Difference between revisions of "User:Woozle/positions/2013/9-11"

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==Position Quiz Answers==
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==Pages==
My answers to the [[9-11/disagreement/quiz|position quiz]] (as of 2009-12-05):
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* [[/quiz]]: my answers to the [[9-11/disagreement/quiz|9/11 position quiz]]
: A1. Is the official story essentially true and complete? '''NO'''
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* [[/Bayesian]]: my inexpert attempt at Bayesian analysis of a weakly-believed 9/11 hypothesis
: A2. Was the official investigation conducted in a reasonable way?  '''NO'''
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==Meta==
: A3. Is any further (re-)investigation a waste of time? '''NO'''
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I don't mind people having their own opinions.
: A4. Have all the questions surrounding the events of 9/11 been answered satisfactorily? '''NO'''
 
: A5. In the days prior to 9/11, did the Bush administration respond appropriately to any warnings they might have received? '''NO'''
 
: A6. On the day of 9/11, were the Bush administration's actions reasonable, under the circumstances? '''NO'''
 
: A7. On the day of 9/11, did the military act appropriately? '''NO'''
 
: A7a. If not, was this an understandable lapse under the circumstances? '''NO'''
 
: A8. Is it reasonable to think that men carrying no weapon other than box cutters could overcome trained professional pilots and seize control of four commercial jets? '''NO'''
 
: B1. Is there any reason to distrust the accuracy and even-handedness of mainstream news reporting, as it has existed for the past decade or so? '''YES'''
 
: B2. If available evidence points strongly towards a particular set of circumstances, is it reasonable to be skeptical of any conclusion which states that those circumstances did not occur? '''YES'''
 
: B2a. Is it necessary to explain how those circumstances could have arisen before questioning the idea that they didn't? '''NO'''
 
: B2b. If so, does that explanation need to be just as rigorous as the evidence pointing towards the circumstances? '''NO'''
 
: B3. Is there any reason to distrust statements made by the Bush administration? '''YES'''
 
: B4. Is there any reason to distrust conclusions reached by federal commissions? '''YES'''
 
: C1. Is it likely that WTC1 was hit by American Airlines flight 11? '''YES'''
 
: C2. Is it likely that WTC2 was hit by United Airlines flight 175? '''YES'''
 
: C3. Is it likely that the Pentagon was hit by American Airlines flight 77? '''YES'''
 
: C4. Is it likely that the source of the wreckage seen in Pennsylvania was United Airlines flight 175? '''YES'''
 
: C5. Is it likely that all of these were essentially normal civilian aircraft without any equipment having been installed specifically to aid their use as weapons of terror? '''YES'''
 
==Further Comments==
 
The official story of [[9/11]] is a mixed bag at best. It is also a cover-up of monstrous proportions, regardless of who the bad guys actually were: evidence was destroyed, evidence was ignored, explanations were non-explanations, and some things (e.g. [[WTC7]]) were just ignored altogether.
 
  
If you hide or destroy evidence making it difficult or impossible to solve a crime, you are culpable for some portion of the crime committed. On 9/11, nearly 3000 lives and billions of dollars were lost; the parties responsible for the cover-up are therefore complicit in those crimes, [[accessories after the fact]] at best. There may be some mitigating factors, but we need to know what those factors are before the mitigation can happen. Until then, ''if you concealed or destroyed evidence related to 9/11, that makes you complicit.''
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I can deal with coming to separate conclusions about the same evidence, though I [[Aumann's agreement theorem|dislike it]].
  
When I started investigating 9/11 back in 2005 or so, I believed the official story. The more I looked, however, the more I kept finding (among the chaff) consistent, sane, carefully-considered objections which provided evidence and held up under scrutiny -- and on the other side, a lot of glib counter-arguments which either addressed only [[straw man|the weakest and furthest-out theories]] or else gave quick [[non-explanation]]s and considered their work done. There was definitely a core of "[[9/11 truth|9/11 objectionists]]" who tended to make sense, and no consistent or believable rebuttals from the "9/11 party-liners".
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But when you can't even suggest an hypothesis without being branded a loonie, something is Wrong.
  
