The 9/11 Deception Remains In Control Of America’s Destiny
The 9/11 Deception Remains In
Control Of America’s Destiny
Paul Craig Roberts
The 18th anniversary of 9/11 is
over, but 9/11 isn’t. September 11, 2001, is the defining event of
America’s 21st century. The neoconservatives used their false flag
event to destroy the Bill of Rights and turn the American people over to a
police state, and they used the New Pearl Harbor that they orchestrated to
launch their wars of aggression in the Middle East for the purpose of
reconstructing the Middle East in Israel’s interest. The new
American police state will become more oppressive as time goes by, and now that
Israel has the bit in its teeth the United States will likely be forced into a
war that will result in nuclear Armageddon.
The evil inherent in Washington’s
attacks on Islamic countries has resulted in the intervention by other powerful
countries who are threatened by the chaos that Washington has sowed for two
decades in the Middle East. Russia for one intervened in Syria and stopped the
neoconservative orchestrated overthrow of the Syrian government, thereby making
the world aware that American unilateralism was over. This
realization together with the constant stream of lies and threats issuing from
Washington has undermined America’s influence in the world and will lead to the
breakup of Washington’s empire.
Edward Curtin explains how the insouciant
American people were set up in advance through a form of linguistic mind
control to accept the utterly implausible official explanation of 9/11. Indeed,
the term 9/11 is itself part of the mind control. Curtain disavows
its use. I agree with him. We need a different way of naming the
event. I am open to suggestions.
I found convincing Curtin’s
explanation of how language was used to set up the American people in advance
to accept the official explanation of the defining event of 21st century America. I
recommend it to you:
Why I Don’t Speak of the Fake News
of “9/11” Anymore
Edward Curtin
September 11, 2019
This article was posted last year
but is still pertinent, so I am re-posting it.
Tuesday, September 11, 2001, was a
non-teaching day for me. I was home when the phone rang at 9 A.M.
It was my daughter, who 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.
That was my introduction to the
attacks. Seventeen years have disappeared behind us, yet it seems like
yesterday. And yet again, it seems like long, long ago.
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 was full of holes. I am a born and bred New Yorker with a long
family history rooted in the NYC Fire and Police Departments, one grandfather
having been the Deputy Chief of the Fire Department, the highest ranking
uniformed firefighter, and the other a NYPD cop; a niece and her husband were
NYPD detectives deeply involved in the response to that day’s attacks. Hearing
the absurd official explanations and the deaths of so many innocent people,
including many hundreds of firefighters, cops, and emergency workers, I felt a
suspicious rage. 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,
Michael Ruppert, and other early skeptics, I could articulate the reasons for
my initial intuition. I set about creating and teaching a college course
on what had come to be called 9/11.
But I no longer refer to the events
of that day by those numbers. Let me explain why.
By 2004 I had enough solid evidence
to convince me that the U.S. government’s claims (and The 9/11 Commission
Report) were fictitious. They seemed so blatantly false that I concluded
the attacks were a deep-state intelligence operation whose purpose was to
initiate a national state of emergency to justify wars of aggression, known
euphemistically as “the war on terror.” The sophistication of the attacks,
and the lack of any proffered evidence for the government’s claims, suggested
that a great deal of planning had been involved.
Yet I was chagrined and amazed by
so many people’s insouciant lack of interest in questioning and researching 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. These included many prominent
leftist critics of American foreign policy, such as Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn,
Alexander Cockburn, and others, whose defenses of the official government and
media explanations (when they even made such defenses; often they just trashed
skeptics as “9/11 conspiracy nuts,” to quote Cockburn) totally lacked any
scientific or logical rigor or even knowledge of the facts. Now that
seventeen years have elapsed, this seems truer than ever. There is a long
list of leftists who refuse to examine matter to this very day. And most
interestingly, they also do the same with the assassination of JFK, the other
key seminal event of recent American history.
I kept thinking of the ongoing
language and logic used to describe what had happened that terrible day in 2001
and in the weeks to follow. It all seemed so clichéd and surreal, as if
set phrases had it been extracted from some secret manual, phrases that rung
with an historical resonance that cast a spell on the public, as if mass
hypnosis were involved. People seemed mesmerized as they spoke of the
events in the official language that had been presented to them.
So with the promptings of people
like Graeme MacQueen, Lance deHaven-Smith, T.H. Meyer, et al., and much study
and research, I have concluded that my initial intuitive skepticism was correct
and 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.
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 11 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 (PNAC)
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,
etc. “absent some catastrophic event – like a new Pearl Harbor.”
Then on January 11, 2001, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld’s “Space
Commission” warned that the U.S. could face a “space Pearl Harbor” if it
weren’t careful and didn’t increase space security. Rumsfeld urged
support for the proposed U.S. national missile defense system opposed by
Russia and China and massive funding for the increased weaponization of
space. At the same time he went around handing out and recommending
Pearl Harbor: Warning and Decision (1962) by Roberta Wohlstetter, who had
spent almost two decades working for The Rand Corporation and who claimed
that Pearl Harbor was a surprise attack that shocked U.S. leaders. Pearl
Harbor, Pearl Harbor, Pearl Harbor – those words and images dominated
public consciousness for many months before 11 September 2001, and of
course after. 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 theatres 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 news all summer despite the
fact that the 60th anniversary of that attack was not until December 7,
2001, a more likely release date. So why was it released so early?
