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Comment by Ross Wolf
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If a hijacked jet passenger plane didn’t hit the Pentagon where is the plane? The passengers? The huge amount of passenger luggage that would have been scattered at the Pentagon?  Jesse Ventura’s show said the plane strangely disappeared from radar 28-minutes before the Pentagon was struck. If the Pentagon wasn’t hit by the hijacked plane wouldn’t radar have later pick up the plane flying. Was that radar blocked?

 

 

Jesse Ventura mentions the pilot during training had difficulty flying a Censa, that it was almost impossible this pilot could have maneuvered the turn necessary to hit the Pentagon. That reminds me of Timothy McVeigh who was alleged to have brought down the Oklahoma City Alfred P. Murrah Building on April 19, 1995 leaving a bomb loaded van in front of the building: several early news following the bombing reported McVeigh, shortly before the bombing, had difficulty setting off small explosives on a ranch property. But miraculously the van McVeigh left in front of the Oklahoma building apparently had several 50 gallon drums of fertilizer explosives linked together, perfectly synchronized to explode. Just months prior to the  (Oklahoma Bombing), the “1995, Anti-Terrorist and Death Penalty Act was introduced.” The 1995 act included many provisions from the failed to pass 1993 “Crime Control Act” introduced before the first Trade Center bombing. After the Oklahoma federal building was bombed, Congress had almost no public resistance passing the “1996 Anti-Terrorist and Death Penalty Act that included provisions from the failed “1993 Crime Control Act.” For example: under the 1996 Anti-Terrorist and Death Penalty Act, prosecutors could use Secret Hearings, secret paid informants, secret testimony, secret witnesses and other hidden evidence to convict U.S. Citizens for terrorist acts. Defense against government terrorist charges, even against the Death Penalty became difficult if not possible; the passed legislation was particularly alarmingly because U.S. Police/Government routinely pay and make deals with informants to provide court testimony. Most Provisions that failed to be included in the 1996 Anti-Terrorist and Death Penalty Act were subsequently passed in the 2001 Patriot Act—that included Congress giving Government the power to (retroactively go back several years to arrest U.S. Citizens and seize their property based on a mere Preponderance of civil evidence, little more than hearsay.

 

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