Gathering To Demand The Truth About 9/11
By Mike Ferner
06/13/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- Over 500 people in the packed hall
applauded eagerly when Dr. Bob Bowman stated he was an advocate
of doctor-controlled, single-payer health care for all.
They cheered louder still when the congressional candidate from
Florida's 15th District pledged that his first piece of
legislation submitted in the U.S. House of Representatives would
be articles of impeachment.
But they simultaneously jumped to their feet and roared approval
when he leaned over the podium and said he was running with a
group of Democrats, Republicans, Greens, Libertarians,
Independents and non politicians ".who are all united by one
thing. We want to bring our troops home from George Bush's
quagmire in Iraq and expose the lies that allowed him to send
them there, including 9/11."
Experienced in stumping on the campaign trail, Bowman was more
dynamic than many of the speakers at the Chicago conference
dubbed, "9/11: Revealing the Truth, Reclaiming Our Future," but
they all adamantly referred to the events of September 11, 2001
as the excuse George Bush needed to invade Iraq and Afghanistan.
At a news conference Friday that kicked off the weekend
discussions, Mike Berger, media coordinator for 911truth.org,
one of the sponsoring organizations, referred to the ongoing
conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, saying, "The main
justification for these wars are the lies put into the 911
report." Citing bellicose statements made towards Iran by Bush
administration officials, Berger added that "the course of
history may hinge on getting these facts out."
Barrie Zwicker, Canadian TV journalist and filmmaker, added that
the U.S. government's official story of what happened on
September 11, 2001, is the "linchpin of the war on terror...and
advance warnings are now being heard of new attacks."
That afternoon, several dozen attendees took Chicago Transit
Authority's Blue Line train to rally outside downtown news media
offices. Among the signs they carried were, "Fiscal ruin, lost
rights, endless war. Only 911 truth will set us free;" and
"Neo-Con Jobs: 911 and Iraq."
Stopping at Daly Plaza, Ron Roggensack, from Eugene, Oregon,
said he believed groups like Scholars for 911 Truth, founded by
physics professor Steven E. Jones, and philosopher James Fetzer
will be key to winning public opinion because "the most
important thing behind an independent investigation into 911 is
the science." When asked what brought him from the west coast
for the conference, the 49 year-old landscape architect
responded, "I think 911 is the mother of all issues. It has made
so many other things possible: the secret prisons, the illegal
war in Iraq, and spying on American citizens."
Watching the marchers pass by on their way to the Chicago
Tribune building, James Brown, a visitor from Royal Oak,
Michigan, said, "If what they're saying is true, it's a sad
commentary. There's a lot of corrupt stuff in government, I know
that for a fact. I hope that Iraq thing gets over soon. We're
only making more enemies for ourselves."
Two women who identified themselves only as "tourists," had
differing opinions.
One, from Los Angeles, said she believed the demonstrators
".wholeheartedly. It was done so the president could do what
he's doing now - go to war. There should be more reporting and
investigating about this so people know what really happened."
A second woman, from New York, said that the arguments she heard
were "thought provoking," and that individually she thought the
activists "impressive and well reasoned. Unfortunately," she
added, "when you look at the whole presentation of the group
they look like nutcases."
Moments before, a 50-ish, bearded demonstrator had paraded past
the skeptical woman, wearing an oversized mad hatter-type hat
covered with political buttons atop graying, shoulder-length
hair and an American flag draped over his shoulders.
Back at the conference similar to but considerably larger than
previous ones held in Toronto, San Francisco and Washington,
D.C., participants heard from a wide variety of speakers the
rest of the day and into the evening.
With a gravely voice and the zeal of a Baptist preacher, radio
talk show host Alex Jones placed the events of September 11,
2001 in league with the Reichstag fire reportedly set by Nazis
in 1933 to advance their political power; Hitler's invasion of
Poland the day after he staged a Polish attack on a German
border radio station; Operation Northwoods, a plan approved by
the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff in 1963 and vetoed by John
Kennedy, meant to provoke war with Cuba by faking attacks
against U.S. planes and ships; and the nonexistent Gulf of
Tonkin incident used by Lyndon Johnson to escalate the war
against Vietnam.
