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Originally posted by talisman
Then with that assumption, will the skeptics admit that the Truth Movement is a Powerful Weapon against Bin Laden? Since it causes youth form Pakistan to doubt just "WHO BIN LADEN MIGHT BE"?
Originally posted by talisman
reply to post by Nohup
1. Bin Laden to date hasn't challenged the rumors about him. (although I expect that to change soon) He hasn't gone on video and reminded people that he doesn't work for the CIA.
2. Bin Laden has never answered his about face change, at first denying the 9/11 events, then embracing them.
3. Bin Laden has never tried to deny his "confession" on tape, since technology could have easily been blamed by him. In fact, curiously he never mentions the tape in his rantings.
The name 'al-Qaeda' was established a long time ago by mere chance. The late Abu Ebeida El-Banashiri established the training camps for our mujahedeen against Russia's terrorism. We used to call the training camp al-Qaeda. The name stayed
5. The Bin Laden family and the Bush family are closely tied.
6. The internet is accessible to a great many people.
7. The military uses deception often--Look at Operation Northwoods or Cointelpro.
How many American lives were to be sacrificed in Operation Northwoods...and was this plan ever put in place?
n 1995 the Energy Department admitted to over 430 radiation experiments conducted by the Atomic Energy Commission between the years 1944 and 1974. Over 16,000 people were radiated, some of whom did not know the health risks or did not give consent.
* Exposing more than 100 Alaskan villagers to radioactive iodine during the 1960s.
* Feeding 49 retarded and institutionalised teenagers radioactive iron and calcium in their cereal during the years 1946-1954.
* Exposing about 800 pregnant women in the late 1940s to radioactive iron to determine the effect on the fetus.
* Injecting 7 newborns (six were Black) with radioactive iodine.
* Exposing the testicles of more than 100 prisoners to cancer-causing doses of radiation. This experimentation continued into the early 1970s.
* Exposing almost 200 cancer patients to high levels of radiation from cesium and cobalt. The AEC finally stopped this experiment in 1974.
* Administering radioactive material to psychiatric patients in San Francisco and to prisoners in San Quentin.
* Administering massive doses of full body radiation to cancer patients hospitalised at the General Hospital in Cincinnati, Baylor College in Houston, Memorial Sloan-Kettering in New York City, and the US Naval Hospital in Bethesda, during the 1950s and 1960s. The experiment provided data to the military concerning how a nuclear attack might affect its troops.