Once the September 11 attacks occurred, the Pearl Harbor analogy was
“plucked out” of the social atmosphere and used constantly, beginning
immediately. Another “Day of Infamy,” another surprise attack blared the
media and government officials. A New Pearl Harbor! George W.
Bush was widely reported to have had the time that night, after a
busy day of flying hither and yon to avoid the terrorists who for some
reason had forgotten he was in a classroom in Florida, to allegedly use it
in his diary, writing that “the Pearl Harbor of the twenty-first century
took place today. We think it is Osama bin Laden.” Shortly
after the 50th anniversary of Pearl Harbor on December 7th, Bush then
formerly announced, referencing the attacks of September 11, that the U.
S. would withdraw from the ABM Treaty. The examples of this Pearl Harbor/
September 11 analogy are manifold, but I am summarizing, so I will skip
giving them. Any casual researcher can confirm this.
2. Homeland. This strange
un-American term, another WW II word associated with another enemy – Nazi
Germany – was also used 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. Now the
Department of Homeland Security with its massive budget is lodged permanently
in popular consciousness.
3. Ground Zero. This is a third
WWII (“the Good War”) term first used at 11:55 A.M. on September 11 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 and
anti-scientific 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 in terms of the 11
September attacks, but surely not as a scare tactic and as part of the plan to
withdraw from the ABM treaty that would be announced in December. 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.
4. The Unthinkable. This is
another nuclear term whose usage as linguistic mind control and propaganda is
brilliantly analyzed by Graeme MacQueen in the penultimate chapter of his very
important book, The 2001 Anthrax Deception. He notes the patterned use of
this term before and after September 11, 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 11 attacks
occurred, Bush rethought the unthinkable and officially gave formal notice on
December 13 to withdraw the U.S. from the ABM Treaty, as previously
noted. 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 the Sept 11
attacks. 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.
5. 9/11. This is the key
usage that has reverberated down the years around which the others revolve. It
is an anomalous numerical designation 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. It’s
impossible. But if you have a good historical sense, you will remember
that the cornerstone for the Pentagon was lain on September 11, 1941, three
months before the attack on Pearl Harbor, and that the CIA engineered a coup
against the Allende government in Chile on Sept 11, 1973. Just strange
coincidences? The future editor of The New York Times and Iraq war
promoter, Bill Keller, introduced the emergency phone connection on the morning
of September 12th in a NY Times op-ed piece, “America’s Emergency Line:
911.” 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 11 as 9/11, an endless national emergency fear 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. Mentioning Israel (“America is proud to be Israel’s closest
ally and best friend in the world,” George W. Bush would tell the Israeli
Knesset) so many times, Keller was not very subtly performing an act of
legerdemain with multiple meanings. By comparing the victims of the 11
September attacks to Israeli “victims,” he was implying, among other things,
that the Israelis are innocent victims who are not involved in terrorism, but
are terrorized by Palestinians, as Americans are terrorized by fanatical
Muslims. Palestinians/Al-Qaeda. Israel/U.S. Explicit and
implicit parallels of the guilty and the innocent. Keller tells us who
the real killers are. His use of the term 9/11 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 well-respected critics
of the U.S. government’s explanation 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 because of the nature of such propagandistic
techniques – 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, which
is a mouth-full and not easily digested in the age of Twitter and texting.
But I am not sure how to be more succinct or how to undo the damage,
except by writing what I have written here.
Lance deHaven-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 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, scientists, architects, and
scholars from many disciplines (see the upcoming 9/11 Unmasked: An
International Review Panel Investigation by David Ray Griffin and Elizabeth
Woodworth, to be released September 11, 2018). To paraphrase the
prescient Vince Salandria, who said it long ago concerning the government’s
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
utterable. “There is no mystery.” The truth becomes obvious.
How to communicate this when the
corporate mainstream media serve the function of the government’s mockingbird
(as in Operation Mockingbird), repeating and repeating and repeating the same
narrative in the same language; that is the difficult task we are faced with,
but there are signs today that breakthroughs are occurring, as growing numbers
of international academic scholars are pushing to incorporate the analysis of
the official propaganda surrounding 11 September 2001 into their work within
the academy, a turnabout from years of general silence. And more and more
people are coming to realize that the official lies about 11 September are the
biggest example of fake news in this century. Fake news used to justify
endless wars and the slaughter of so many innocents around the world.
Words have a power to enchant and
mesmerize. Linguistic mind-control, especially when linked to traumatic
events such as the September 11 and the anthrax attacks, can strike people dumb
and blind. It often makes some subjects “unthinkable” and “unspeakable”
(to quote Jim Douglass quoting Thomas Merton in JFK and the Unspeakable: the
unspeakable “is the void that contradicts everything that is spoken even before
the words are said.”).
We need a new vocabulary to speak
of these terrible things. Let us learn, as Chief Joseph said, to speak
with a straight tongue, and in language that doesn’t do the enemies work of
mind control, but snaps the world awake to the truth of the mass murders of
September 11, 2001 that have been used to massacre millions across the world.
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