I get asked all the time, “Mitch, when did you first start looking into all the lies that you have been told and what convinced you?” I remember it like it was yesterday and it was when the airliners crashed into the World Trade Center on 9/11 2001. Thing about it was, I was a X-files fan at the time and I remembered a pilot episode of a spin-off show that was trying to get started on the back of that successful series called “The Smoking Gun”. If you’re as old as I am, the X-Files was hugely popular if the alien intrusion theme was overdone and they used on occasion a group of individuals who ran a website called “The Smoking Gun” which was one of the most edgy sites out there when it came to exposing the lies that were all around us at that time. That site actually existed and still does to this day even though I doubt their motives anymore. Well this is part of the pilot that was aired March 4th, 2001:
At the time, I was supposedly happily married with kids but after the 9/11 attacks, I had an epiphany. I thought to myself, “These bastards warned us and it happened.”
The reason I had an epiphany was I knew hard it was to fly a plane especially especially ones that large without specialized training and to put it in a target as small as the twin towers given the size of the building and the size of the planes would take a professional. You see, I took flying lessons from my neighbor for two years and let me tell you something, driving a plane is nothing like driving a car or a motorcycle. Airliners have all the tech in the world and if you know and ask any airline pilot, he’ll tell you the same thing. If you don’t know it, you ain’t flying it.
After the twin towers were devastated, the TV show went nowhere. I figured at the time the show got too close to the truth with what had happened for it to stay on the air.
But I never forgot the lesson. The bastards are always going to broadcast their intentions to inure you to what is to come. Look for nuclear war movies to come out as blockbusters by the first of the year.
That last sentence in the video is prescient. “Just don’t expect to win.”
Personally I don’t. But I’ve got to try.