I don’t usually take much notice of conspiracy theories: If it’s a theory then that’s all it’s likely to be. But there is a growing body of evidence that the WTC 9/11 building collapses were not what the government reported. I am becoming convinced that outside forces, apart from Al Queda, may have been responsible as well.

I have included links to videos that explain the points I make. It will take you perhaps 3 hours to read the article and view all the videos. If you care for civilization and would like to see the US regain its prestige and trust in the world, please do take the time.

I have included footage that purports to support the WTC 9/11 report submitted by the government appointed inquiry. And you will view other video clips of experts from major technical institutes, including MIT, that will demonstrate quite clearly that the building collapses were not due to planes crashing into them. In fact, they go further and openly say that the collapses could only have happened by controlled demolition.

Who would have benefited from destroying these very visible signs of American power and pride? Many conspiracy ‘theorists’ point the finger at the US government. But my investigations lead me to a completely different set of villains with their own agenda. However, before I examine that, let’s look into how I believe the destruction occurred.

First, we need to remember that the towers were immensely strong structures. They were built to withstand hurricane force winds. They could easily bend and sway, and then return to the vertical without any danger to their integral structure.

The central core contained 47 specially designed load-bearing steel support columns that enabled the two towers to withstand incredible stresses from all directions. As you will see in the videos, the fires that affected the core columns on the floor where the aircraft hit were barely damaged. The insulation sprayed onto them was almost totally destroyed, but the columns themselves remained in surprisingly good condition. Even where they were exposed to very high heat, only small portions of the beams suffered any melting. Nor did they show much structural damage. They were merely bent slightly out of shape. In fact, they are surprisingly undamaged. Yet the government 9/11 report maintains that they were completely melted by the aviation fuel fire. Obviously, the evidence before your eyes is much more believable.

In addition, the core of 47 steel columns was designed so that they would not create a ‘chimney’ in case of fire. They were constructed in fireproof sections designed to limit the amount of oxygen the could flow inside the central space. In effect, this meant that the fires caused by the burning aviation fuel were relatively ‘cool’. They would not have been able to generate enough heat to reach the melting point of steel.

Other evidence also points to other factors that are much more likely to have caused the towers to collapse. None of that evidence is connected to the planes flying into them. I will go into this in more detail below.
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No longer should the peace business be undermined by the arms business

09/13/06 “The Independent” — – For many years, I’ve been involved in the peace business, doing what I can to help people overcome their differences. In doing so, I’ve also learnt a lot about the business of war: the arms trade. In my opinion it is the modern slave trade. It is an industry out of control: every day more than 1,000 people are killed by conventional weapons. The vast majority of those people are innocent men, women and children.

There have been international treaties to control the spread of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons for decades. Yet, despite the mounting death toll, there is still no treaty governing sales of all conventional weapons from handguns to attack helicopters. As a result, weapons fall into the wrong hands all too easily, fuelling human rights abuses, prolonging wars and digging countries deeper into poverty.

This is allowed to continue because of the complicity of governments, especially rich countries’ governments, which turn a blind eye to the appalling human suffering associated with the proliferation of weapons.

Every year, small arms alone kill more people than the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki put together. Many more people are injured, terrorised or driven from their homes by armed violence. Even as you read this, one of these human tragedies is unfolding somewhere on the planet.

Take the Democratic Republic of Congo, where armed violence recently flared up again, and millions have died during almost a decade of conflict. Despite a UN arms embargo against armed groups in the country, weapons have continued to flood in from all over the world.

Arms found during weapons collections include those made in Germany, France, Israel, USA and Russia. The only common denominator is that nearly all these weapons were manufactured outside Africa. Five rich countries manufacture the vast majority of the world’s weapons. In 2005, Russia, the United States, France, Germany and the UK accounted for an estimated 82 per cent of the global arms market. And it’s big business: the amount rich countries spend on fighting HIV/Aids every year represents just 18 days’ global spending on arms.

