Well, well, well....Was Reinhardt right again? There WAS a "crash."
Me, too. I read through that whole glp thread and I am totally bugged out now. Someone talk some sense into me because then I saw this: http://www.godlikeproductions.com/news/Breaking_News/14202-67_Computers_Missing_From_Nuclear_Weapons_LabOk, I'm jumping on the creepy bus too...
With Beverly Eckert on board that sure puts an interesting spin on things. Yet, question that it was more than a coincidence and be branded as a nutcase. Ergh!!!!
That's OK. I'm used to being called a nutcase. The good news is that more and more of my friends are at least listening to me. They may still think I'm a nut but their ears are open.
Eckert was working on getting a new investigation into 9-11 as well as questioning the fairness of trials at Guantanamo.
Which makes this very hard to accept as a coincidence. The level of money she turned down put her in the category of someone who was going to perservere at all costs. Easier to just have yet another plane coincidence occur.![]()
easier to have her killed in her own home
or one of those car accident things that you see on TV all the time
Not easier if you are trying to avoid an investigation.
Hugo
I'm missing somethinglawl, the infamous Christopher Story strikes again.
I'm missing something![]()
[link to www.juntawatch.org]
Ms Eckert has since been kind enough to contact me regarding this study & told me that during the days of the NIST investigation into the WTC collapse she made her own enquiries to the NIST regarding the likely nature or source of the above mentioned explosion.
She wrote me in May 2007 thus:
"I am responding to you because I do not in any way subscribe to conspiracy theories about the 9/11 attacks nor do I believe that the collapse of my husband's building (the South tower) was brought about by pre-set detonations from within. However, the source of the explosion I heard has never been explained to my satisfaction.
I asked NIST to address it in their investigation, but I don't believe it was mentioned. You might want to check their report to confirm either way. I know that I once asked Dr. Shyam Sunder (of NIST) personally about it.
He theorized that what I heard may have been the sound of the tower's water storage container on the roof exploding from the intense heat. If that were the case, it seems to me the floor just below the roof (where Sean was) would have also been extremely hot, since heat rises. Yet Sean was still calmly talking to me just before the explosion. Clearly, the area he occupied was not at furnace-like temperatures."
Ok, I'll take your word for it.not much, promise.