Here are just a few of the more glaring questions left unanswered by anyone in authority:
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And when otherwise rational people [[2010-01-29 Rebutting (Again!) the 9/11 Truthers/woozle|seem]] to [[User:Woozle/Facebook/2011-05-04 9-11|believe]] they have free license for the use of logical fallacies to attack an idea... something is Wrong.
  
* The hijackers named may have been ultimately responsible for flying the planes into the twin towers and the Pentagon, yes. But why weren't those names on the passenger lists? If they were flying under assumed names, which assumed names on the list were they flying under? Why did some of them later turn up alive, and why haven't the official lists been revised?
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This is the situation we have now.
* Why didn't the [[9/11 Commission Report]] explain anything about how the towers actually collapsed?
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==Why It Matters==
* Why didn't it even ''mention'' [[WTC7]]?
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For a decade, the official account of 9/11 has set the tone for foreign policy and domestic security. It has greatly reduced the degree to which one is allowed to question official statements without being ridiculed. Belief in that account enabled [[Gitmo]] and [[Abu Ghraib]], excused many of Bush's (and now Obama's) criminal actions, and enabled the wars which helped destroy our economy and international reputation. It also enabled the creation of the [[Transportation Security Administration|TSA]], the [[US Department of Homeland Security|Department of Homeland Security]], the [[Patriot Act]], the [[Military Commissions Act]], and accompanying leaps of [[authoritarianism]]. It has enabled a stifling new atmosphere of secrecy and non-accountability in government. It has caused us to be in a state of "[[US/national emergency|national emergency]]" for nearly 10 years now, when no emergency exists.
* Why were all the videos of the Pentagon crash confiscated, and why haven't any of them been released except for 5 highly questionable video frames?
 
* Why was all the debris hauled off before forensics experts could look at it?
 
* Why is anyone still claiming that the twin towers collapsed due to extreme heat when this suggestion has been repeatedly shot full of holes?
 
** How do they explain the diagonal cuts in the girders, the molten steel found in the wreckage, the molten steel seen pouring from WTC2, the sheer symmetricality and lateral forcefulness of the so-called "collapses"?
 
* Why were we utterly unable to intercept any of 4 planes, when such interceptions had been routine for at least a decade?
 
** Did it have something to do with the multiple military exercises coincidentally scheduled for that day, one of which reportedly involved more or less the exact scenario which was unfolding in real life?
 
** Why had intercept regulations recently been changed so that top-level authorization was required?
 
** Why had airline pilots recently been deprived of the freedom to carry a sidearm?
 
** How the hell did the hijackers manage to overcome the crews (many of them vets with combat experience) of ''four airplanes'' using only ''box-cutters''??
 
  
Yes, there are simple explanations for all of these things which agree completely with the official reports. Take your dried frog pills and go back to sleep.
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It bothers me a great deal that it is very difficult to even argue in favor of questioning the official account of 9/11 without being labeled a "conspiracy theorist", and the matter left at that -- as if that proved anything.
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Even if I turn out to be completely wrong about this, I should be able to talk about it and discuss it rationally with others.
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That's how we overcome our biases and preconceptions, and become less wrong, is it not?
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==How an Investigation Would Help==
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I think it would be a large step in the right direction. Obama refused to prosecute any of the Bush administration wrongdoers, and that is why many of them are still in charge. With proper investigation of 9/11, part of the tangled web of lies that led to the Patriot Act etc. would start to unravel, and some of those who benefited from those lies might finally be brought to some form of justice.
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As it is, many people who buy the official story naturally see the whole package (Patriot, Military Commissions, multiple wars, torture, offshore detention...) as at least somewhat justifiable by the (fabricated) circumstances.
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Take away the justification, and some people will rethink their conclusions on those issues. Not all, maybe not a majority, but some.
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The "[[conspiracy theory]]" accusation also casts doubt on the whole idea of revisiting popular conclusions about history. Was Kennedy shot by a lone gunman? Was Pearl Harbor really a total surprise to the White House? Was the Maine destroyed by Spanish saboteurs? Did the North Vietnamese fire first in the Gulf of Tonkin? Maybe so. but we should be able to ask and examine the evidence without being accused of "conspiracy theorizing". What we think we know about history profoundly affects how we act in the present. If "what we think we know" is actually wrong, we may take actions which are very harmful and unjustified, without knowing it.
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We need to make sure that "what we think we know" about history is as accurate as we can possibly make it. If there are significant doubts, they should be examined in all possible detail. They should certainly not be dismissed as crazy until sufficient evidence is produced to banish them.
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To some extent, though, I would really just like to know the truth and have the matter settled. If the official story turns out to be essentially true, great -- then I can be less worried. If it is proven false, then people will have to stop making fun of "truthers" and "conspiracy theorists".