In the dispassionate, understated tones of a physicist, Steven
E. Jones Ph.D., (no relation), described some of the findings in
the official 911 report that led him to write the first
scientific, peer-reviewed analysis on the issue.
Stating that "no steel frame skyscraper before or after
September 11, 2001 has ever fallen as a result of fire," he went
on to describe the steel beam construction that comprised the
core of the 110-story towers; the melting point of steel and how
jet fuel could not sustain a fire close to that temperature; the
way the towers collapsed instantly straight down, indicating the
support beams had been cut simultaneously by explosive charges;
the pools of molten steel found underneath the rubble, pointing
to the use of thermite in the explosive charges; and finally the
collapse of World Trade Center Building number 7 that occurred
after 5 pm, September 11.
That building, not hit by any aircraft and sustaining only
relatively minor fires, Jones said, collapsed in a classic,
controlled-demolition fashion "in about 10 seconds, which is
almost exactly the speed it would collapse in freefall." The
significance of that, the Brigham Young University professor
added, is that it belies the government theory of "pancaking"
floors falling one atop the next to cause collapse.
One panel on Saturday examined the historical role of dissent in
political movements.
Rebecca Cerese, a North Carolina filmmaker, spoke on the topic
of her recent work, "February One," the story of the Greensboro
lunch counter sit-ins in
1960. She was joined by Chuck Knowles, a Miami-based filmmaker
with a particular interest in the White Rose, a group of
courageous German students who spoke out against Hitler in the
1940's; Ralph Schoenman, who spoke of his lifelong involvement
with left and labor causes, and stated that "the 10 trillion
dollars spent on weapons in the U.S. over the last 40 years has
come from the excess value of the labor of working people;" and
Janice Matthews, a Kansas City mother of six studying populist
actions around the world as blueprints for change here.
In a later afternoon session, David Slesinger, from Washington,
D.C., led a discussion on the history and strategy of non
violent civil disobedience.
"Improbable Collapse" was the evening's film offering, featuring
the work of Dr. Steven E. Jones. At one point he described how
virtually all the structural steel from the collapsed towers was
carted away and recycled in Asia without being examined for
clues, commenting "It's hard to imagine how at a crime scene you
can destroy evidence so thoroughly and quickly and get away with
it." The gravity of his low key presentation, however, was
undercut at times by the filmmaker's excessive use of eerie
music, apparently in attempts to underscore important arguments.
Attendees were given a 45-minute preview of another film, "Press
for Truth." Filmmakers Kyle Hence and Ray Nowosielski apologized
that it couldn't get a full debut, because they are in the
process of shopping their work to international distributors for
a formal release before September 11 this year. "If that doesn't
happen," Hence said, "we will be counting on you to get the DVD
version shown in art houses and living rooms across the
country."
"Press for Truth" featured the work of independent investigator,
Paul Thompson, who has constructed a minute by minute timeline
of the days leading up to and including September 11, 2001, from
hundreds of news media sources. In an interview on the film,
Thompson said one thing he noticed as he did his research, was
that for almost any area covered by the official 911 report, "A
different narrative could be constructed if you look deeper into
the news reports."
On Sunday afternoon it was time to hear reports from the various
work groups regarding next steps - ranging from coordinated
call-ins on radio shows, to supporting a general strike if
President Bush invokes martial law during the remainder of his
term.
Congressional candidate Bowman then strode to the microphone to
bring the weekend's events to a close. In addition to announcing
his support for social programs like single-payer health care,
he told the overflow audience that "As an old interceptor
(fighter) pilot who flew over 100 missions in Vietnam, I know
the drill. I flew those missions. I know how long it would've
taken pilots to intercept the planes" that flew into the World
Trade Center buildings.
"This was not incompetence," Bowman said, referring to the
failure of military commanders to order fighter jets to shoot
down the airliners before they hit the buildings, "this was
treason." Judging by the reaction from his audience, it was
clear he was not alone in that sentiment.
Mike Ferner is a freelance writer from Ohio. He can be
reached at mike.ferner@sbcglobal.net
© 2006 Mike Ferner
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