The pile hypothesis
Posted by: ZombyWoof on Jul 12, 2006 4:20 AM    [Report this comment]

A problem with conspiracy research is that a motive is often assigned based on a pile of facts. Many of these researchers have discovered many verifiable interesting facts about 9-11. Some go further and assign a nefarious motive to one group or another, often with great leaps of logic. There are certainly a number of misconceptions and inflated evidence floating around the 9-11 research community because of shabby research, strong preconceptions or possible disinfo.

That being said, the author seems to believe that disproving a handful of off-the mark allegations is a reason to stop asking questions which have never been satisfactorily answered.

A pile hypothesis still demands a pile of information. We do have a pile of information which contradicts or brings into question the conventional wisdom. The administration has, in many ways, actively hindered the offical analysis of such information. Why, I do not know.

If these questions are so easily disposed of, the author would be better off doing some investigation and explaining away some of the key unanswered questions rather than cherry-picking a few of the low-lying straw men and recommending that the subject be dropped.

I often hear people say that there are some things we shouldn't know about the government's actions. I bristle at that because it is a way of telling yourself that you are absolved from responsibility as a citizen.

If the government doesn't work for us, it works for someone else. As Dylan sang, "You've got to serve somebody." No President is Superman. Different power centers always direct or influence the government. I would prefer it to be the citizens, but an uniformed citizenry is useless for that purpose. Unfortunately, that is the end result of too much secrecy in government.