But while the profits flow back to the developed world, the effects of the arms trade are predominantly felt in developing countries. More than two-thirds of the value of all arms are sold to Africa, Asia, the Middle East and Latin America.

In addition to the deaths, injuries and rapes perpetrated with these weapons, the cost of conflict goes deeper still, destroying health and education systems.

For example, in northern Uganda, which has been devastated by 20 years of armed conflict, it has been estimated that 250,000 children do not attend school. The war in northern Uganda, which may be finally coming to an end, has been fuelled by supplies of foreign-made weapons. And, as with so many wars, the heaviest toll has been on the region’s children. Children under five are always the most vulnerable to disease, and in a war zone adequate medical care is often not available.

The world could eradicate poverty in a few generations were only a fraction of the expenditure on the war business to be spent on peace. An average of $22bn is spent on arms by countries in Asia, the Middle East, Latin America and Africa every year, according to estimates for the US Congress. This sum would have enabled those countries to put every child in school and to reduce child mortality by two-thirds by 2015, fulfilling two of the Millennium Development Goals.

This year, the world has the chance to finally say no to the continuing scandal of the unregulated weapons trade. In October, governments will vote on a resolution at the UN General Assembly to start working towards an Arms Trade Treaty. That Treaty would be based on a simple principle: no weapons for violations of international law. In other words, a ban on selling weapons if there is a clear risk they will be used to abuse human rights or fuel conflict. The UN resolution has been put forward by the governments of Australia, Argentina, Costa Rica, Finland, Japan, Kenya, and the UK. These governments believe the idea of an Arms Trade Treaty is one whose time has come.

I agree. We must end impunity for governments who authorise the supply of weapons when they know there’s a great danger those weapons will be used for gross human rights abuses. Great strides are being made towards ending impunity for war criminals. It cannot be acceptable that their arms suppliers continue to escape punishment. No longer should the peace business be undermined by the arms business. I call on all governments to put the control of the international arms trade at the top of their agenda.

By Michael Powell
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, September 8, 2006; C01

NEW YORK

He felt no shiver of doubt in those first terrible hours.

He watched the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon and assumed al-Qaeda had wreaked terrible vengeance. He listened to anchors and military experts and assumed the facts of Sept. 11, 2001, were as stated on the screen.

It was a year before David Ray Griffin, an eminent liberal theologian and philosopher, began his stroll down the path of disbelief. He wondered why Bush listened to a child’s story while the nation was attacked and how Osama bin Laden, America’s Public Enemy No. 1, escaped in the mountains of Tora Bora.

He wondered why 110-story towers crashed and military jets failed to intercept even one airliner. He read the 9/11 Commission report with a swell of anger. Contradictions were ignored and no military or civilian official was reprimanded, much less cashiered.

“To me, the report read as a cartoon.” White-haired and courtly, Griffin sits on a couch in a hotel lobby in Manhattan, unspooling words in that reasonable Presbyterian minister’s voice. “It’s a much greater stretch to accept the official conspiracy story than to consider the alternatives.”

Such as?

“There was massive complicity in this attack by U.S. government operatives.”

If that feels like a skip off the cliff of established reality, more Americans are in free fall than you might guess. There are few more startling measures of American distrust of leaders than the widespread belief that the Bush administration had a hand in the attacks of Sept. 11 in order to spark an invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq.

A recent Scripps Howard/Ohio University poll of 1,010 Americans found that 36 percent suspect the U.S. government promoted the attacks or intentionally sat on its hands. Sixteen percent believe explosives brought down the towers. Twelve percent believe a cruise missile hit the Pentagon.

Distrust percolates more strongly near Ground Zero. A Zogby International poll of New York City residents two years ago found 49.3 percent believed the government “consciously failed to act.”