Latest revision as of 19:04, 8 November 2020

Pages

Meta

I don't mind people having their own opinions.

I can deal with coming to separate conclusions about the same evidence, though I dislike it.

But when you can't even suggest an hypothesis without being branded a loonie, something is Wrong.

And when otherwise rational people seem to believe they have free license for the use of logical fallacies to attack an idea... something is Wrong.

This is the situation we have now.

Why It Matters

For a decade, the official account of 9/11 has set the tone for foreign policy and domestic security. It has greatly reduced the degree to which one is allowed to question official statements without being ridiculed. Belief in that account enabled Gitmo and Abu Ghraib, excused many of Bush's (and now Obama's) criminal actions, and enabled the wars which helped destroy our economy and international reputation. It also enabled the creation of the TSA, the Department of Homeland Security, the Patriot Act, the Military Commissions Act, and accompanying leaps of authoritarianism. It has enabled a stifling new atmosphere of secrecy and non-accountability in government. It has caused us to be in a state of "national emergency" for nearly 10 years now, when no emergency exists.

It bothers me a great deal that it is very difficult to even argue in favor of questioning the official account of 9/11 without being labeled a "conspiracy theorist", and the matter left at that -- as if that proved anything.

Even if I turn out to be completely wrong about this, I should be able to talk about it and discuss it rationally with others.

That's how we overcome our biases and preconceptions, and become less wrong, is it not?

How an Investigation Would Help

I think it would be a large step in the right direction. Obama refused to prosecute any of the Bush administration wrongdoers, and that is why many of them are still in charge. With proper investigation of 9/11, part of the tangled web of lies that led to the Patriot Act etc. would start to unravel, and some of those who benefited from those lies might finally be brought to some form of justice.

As it is, many people who buy the official story naturally see the whole package (Patriot, Military Commissions, multiple wars, torture, offshore detention...) as at least somewhat justifiable by the (fabricated) circumstances.

Take away the justification, and some people will rethink their conclusions on those issues. Not all, maybe not a majority, but some.

The "conspiracy theory" accusation also casts doubt on the whole idea of revisiting popular conclusions about history. Was Kennedy shot by a lone gunman? Was Pearl Harbor really a total surprise to the White House? Was the Maine destroyed by Spanish saboteurs? Did the North Vietnamese fire first in the Gulf of Tonkin? Maybe so. but we should be able to ask and examine the evidence without being accused of "conspiracy theorizing". What we think we know about history profoundly affects how we act in the present. If "what we think we know" is actually wrong, we may take actions which are very harmful and unjustified, without knowing it.

We need to make sure that "what we think we know" about history is as accurate as we can possibly make it. If there are significant doubts, they should be examined in all possible detail. They should certainly not be dismissed as crazy until sufficient evidence is produced to banish them.

To some extent, though, I would really just like to know the truth and have the matter settled. If the official story turns out to be essentially true, great -- then I can be less worried. If it is proven false, then people will have to stop making fun of "truthers" and "conspiracy theorists".