Silly Warspite1-Newblette,
warspite1
The first of those three groups of letters did not stand for Bachelor of Science...it stood for cow poo.
So tell me what is your PhD specialized in? [:'(]
Silly parusski-Newblette,
You dill hole, he is speaking about passengers with NO planes.
How many passengers were in the vehicle that struck the Pentagon?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=72dUakbPGVA
Was flight 77 diverted so a missile would make the attack at the Pentagon?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eDshVgRx2Xw
Hidden in Plane Sight
June 13, 2003
After spending some time carefully examining a website that published photos of the aftermath of 9/11 at the Pentagon, it became very clear to me that there was a missing plane and 64 missing people.�
I decided to check the manifest of those killed on Flight 77, which informed me that there were �only 50 passengers and 6 crew listed.� Apparently, there were families who didn't want to list the names of their loved ones killed on the flights of 9/11. (See also: HERE)
Both of the above linked sites lists the names of those killed on flight 77.� There's also an area to click on for those who were killed at the Pentagon, and the other flights.
Now, what strikes me as curious is the number of people claimed to have been killed at the Pentagon: 125 fatalities.� I was under the �impression that this was a construction zone where it was not likely that the offices would be occupied.� In fact, in many of the Pentagon photos, you can see large spools of cable near the point of impact.� Next, if you look at the damage sustained by the building, it seems hard to believe so large a number of fatalities.� It seems like a lot of people for such a small area.�
Going back to consider the victims on Flight 77, I wanted to know a little bit more about them. This was an event that I grieved over for weeks and I wanted to know the human beings I was grieving for. As I read the list, I also began to want some answers.
Why?
Well, if you look at the occupations of the passengers of Flight 77, you get a strange feeling that something is wrong with this picture:
an electrical engineer with BAE Systems.
�2 Boeing propulsion engineers
1 Boeing engineer
a senior vice president for government relations at the Washington office of Genzyme, a biotechnology firm ~ governing cellular therapies
a physician who worked with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the surgeon general to address racial and ethnic disparities in health.
a man who worked on data systems for NASA and also developed data systems for the study of global and regional environmental issues.� Along with his family....
a retired Navy admiral/retired American Airlines pilot
a senior executive at the Defense Department
a chief operating officer of Metrocall Inc., a wireless data and messaging company.
an associate director of clinical research for a biotech firm.
a retired chemist.
a director of medical affairs, IPC
a vice president for softward development, EM Solutions, Inc.
a technical manager, XonTech Inc.
a technical group manager, XonTech Inc.
There were also a number of children along with their teachers, who were chosen by National Geographic Alliance Coordinators for this trip.� One of the teachers had this said about the trip:� "She was originally supposed to go to Florida, but two weeks ago they changed it �and told her she was going to California,"
And of course, there was Barbara Olsen, attorney, CNN Commentator and wife of the United States Solicitor General.
Family members of one of the flight attendants commented that "she was trained five years ago in how to deal with a hijacking.
One of the passengers, John D. Yamnicky Sr, was a retired naval aviator who worked for Veridian Corp., a defense contractor, since his retirement as a captain in 1979.
"He had done a number of black programs -- which means top-secret," said his son. "We were given no details."
One of the passengers, William E. Caswell, a graduate of Princeton University, was a third-generation physicist whose work at the Navy was so classified that his family knew very little about what he did each day. They don't even know exactly why he was headed to Los Angeles on the doomed American Airlines Flight 77.
�As you can see, it's a pretty impressive manifest.� A lot of knowledgeable and skillful people. �I haven't checked the passenger occupations for the other flights lost on September 11. But with just this one flight, a lot of questions come to mind.
With so many questions coming up, I decided that I wanted to know more, and it seemed obvious to try to find what the witnesses of the crash had to say. So, I went looking for the stories of the eyewitnesses.�
One of the witnesses, an Army Captain named Lincoln Liebner, reported the following:
"I saw this large American Airlines passenger jet coming in fast and low".� "Captain Liebner says the �aircraft struck a helicopter on the helipad, setting fire to a fire truck."�
Helicopter?� Fire truck?� Do they always have fire trucks sitting at the Pentagon?
Some eyewitnesses believe the plane actually hit the ground at the base of the Pentagon first, and then skidded into the building. Investigators say that's a possibility, which if true, crash experts say may well have saved some lives. However, it is hard to credit this when looking at the photos. �
Radar shows Flight 77 did a downward spiral, turning almost a complete circle and dropping the last 7,000 feet in two-and-a-half minutes. The steep turn was so smooth, the sources say, it's clear there was no fight for control going on. And the complex maneuver suggests the hijackers had better flying skills than many investigators first believed. The jetliner disappeared from radar at 9:37 and less than a minute later it clipped the tops of street lights and plowed into the Pentagon at 460 mph.
http://www.cassiopaea.org/cass/hidden.htm
Germany's unforgivable crime before the Second World War was her attempt to extricate her economy from the world's trading system and to create her own exchange mechanism which would deny world finance its opportunity to profit.
— Winston Churchill