You could dismiss this as a louder than usual howl from the CIA-controls-my-thoughts-through-the-filling-in-my-molar crowd. Establishment assessments of the believers tend toward the psychotherapeutic. Many academics, politicians and thinkers left, right and center say the conspiracy theories are a case of one plus one equals five. It’s a piling up of improbabilities.

Thomas Eager, a professor of materials science at MIT, has studied the collapse of the twin towers. “At first, I thought it was amazing that the buildings would come down in their own footprints,” Eager says. “Then I realized that it wasn’t that amazing — it’s the only way a building that weighs a million tons and is 95 percent air can come down.”

But the chatter out there is loud enough for the National Institute of Standards and Technology to post a Web “fact sheet” poking holes in the conspiracy theories and defending its report on the towers.

Yeah, as if . . .

The loose agglomeration known as the “9/11 Truth Movement” has stopped looking for truth from the government. As cacophonous and free-range a bunch of conspiracists anywhere this side of Guy Fawkes, they produce hip-hop inflected documentaries and scholarly conferences. The Web is their mother lode. Every citizen is a researcher. There’s nothing like a triple, Google-fed epiphany lighting up the laptop at 2:44 a.m.

Did you see that the CIA met with bin Laden in a hospital room in Dubai? Check out this Pakistani site, there are really weird doings in Baluchistan . . .

The academic wing is led by Griffin, who founded the Center for a Postmodern World at Claremont University; James Fetzer, a tenured philosopher at the University of Minnesota (Fetzer’s an old hand in JFK assassination research); and Daniel Orr, the retired chairman of the economics department at the University of Illinois. The movement’s de facto minister of engineering is Steven Jones, a tenured physics professor at Brigham Young University, who’s studied vectors and velocities and tested explosives and concluded that the collapse of the twin towers is best explained as controlled demolition, sped by a thousand pounds of high-grade thermite.

Former Reagan aide Barbara Honegger is a senior military affairs journalist at the Naval Postgraduate School in California. She’s convinced, based on her freelance research, that a bomb went off about six minutes before an airplane hit the Pentagon — or didn’t hit it, as some believe the case may be. Catherine Austin Fitts served as assistant secretary of housing in the first President Bush’s administration and gained a fine reputation as a fraud buster; David Bowman was chief of advanced space programs under presidents Ford and Carter. Fitts and Bowman agree that the “most unbelievable conspiracy” theory is the one retailed by the government.

Then there’s Morgan O. Reynolds, appointed by George W. Bush as chief economist at the Labor Department. He left in 2002 and doesn’t think much of his former boss; he describes President Bush as a “dysfunctional creep,” not to mention a “possible war criminal.”

You reach Reynolds at his country home in the hills of Arkansas. His favored rhetorical style is long paragraphs without obvious punctuation: “Who did it? Elements of our government and M-16 and the Mossad. The government’s case is a laugh-out-loud proposition. They used patsies and lies and subterfuge and there’s no way that Bush and Cheney could have invaded Iraq without the help of 9/11.”

They are cantankerous and sometimes distrust each other — who knows where the double agents lurk? But unreasonable questions resonate with the reasonable. Colleen Kelly’s brother, a salesman, had breakfast at the Windows on the World restaurant on Sept. 11. After he died she founded September Eleventh Families for Peaceful Tomorrows to oppose the Iraq war. She lives in the Bronx and gives a gingerly embrace to the conspiracy crowd.

“Sometimes I listen to them and I think that’s sooooo outlandish and bizarre,” she says. “But that day had such disastrous geopolitical consequences. If David Ray Griffin asks uncomfortable questions and points out painful discrepancies? Good for him.”

Griffin’s book, “The New Pearl Harbor: Disturbing Questions About the Bush Administration and 9/11,” never reviewed in a major U.S. newspaper, sold more than 100,000 copies and became a movement founding stone. Last year he traveled through New England, giving speeches in whitewashed churches and gymnasiums. He came to West Hartford, Conn., on a rainy autumn evening. Four hundred mostly middle-aged and upper-middle-class doctors and lawyers, teachers and social workers sat waiting.

