It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
I don't think he is, I saw the page years back, 77 was not on the list on 9/11, it has since been scrubbed, no surprise there..
Yes and two hours after it happened they knew who did it, boy thats fast work, yeah I believe that, no I don't.. the OS is bull crap.
originally posted by: wildb
a reply to: skyeagle409
That is moot by the fact that American Airlines had confirmed that American 77 crashed.
Yes and two hours after it happened they knew who did it, boy thats fast work, yeah I believe that, no I don't.. the OS is bull crap.
ACARS in 2001 was ground based, not satellite based, at least for domestic flights.
The BTS data is interesting and new for me. It's amazing that several of the flights were not even scheduled. I just finished the Rebekah Roth books, and she provides copies of some of the radar data that were created early that morning, proving the hoax.
The BTS data is interesting and new for me. It's amazing that several of the flights were not even scheduled. I just finished the Rebekah Roth books, and she provides copies of some of the radar data that were created early that morning, proving the hoax.
originally posted by: skyeagle409
a reply to: wildb
Just to let you know that the Pentagon doesn't keep all of its eggs in the same basket and the $2.3 trillion was never missing. 9/11 conspiracy theorist didn't bother to do their homework to understand the Pentagon was unable to handle that much money and that most of the money has now been accounted for.
Just another example how ignorance of the facts resulted in another unfounded and baseless conspiracy theory.
This is another perfect example of the untruths you propagate here.
The money was missing before Bush even took office. Congress was aware of it before Bush took office, which means that Bush himself had nothing to do with it, but it was missing.
Department of Defense Speech
The technology revolution has transformed organizations across the private sector, but not ours, not fully, not yet. We are, as they say, tangled in our anchor chain. Our financial systems are decades old. According to some estimates, we cannot track $2.3 trillion in transactions. We cannot share information from floor to floor in this building because it's stored on dozens of technological systems that are inaccessible or incompatible.
www.911myths.com...
Pentagon's finances in disarray
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The military's money managers last year made almost $7 trillion in adjustments to their financial ledgers in an attempt to make them add up, the Pentagon's inspector general said in a report released Friday.
The Pentagon could not show receipts for $2.3 trillion of those changes, and half a trillion dollars of it was just corrections of mistakes made in earlier adjustments.
Each adjustment represents a Defense Department accountant's attempt to correct a discrepancy. The military has hundreds of computer systems to run accounts as diverse as health care, payroll and inventory. But they are not integrated, don't produce numbers up to accounting standards and fail to keep running totals of what's coming in and what's going out, Pentagon and congressional officials said.
hv.greenspun.com...
Zakheim Seeks To Corral, Reconcile 'Lost' Spending
Billions of dollars of DoD taxpayer-provided money haven't disappeared, Zakheim said. "Missing" expenditures are often reconciled a bit later in the same way people balance their checkbooks every month. The bank closes out a month and sends its bank statement, he said. In the meanwhile, people write more checks, and so they have to reconcile their checkbook register and the statement.
DoD financial experts, Zakheim said, are making good progress reconciling the department's "lost" expenditures, trimming them from a prior estimated total of $2.3 trillion to $700 billion. And, he added, the amount continues to drop.
"We're getting it down and we are redesigning our systems so we'll go down from 600-odd systems to maybe 50," he explained.
"That way, we will give people not so much more money, but a comfort factor, to be sure that every last taxpayer penny is accounted for," he concluded.
web.archive.org...://www.defenselink.mil/news/Feb2002/n02202002_200202201.html