djharkavy, on Jan 31 2007, 02:58 AM, said:
You are accusing someone at high levels of government of some serious criminal negligence, if not outright mass murder.
I guess I think of it more as human nature (not one of the better qualities though). Let's say that, in passing conversation, person A tells person B that he/she is going to kill person C at person C's home at midnight tonight. And let's say B knows that, upon the death of C, he/she {meaning B} will receive $1,000,000.00 from C's will, even though B has never even met C. Now B just doesn't bother to call the police to let them know that A is about to kill C.
A kills C.
B does or doesn't receive $1,000,000.00. It doesn't matter. B didn't kill C, nor even conspire to kill C. B just withheld info that might have prevented C's death.
A is convicted of murdering C.
Would C be accused of killing A?
Is it any different in government? (This is not a rhetorical question. I really don't know the answer.)
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And maybe I was wrong, but the idea that the government knew about the attack ahead of time and didn't act to stop it is most definitely the stuff of conspiracy web sites. Indeed, the conspiracy that it would take to keep this knowledge quiet is the stuff of which such legends are formed.
Accusations have already been made, and I don't necessarily believe them. That's why I ask for the opinions of people like you. I don't know much about anything. I did read Richard Clarke's memoir titled,
Against All Enemies, 2004. He was Bush's chief of counterterrorism and adviser to three Presidents before him. He gives an account of his work in the White House on Sept. 11, coordinating the US's response to the terrorist attacks in Bush's absence. He claims he was surprised when, right after the attacks, Bush and Rumsfeld seemed to focus upon attacking Iraq. He states, "Nothing America could have done would have provide al Qaeda and its new generation of cloned groups a better recruitment device than our unprovoked invasion of an oil-rich Arab country." He says he advised the President and Collin Powell of this because, already, on September 11th, Rumsfeld was urging the President to bomb Iraq in response to the attacks. Clark felt that after 30 years in national security, he would have some influence, but he was ignored. He seemed to think that he could do the most good by working from within the government and waited almost a year after Iraq was invaded to resign.
Maybe he's lying and just wrote the book to make a lot of money, but he just doesn't sound that way.
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But I do believe that in a relatively open society, as we have, nothing of this nature can be hidden for long. Real evidence would come out eventually, if for no other reason than that people are pretty bad at keeping secrets for a long time. And the bigger the secret, the faster people tend to spill it.
You're right. If what Clarke says is true, it took him about 2 1/2 years to get his message out. Daniel Ellsberg explains in "The Next War" an article in
Harpers, Oct. 2006, that he regrets his delay in releasing "The Pentagon Papers." He says that in 1964, he had all the information necessary to prevent the US from going into Vietnam. (Okay, I know NOTHING about Vietnam.) Apparently a Senator named Morse was one of two who voted against the Tonkin Gulf resolution because he believed that Johnson would treat the resolution as a congressional declaration of war, even though he had assured congress that he sought "no wider war." Morse told Ellsberg that, had he given the documents to him at the time, the Tonkin Gulf resolution would never have gotten out of committee. Ellsberg claims that the Tonkin Gulf episode was a deliberate deception, and says that it took him 7 years to come forth with evidence that could have saved 50,000 American lives. It seems he felt loyalty to his government and was reluctant to tell secrets he'd sworn to keep.
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If we are going to place quotes, one of my favorites is "never attribute to malice, that which is adequately explained by stupidity" - Robert J. Hanlon.
I like this quote. It seems largely true. I use quotes a lot because I have no personal knowledge of much of anything.
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That we could not connect the dots together and figure out that the 9/11 attacks was going to occur was mild stupidity. The idea that the government DID put the dots together and chose to ignore it for their own purposes is surely on the side of malice.
Maybe. Well, I'm not so sure it's malice. Again, it could just be human nature. I think Bush and his supporters believe that what they're doing is right (no matter by what means). I've given up trying to guess what is in other people's brains. Hussein and bin Laden probably think they're right. Anyway, Ellsberg, in his ariticle, went on to say, "Philip Giraldi, a former CIA official, reported in "The American Conservative" a year ago that Vice President Cheney's office had directed contingency planning for 'a large-scale air assault on Iran employing both conventional and tactical nuclear weapons' and that 'several senior Air Force officers' involved in the planning were 'apalled at the implications of what they are doing--that Iran is being set up for an unprovoked nuclear attack--but no one is prepared to damage his career by posing any objection.'"
I hope you can tell me that this is all nonsense. I really don't want to be drafted into WWIII.
(apologies to BTHSnews gang. i see that this statement may sound "eccentric" and is possibly an overly dramatic leap, but there are countries with alliances to Iran. it didn't take much to start WWI, basically a bunch of alliances. i'm not trying to be radical/confrontational/oppositional/provocative/or a know-it-all. i really do have this fear and i don't want to overlook something that may catch
us by surprise. also, i tried to be concise, but it's still a long post

)
Thanks