Griffin took the podium and laid down his ideas with calm and cool. He concluded:

“It is already possible to know beyond a reasonable doubt one very important thing: The destruction of the World Trade Center was an inside job, orchestrated by domestic terrorists,” he says. “The welfare of our republic and perhaps even the survival of our civilization depend on getting the truth about 9/11 exposed.”

The audience rose and applauded for more than a minute.

“Reality is a thin line between denial and paranoia.”

– Author unknown, but often quoted by the 9/11 truth movement

“Me?” You’ve asked the Rev. Frank Morales, the bohemian Episcopalian minister with the hipster goatee, where he stands on the nature of the conspiracy. We’re standing in the ancient graveyard of St. Mark’s Church in the Bowery on Second Avenue. “I lean to LIHOP.”

The 9/11 truthers share a lieutenant colonel’s love of acronyms. They divide themselves into LIHOPS and MIHOPS and differences are not trifling. LIHOP stands for “Let It Happen On Purpose,” which means someone inside the U.S. government intentionally let the terror conspiracy go. MIHOP means “Made It Happen On Purpose,” and its gradations center on whether Bush was in or out of the loop (a surprising number believe he was clueless) and whether the Mossad or British intelligence was dealt into the deal.

Morales, 57, who came out of the Lower East Side housing projects, spent days at Ground Zero performing last rites for the dead, many little more than a collection of body parts.

“I didn’t presume to know who did it,” he says. “There was a lot of shucking and jiving. I wonder at what point massive incompetence crosses over into negligent homicide.”

To make sense of the truth movement’s anger, you need to hit the rewind button to early 2001, with the hindsight of today. There was, as the 9/11 Commission hearings made clear, a bad moon rising. Warnings kept coming of a “high probability” of a “spectacular” terrorist attack. A national security adviser warned Condoleezza Rice there were terrorist cells, probably al-Qaeda guys, in the country. CIA chief George Tenet said the “system was blinking red.”

A presidential bulletin on Aug. 6 had a catchy title: “Bin Laden Determined to Strike in U.S.” Bush did not discuss it again with Tenet before Sept. 11.

So give the truth movement, many of whom are based in New York City, their props. They may be paranoid, but something nasty came our way. They pore over the paper trail with a Sherlock Holmesian intensity, alert to intriguing discrepancy.

Such as:

Former transporation secretary Norman Mineta told the commission he arrived in the presidential operations center — under the White House — at 9:20 a.m. on Sept. 11 and found Vice President Cheney. When an aide asked Cheney about the hijacked plane fast approaching the Pentagon, Mineta says the vice president snapped that the “orders still stand.” Mineta assumed the orders were to shoot the plane down. Conspiracy theorists interpret this to mean: Don’t shoot it down.

Cheney later said he was not in the operations center until after the plane hit. The commission never mentioned Mineta’s contradictory version.

In September 2001, NORAD generals said they learned of the hijackings in time to scramble fighter jets. But the government recently released tapes claiming to show the FAA did not tell the military about the hijackings until three of the four planes had crashed.

That would mean the FAA repeatedly lied. It would also mean, as Griffin points out, that the entire military chain of command stayed quiet about huge inaccuracies for four years “even though . . . the true story would put the military in a better light.”

More mysteries pile up. The 9/11 Commission says Flight 77 hit the Pentagon at 9:37. But Honegger says clocks stopped at the Pentagon at 9:32. Then there’s the collapse of the twin towers, which Jones, the physics professor, timed at just short of free fall. Griffin cites firefighters, including a captain, who said in hearings and on tapes from that day that they saw flashes and heard the sound of explosions before the collapse.

“It’s like the Nazi-facilitated Reichstag fire,” Honegger says from her home in California. “They guided and secretly protected it to justify their global agenda.”

