09-09-2015, 08:56 AM
Peter Lemkin Wrote:Anthony Thorne Wrote:Don't have time to format and quote the whole things but others (Peter?) are more than welcome if they want to do so in this thread. Both the articles here complement each other.
Sander Hicks on Confronting Jeb Bush about his role in the 9/11 cover-up
http://slingshottothe.blogspot.com.au/20...d.html?m=1
Daniel Hopsicker on Jeb Bush's 9/11 problem
http://www.madcowprod.com/2015/09/04/jeb...1-problem/
Hicks has a lengthy chapter expanding on Hopsicker's work in his valuable book SLINGSHOT TO THE JUGGERNAUT.
Good stuff! Interesting the files from Huffman Aviation went to CIA, according to Hopsicker's informants. Glad Hopsicker is back in the 'saddle' after his illness. The whole Bush family and a lot of their friends and business partners had some involvement before/during/after in 911 - however, I don't believe Bush-the-W was in any way a 'mastermind' of that operation...if 'mastermind' can even be associated with that mental and ethical midget. He likely wasn't even in the 'loop' until the cover-up, IMHO.
Would be hard to format the first article for this forum, as the very interesting video questions/responses to/from Jeb Bush about his flying with the documents to D.C. are posted on facebook. I don't believe putting that into our website will work...but I'm sure there is a work-around. I just don't know it. Have a look at his uncomfortable body language!
It's more than interesting that Bush's reply wasn't a denial:
Quote:Bush began taking another question, then stopped. His voice rising slightly to convey indignation, he said, "I was in the Emergency Operations Center trying to make sure the state of Florida was safe… trying to work with local officials to figure out how to make sure another attack wouldn't hit and devastate our economy…That's what I did."
It was a deflection.
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14