Believe it or not, Portland (Oregon) activist David Morrison managed to be approved for a table of 9/11 handouts and DVDs in the airport terminal at PDX. Airport employees, security and passengers received his materials (including "911 Mysteries") with interested and open minds. Read the full account from www.WillametteWeek.com!
Publisher David Deschesne prints alternative global news in this innocent local paper (online version available too). "It's the only way to do it," he says. "Real. Educational. News ... is our slogan." And boy, does he cover it! From 9/11 to the IRS income-tax scam -- it's all there, mixed right in with the Frontier Historical Society's House and Garden Tour, Town Talk, molasses recipes and the local police log. Subscriptions ($30 a year) are growing by leaps and bounds. The Fort Fairfield Journal's story of the IRS siege on Ed and Elaine Brown is the best we've read, and thousands of hits to its website prove it.
"911 Mysteries" producer writes to The Fort Fairfield Journal (April 25, 2007 issue, click here for letter)
9/11 Truthers respond to Bill Maher
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Morons and Magic: A Reply to George Monbiot
Our major media regularly releases "hit pieces" on the 9/11 skeptics movement. Popular Mechanics set the precedent in February 2005, and was followed by a stream of others. Many (including Time, Vanity Fair and a number of TV networks) mentioned the popular video "Loose Change." What was amusement and idle curiosity (in the name of "reporting the news") has now turned to tar -- the brush dripping with the effort to label us goons, kooks, morons, unpatriotic and even anti-Semitic. Britain's BBC created the latest smear, and here is esteemed Professor David Ray Griffin's response. A nice summary of points!