Let’s put aside the could-anyone-do-something-that-spectacularly-twisted? question and touch on practicalities. Isn’t the problem with big ugly conspiracies — from the Gulf of Tonkin to My Lai to the 1961 Pentagon plan to provoke a war by attacking Americans and blaming it on Castro — that they are too big and ugly to keep secret?

Griffin shrugs. History is littered with government black-bag jobs. “How do you know they can’t keep big secrets? Can you be sure you know what you don’t know?”

* * *

There is a “morning after” quality to the conspiratorial romance. One moment you groove on the epiphanies and the next moment you’re lost in a dull haze of “this cannot be a coincidence,” “perhaps significantly” and “if so . . .”

What of incompetence? Or the raw absurdity of life? The truth movement makes much of a 2001 BBC report that a half-dozen of the hijackers were still alive. They mention Waleed al Shehri, a pilot who still flies commercial runs in Morocco. But the BBC retracted that.

It turns out the live guy and the dead hijacker spelled their names differently.

Then there’s the theory that Flight 77 did not hit the Pentagon and United 93 did not crash in Shanksville, Pa. But, like, what happened to the passengers? (Among the passengers on Flight 77 was Barbara Olson, wife of former U.S. solicitor general Ted Olson).

“Why should any of us know where it went?” Griffin says. “It could have been it crashed in Kentucky. We don’t need a theory where it went.”

Chip Berlet, senior analyst at Political Research Associates, a Boston-based left-leaning think tank, is no fan of the 9/11 Commission. He believes a serious investigation should have led to indictments and the firing of incompetent generals and civilian officials.

But he has no patience with the conspiracy theorists.

“They don’t do their homework; it’s a kind of charlatanism,” Berlet says over the phone. “They say there’s no debris on the lawn in front of the Pentagon, but they base their analysis on a photo on the Internet . That’s like analyzing an impressionist painting by looking at a postcard.”

Now comes a loud sigh.

“I love ‘The X-Files’ but I don’t base my research on it,” he says. “My vision of hell is having to review these [conspiracy] books over and over again.”

Let’s move on to Eager of MIT. “Demolition experts say, ‘Ohhh, it’s all science and timing.’ Bull!” Eager says. “What’s the technique? If 200,000 tons gives way, where do you think it’s going? Straight down.”

In the days after Sept. 11, experts claimed temperatures reached 2,000 degrees on the upper floors. Others claimed steel melted. Nope. What happened, Eager says, is that jet fuel sloshed around and beams got rubbery.

“It’s not too much to think that you could have some regions at 900 degrees and others at 1,200 degrees, and that will distort the beams.”

The truth movement doesn’t really care for Eager. A Web site casts a fisheye of suspicion at the professor and his colleagues. “Did the MIT have prior knowledge?” notes one chat room. “This is for sure another speculative topic . . . “

“It is no measure of health to be sane in an insane society.”

– Krishnamurti

Nico Haupt, a gaunt fellow in black sneakers, black socks, black jeans and black T-shirt, stands up in St. Mark’s Church in the Bowery. He holds aloft two blue Oreos boxes taped to resemble the twin towers. A pen juts out, kind of like a Boeing airplane.

For an hour he’s shown videos of planes hitting the towers. If you note the glinting sunlight and angle of wings and you’re honest about vectors and maybe the hashish is kicking in, you’ll realize there were no planes .

Truth movement veterans distance themselves from Haupt, who has a bit of a temper. But Reynolds, the former Labor Department economist, also is a “no-planer.”

“There were no planes, there were no hijackers,” Reynolds insists. “I know, I know, I’m out of the mainstream, but that’s the way it is.”

But what about all those New Yorkers who saw airplanes hitting the twin towers? A chuckle rumbles down the phone line. “I don’t believe anyone in Lower Manhattan,” he says. “You hire three dozen Actors’ Equity dudes and they’ll say anything .”

