Re: Support Canadians in their Fight for Freedom of Expressi
I agree. This is hugely important.
When it comes to mass media, the average person and what we talk about - here and wherever - doesn't make it to the big show, the mass media.
We cannot say anything about corporations or their products.
We cannot say anything about alternative views as to what happened on 9-11. This is so important, and yet they can't even put one word for the millions of people who are asking "was it a planned demolision?" and of course " What happened to Bldg #7? " and the 100 other big Qs about 9-11 issues. Nothing. Some kinda crappy freedom this is, George.
http://tinyurl.com/hlbey
-this link to site w/these questions on 9-11. The site is mixed up with religion {note - I do not encourage religion.
Here are the questions that mass media has not yet expressed our FREEDOMs by asking out loud:
1.) Thousands of put stock options that were purchased on United and American airlines immediately prior to 9/11/01
2.) Financial transactions totaling more than 100 million dollars that electronically passed through the World Trade Center immediately prior to its destruction on 9/11
3.) Black-box recordings from the four planes which crashed on 9/11
4.) Cell phone calls made by passengers on hijacked flights on 9/11 which never emerged on their cell-phone bills
5.) Interviews of any air-traffic controllers on duty on 9/11
6.) Eyewitness accounts detailing Flight 93's explosion prior to its crashing
7.) Aircraft debris strewn approximately seven miles from the crash site of Flight 93
8.) Unocal's role in its quest to build an oil pipeline across Afghanistan, plans implemented prior to 2001
9.) Carlyle Corporation's role in overseeing Unocal's quest to have an oil pipeline built across Afghanistan, plans implemented prior to 2001
10.) Role of remote-control software technology implemented in 9/11 hijackings and crashes
11.) George W. Bush's possible foreknowledge of the terrorist attacks on 9/11
12.) Role of the Northern Alliance in explosive growth of opium production in Afghanistan after U.S. military intervention