages-1.157361#.WN6GbVXyuUk

https://www.army.mil/article/162891/US_Soldiers_deliver_school_supplies_to_children_in_Kosovo/

https://www.dvidshub.net/news/104866/afghan-child-rescued-well-afghan-and-us-soldiers-partner-save-day

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