Some days the 9/11 truth movement resembles an Italian coalition government — dissolution is a certainty. Honegger and Griffin believe bombs brought down the twin towers but have little truck with make-believe planes. There’s a faction that says the Mossad did it and another that says that’s insane, and maybe anti-Semitic.

Where are we going here? There’s a Journal of 9/11 Studies, documentaries, CDs and DVDs. Is conspiracy thought getting codified?

“That’s our worry, of course,” Griffin says. “I want my life back. But how can I ignore that we have become entranced by demonic power, so focused on lust for wealth and control that almost anything becomes possible?”

You reach Honegger a few nights later. She’d like to give it up, too. “I am sitting here in my little office trying to figure out what happened to my country on this day. I wouldn’t be a patriot if I didn’t try to prove the government’s story is preposterous.”

The Boston Globe, August 2, 2003

Teen Arrested at Logan for Alleged Bomb Threat in His Bag By Nicole Fuller

A Paxton teenager was arraigned on a felony charge yesterday morning after he and his family were removed from a plane bound for Hawaii following the discovery of a profanity-filled note referencing a bomb in his luggage examined at Logan International Airport.

Appearing in court with his navy blue T-shirt pulled up over his face, 17-year-old David Socha pleaded not guilty to one count of making a bomb/hijacking threat in East Boston District Court, as his parents and younger sister looked on.

Ann E. Davis, a spokeswoman for the Transportation Security Administration, said the note was discovered by a baggage screener at about 6:20 a.m. when the bag was chosen for a random search.

No bomb was found.

Socha was arrested by State Police and his mother, father, and sister, were ordered off United Airlines Flight 171 to Honolulu via San Francisco, which was set to depart at 7:07 a.m.

According to the police report, the note, which was placed on top of clothes in a black gym bag read: “[Expletive] you. Stay the [expletive] out of my bag you [expletive] sucker. Have you found a [expletive] bomb yet? No, just clothes. Am I right? Yea, so [expletive] you.”

Socha only spoke to answer “yes” to Judge Albert Conlon when he asked the teenager if he would like to be represented by a court-appointed lawyer.

Socha, who has no previous record, was released on $1,000 surety. Socha’s shirt remained over his face as he left the courthouse with his family. They all declined to comment on the allegations.

According to the police report, when he was confronted by State Police, Socha told his parents, “I can explain this. I wrote a note in my bag asking if there was a bomb in it and telling them to stay out.” There were no other delays at the airport due to the alleged threat, said Davis, and the United flight departed from Logan on schedule.

“There was no commotion whatsoever,” Davis said. “But when [we] see the word ‘bomb,’ we take it very seriously. In today’s security environment, there’s no room for that sort of joking.”

David A. Procopio, spokesman for the Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office, said in the months after Sept. 11, 2001, a number of bomb hoaxes occurred at the airport, but now have become more sporadic with the passing of time.

“Putting a false bomb threat in your luggage is not something we take lightly,” Procopio said. “In the current climate, it’s just unacceptable because of the fear and panic it causes.”

Ruth E. Ryan, a neighbor of the Socha family, said by phone yesterday that the Sochas are a “nice family.” “I’m surprised,” Ryan said. “I thought he was a good kid.” Socha is due back in court on Sept. 26 for a pretrial conference.

—————

Excuse me?

This report just astounded me. The kid didn’t even make a bomb threat. He only asked did the searchers find a bomb? That’s a bomb threat? I don’t see it, do you? Are these people so stupid that they can only see one word? I’m sailing everywhere from now on.

The everything I sent you e-mail its thought.I never even think that you will fine the way to cheat me. You know me well if I find the way to cheat you I can do easier.Remember? sometime you drop me diamond with no receive bill. Thrush me no one who can’t hurt you, now you do something to hurt yourself. Scott, come out and clear every single bill so you will understand more clearly than you are. If you think some where in the bill unclear and dis-correct and you can prove the document by the reason I accepted to deduct from the total amount as you have .But after proved if you don’t see any where wrong you have to accept to pay me bill in whole total amount. Don’t tries to talk to much about I sent some armed to hurt you or kill you.If you still keep talking I will do it in clude your friend ( lockei) may be your girl friend too. Belive me you get DEAT.!!!!!!!!!!!! Suleeporn.

