Smoking Guns, Controversies and Disinformation

Introduction

9-11 Rejected

The official 9/11 Commission Report – the formal findings of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States – can be downloaded in its entirety here. However, as Professor David Ray Griffin makes clear in his painstakingly detailed book The 9/11 Commission Report: Omissions And Distortions as well as in this accompanying video, the Commission’s report is a masterpiece of half-truths, distortions, significant omissions, and deliberate disinformation. Like the Warren Commission report on the assassination of President Kennedy – created to cover up the Truth, rather than reveal it – the covert purpose of the 9/11 Commission Report is to solidify public alignment with the official 9/11/01 fable rather than to investigate even the “Smoking Guns” of its most obvious fallacies!

Exploration of the 9/11 Truth Movement’s challenge to the formal 9/11/01 narrative quickly reveals multiple such “Smoking Guns” – unmistakable evidence that the official story is far more fairy tale than fact. Such exploration also lays bare the legitimate differences of opinion, to which honest 9/11 Truth researches have come, regarding the “Who” “How” and “Why” of 9/11/01. Even deeper investigation begins to uncover the ways in which the search for 9/11 Truth has been made deliberately more difficult by the disinformation professionals whose assigned task it is to undermine the 9/11 Truth Movement by seeding it with yet more half-truths, distortions, significant omissions, and deliberate disinformation. Thus the material which follows seeks to address these concerns – the Smoking Guns and Controversies which swirl within and around the 9/11 Truth Movement.

9-11 Commission Report

 

To learn about the best known, and most obvious,  9/11 “Smoking Gun” – as well as some lesser known, more subtle, “Hot Pistols” – link here. But before you move on to that page let’s set the proper tone with a little bit of “9/11 Truth” folk music:

Building 7 (The Smoking Gun)
by Carl Seeger Henry and Mark Saunders