Alexander Hamilton is often portrayed as an early advocate of
strong central government. But even Hamilton understood the danger from
government. In the Federalist Papers, he wrote:
"Safety from external danger is the most powerful director of
national conduct. Even the ardent love of liberty will, after a time, give
way to its dictates. The violent destruction of life and property incident
to war, the continual effort and alarm attendant on a state of continual
danger, will compel nations the most attached to liberty to resort for
repose and security to institutions which have a tendency to destroy their
civil and political rights. To be more safe, they at length become willing
to run the risk of being less free."
I would be more confident of the survival of democracy and civil
liberty in the United States if, on this fifth anniversary of the Sept. 11
attacks, a majority of Americans were reading David Ray Griffin's
challenging new book, "Christian Faith and the Truth Behind 9-11."
It is an inexpensive book and available quickly from online
booksellers. A person only needs to read the first 56 pages to realize that
the official account of the collapse of the three World Trade Center
buildings has many problems and that defenders of the official account have
no hard evidence upon which to stand.
On pages 57-75, Griffin summarizes the inconsistencies in the
9-11 commission's incredible tale of flights 11, 175, 77 and 93. The
official account is a story of improbable incompetence and failure.
On pages 76-82, Griffin concludes that the failure of the 9-11
commission report to produce a believable account or even to acknowledge the
most important known facts is itself a conclusive case that the report is a
cover-up.
Griffin believes that 9-11 was a false flag operation to provide
the neoconservative Bush regime with a "new Pearl Harbor" excuse to launch
its imperial ambitions for hegemony in the Middle East and beyond. On pages
85-106, Griffin provides an excellent summary of the neocon agenda and how
it was enabled by 9-11.
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Griffin expects no further investigation from Congress, official
commissions and government agencies, such as the National Institute for
Standards and Technology. Although Griffin calls on The New York Times to
take up the investigation, he does not expect any investigative interest on
the part of the media, which has served as a propagandist for the
government's story.
Instead, Griffin places his hope in Christian churches. He calls
upon the churches to confront the evil that has America in its grip.
Is the hope that Griffin places on Christian churches realistic?
Many of the right-wing evangelical churches are fanatical supporters of the
Bush administration and Republican Party. The Rapture churches actually look
forward to the Armageddon that they believe Bush is brewing in the Middle
East, as they think it will bring about their ascent into Heaven.
The attack by conservative Presbyterians on Griffin's publisher,
the Presbyterian Westminister John Knox Press, for distributing his book is
more indication that the protestant churches might not be up to the job that
Griffin assigns to them. Conservative Presbyterians, who have not read
Griffin's book and whose comprehension of events is dependent on right-wing
radio talk shows and Fox "News," demanded retribution against the John Knox
Press for daring to publish a work so blasphemous as to cast doubt on the
motives of President Bush and the U.S. government.
Scientists tend to believe that facts and analysis can prevail
over emotions such as those of the conservative Presbyterians. BYU physics
professor Steven Jones is one of those scientists. Jones believed that it
was safe for him to point out that there appears to be a large energy
deficit in the official explanation of the collapse of the WTC buildings. He
is prepared for this question to be settled by scientific inquiry and
analysis, and has called for an independent panel of experts.
Jones overlooked that universities, and especially physics
departments, are dependent on government research grants. People dependent
on government research grants are not independent. Jones himself has now
been placed on paid leave by BYU. The message is clear. The debate is over.
Elected Republican officials, both governors and senators, have
demanded the firing of every academic who has expressed doubts about the
official line on 9-11. And now a U.S. Army intelligence analyst, Donald
Buswell, is being accused of sending an email message "disloyal to the
United States." Apparently, Buswell is guilty of expressing doubts that the
airliners alleged to have hit the Pentagon and crashed in Pennsylvania would
have been vaporized by the impacts. It should scare all Americans that
reaching a logical conclusion is an act disloyal to the U.S. government.
It has always been the case that the untutored emotions of
ignorant people are material that enables evil deeds. Recognizing that
emotion is a powerful shield against facts and that American disbelief in
their government's bad behavior is the government's best protection when it
behaves badly, Griffin opens his book with a short history of well known
false flag operations, both by the United States and other countries. It is
a sobering account.
So much factual information about 9-11 has been kept from the
public that we owe it to ourselves and to our country to read Griffin's
brief presentation. I find the facts against the official story of the
buildings' collapse more compelling than the case that has been made in
behalf of the official story. I would like to see the issue debated by
independent scientists and engineers, if such people exist.
Few Americans understand that an enormous amount of energy was
required to produce such a total collapse of the buildings and to pulverize
so many tons of concrete, furniture and office equipment into fine dust.
What was the source of this energy, and how did it act so suddenly? The
damage to the buildings from airliners was asymmetrical, and the fires were
scattered. WTC 7 was not hit by an airliner. Yet, all three buildings
collapsed symmetrically, as if there was no resistance and all structural
support crumbled almost instantly.
The function of government commissions is to reassure the
public. The fact that the 9-11 commission came up with a story that is not
well supported by the evidence might simply reflect the overriding political
need to reassure the public.
I think that we can accept Griffin's conclusion that the
evidence does not fit the commission's story. A real investigation is needed
to find an explanation consistent with the evidence, even if it doesn't
reassure the public. But I don't think this will happen. Even Internet sites
that are antiwar, anti-Bush and independent of the mainstream media, such as
Antiwar.com and CounterPunch, refuse to post objective reporting about the
9-11 skeptics' arguments. BYU has closed down the seminars that Jones was
holding for his academic peers where his views could be tested by competent
authorities. I suspect that other credible skeptics will find pressures
brought against them, as well.
All of this suggests to me that there is something to hide. If
Jones, for example, is wrong about there being insufficient energy in the
official account to explain the destruction of the buildings, discussions
and debates with his academic peers would bring this out. There is no
justification for the university administration to intervene in a matter of
scientific inquiry, or for people who know nothing about science to serve as
gatekeepers for neoconservative ideologues by branding skeptics "conspiracy
theorists." "Conspiracy theorist" is used to suppress debate about 9-11 just
as "anti-Semite" is used to suppress debate about Israel's policies.
Of course, Jones and Griffin were not allowed to express their
doubts of the official story without being pressed to offer their
explanations. Jones offered the hypothesis that explosives were used and
called for the testing of any surviving evidence.
Griffin went further and threw down the gauntlet. He accuses the
Bush administration of the deed.
My role in this is as a reporter. I do believe that 9-11 was
used by the Bush administration to launch aggressive wars in the Middle East
and that it is not the administration's intent to end the aggression in
Iraq. Whether 9-11 was merely convenient for the administration or whether
the administration had a hand in it, I do not know.
I am reconciled to the fact that our free democratic society is
incapable of producing an inquiry that can arrive at the truth about 9-11.