I am an atheist. I don’t believe in a ‘god’. I don’t believe in a heaven or a hell. I don’t believe that we need religion to force us to behave peacefully, justly, and honestly towards each other. John Lennon wrote ‘Imagine there’s no heaven’. Instead, I would like you to imagine a lot more than anything John said.

Imagine if we tore down the churches, the mosques, the temples and all the other places of worship, and used them to build houses for the poor and homeless instead. Wouldn’t the world be a better place?

Imagine if we made all the priests, monks, nuns, rabbis and other so-called holy people disrobe, leave their cloisters, and become productive members of society instead. We would have legions of mostly highly educated men (and some women) helping mankind, instead of hiding their lives away. They would have to face life, instead of spending their lives preparing to die. Fear drives these people. They need to overcome their fear and learn to live every day, dare I say it, like it is their last day. One day, it will be their last day. Will they be able to look back on their lives when that day comes and be proud of the life they have lived? Will they be able to say that they have helped others become better people? Hiding behind robes and walls does not make them better people, does it? We have all heard of the priests who sodomized children. The terrorists use religion as their excuse to murder thousands of people. But the terrorists are misfits who cannot face their lives. They prefer to die, and selfishly take many other people with them. Do any of these people, holy people or terrorists, deserve our admiration or support?

Imagine if we stopped wasting paper and ink printing holy books and used the materials to print children’s educational books to teach rational thought instead of superstition. Those books would teach children how to question ideas and learn to think for themselves. We could even employ the disrobed holy people to teach from those books. As a result, they would feel so much better because they would be helping prepare the next generation to make a useful contribution to the world and their fellow man. Isn’t that something to aspire to?

Imagine if we stopped classifying people by their religion, or their race, and started looking at them as human beings instead. We would see that they have the same dreams, aspirations and needs as we do. We all have to eat. We all want to love and be loved. We all love our children dearly. None of us would feel hatred if we could only see each other as people. Have you ever looked closely at the people of other religions you have been vilifying? What do you see?

Imagine if we stopped praying for things in the hope that a ‘supreme being’ might actually care what we want. Who can honestly prove that prayer works? Let’s be realistic here. If you were to set up an experiment to have millions of, say, Christians around the world join in prayer at the same time to stop the terrorists, do you really think those prayers would work? Of course not! Instead, it would be far more productive to sit down together and examine what is causing the problem and then work out a solution rationally. You can apply this principal to anything in your life. Your boss is considering a promotion in the company? Will praying help you get it? Or would you be better off thinking about how to impress the boss? If you think about what your boss needs and expects from you, and then you gratify his expectation, you will increase your chances many time over. Prayer can’t do that. I know where I would bet my money, don’t you?

Imagine if you saved your money instead of giving it to religions. Most divorces result from financial problems in one way or another. That money could help provide a better education for your children. It could provide a security cushion for you and your family so that you are happier together. Money doesn’t buy happiness, but it does make it easier to achieve your goals, and that is how you can be happier. The money you give to your religion merely helps enslave people to one way of thinking. Wouldn’t you rather be free and happy?

Imagine if you were to start thinking for yourself, instead of quoting verses from books written by men hundreds or even thousands of years ago. What do those men have to do with our modern world? Did they have the knowledge we take for granted today? Even the most rabid religionist knows that the world is round. How? It has been proved by scientists. What is the point of forbidding people to eat certain kinds of food, such as pork or beef, simply because some ignorant ‘holy man’ a long time ago said you shouldn’t eat them? Actually, the ban on eating pork, or butchering animals to Muslim halal or Jewish kosher standards made sense when they had no refrigerators. Draining the blood ensured that the meat would stay fresher longer. Their ban on eating certain type of seafood made sense for the same reason. But it makes absolutely no sense these days, does it? Religious leaders turned the ban into a weapon to control their followers. Instead of saying, “That doesn’t make sense any more”, you continue to blindly follow the old ways, instead of thinking rationally and making decisions based on common sense. Why not free your mind, body and soul instead?

Imagine if world leaders were to stop using religion as an excuse to grab and hold onto power. We all know that power corrupts and that absolute power corrupts absolutely. So why do we continue to let unbalanced men hungry for power who cannot think rationally lead us into wars that destroy lives and cause so much misery? How could anyone capable of thinking rationally continue to believe in any religion in this day and age?

If you were thinking rationally, religion would not make any sense at all. Instead of quoting from the Bible, the Koran, or any other ‘holy’ text, you would be thinking rationally. You would be thinking for yourself. You would not blindly follow rules set by someone from thousands of years ago with a fraction of our knowledge of the world. You would care about your fellow man, instead of trying to classify or demonize them because they don’t think the same as you. Wouldn’t that make more sense?

Any rational man, looking at religion, can see that religious thought is ‘wrong thought’. It robs you of the power to make rational decisions. Instead of looking for rational, humanist solutions to problems you continue to make the same mistakes over and over again. It blinds you to the beauty and love that exists in the world today. Only rational thought, and a belief in mankind, can turn our world into a paradise NOW. Do you really want to live your life trying to fulfill unrealistic expectations set by religion in the hope you will go to a ‘better place’ after you die? What about the here and now? Doesn’t it make so much better sense to work to achieve paradise today? To make your life, and the lives of everyone around you, better?

Isn’t it time we stopped the cycle and resolved to turn our world into a better place instead? If enough of us start thinking like this we can do it. But you have to want to do it. No one else, especially ‘god’, ‘allah’ or any other deity, will do it for you.

The hippies back in the 1960’s said, “What if they gave a war and nobody went?”

I ask you, “What if you gave up religion and started living your life for today instead?”

No one has ever come back from the dead. Not even Jesus, despite what is written in the Bible. No one has ever come back and told us they actually saw god or the devil when they died. It just doesn’t happen. We only get this life. Let’s make it a good life. Believe in yourself…not in some mythical deity no one has ever seen. Give up religion and become a thinking, rational human being instead. It’s only common sense, isn’t it?

On Tuesday evening the 29th of August police from Banglamung station arrested three Pattaya-based Water Policemen who will more than likely be charged with the attempted bribery and extortion of a 52-year-old American national named Billy Whittaker. Three days earlier, Mr Whittaker had been arrested by the Water Police in front of the VC Hotel in south Pattaya after they discovered him in possession of 100 ecstasy tablets as well as a loaded pistol, a sub-machine pistol, six loaded magazines, spare bullets and 600,000 baht in cash. According to Mr Whittaker the Water Police took him back to their base where he claimed they offered to let him go if he would pay them a lump sum of 2 million baht. The American told them he didn’t have the money but would ring an Australian friend of his who might be able to come up with the cash.
The Australian instead contacted Banglamung police to make an official complaint. The local police, shocked at the potential disgrace to the men in brown, decided to lay a trap for their allegedly greedy seafaring colleagues. They told the Australian to let Mr Whittaker know that the money had been transferred to his account and he should go to the bank and make a withdrawal. Mr Whittaker duly informed the three Water policemen, but when they all arrived outside the designated bank, Banglamung officers were waiting. They took the three Water police as well as Mr Whittaker into custody.
The arrested Water policemen have claimed it was Mr Whittaker who offered them money in order to avoid facing court proceedings, although just why they were happy enough to accompany him to the bank to make a withdrawal is yet to be determined. The Water police as well as Mr Whittaker will all no doubt get their chance to have their day in court.

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