Dimitris Yannopoulos has a bee in his bonnet, fair enough, there is much to be unsettled by. He takes particular umbrage at my use of the term ‘conspiracy theory’, and seems particularly upset by what he sees as my dismissive use of the term. But if he reads carefully, he will see that I am probably as hardcore a conspiracy theorist as he is – I disbelieve the official story. The difference between him and me is that he is probably more inclined to following the various threads of misinformation than I. For me, it becomes noise rather rapidly; so rather than add to it, I prefer to allude to it. But since he has brought it up, perhaps I can clarify some of the problems, as I see it, with Hardcore conspiracy theorist of the variety Dimitris has included in his message. Not that I would necessarily disagree that most of it is possible, but because protagonist sincerely believe they ‘prove’ their case, and anybody that holds any degree of skepticism is an ‘unbeliever’ of the religious kind. But really, everyone has a theory about how the world we live in functions: Muslims have theories, Christians have theories, and different political factions have different theories. None of these theories are proven, none can claim to be objective ‘truth’, we all distill the facts through our worldview, under the influence of our teachers, and through the filter of the media we pay attention to. We can marvel at the ability of the various commentators who possess an uncanny knack of spotting the peculiarities of an official explanation, but it would be good if they were also able to spot the inconsistencies in the analysis of the peculiarity pickers. Now the sample provided by Dimitris is as tight, concise and logical expose’ about the recent events as we can find, but even here there are a few nuggets that only foster skepticism. This is quite apart from the lack of consideration about whether some of the inconsistencies in the official explanation could perhaps be a result of goofiness on the part of the ruling elite. The premise for the conclusion is therefore laid before any consideration is given to the evidence, such as it is. The possibility that some of the misinformation is post facto is hardly considered at all. That a conspiracy exists to milk the event for all it is worth, to further an agenda. So let us look at the premise, it is provided by the introduction: ‘Too many people saw the hand of MOSSAD’ in the first attacks, so these latest attacks serve to correct some of the mistakes made in that attack. Well, perhaps. One gets the feeling that all we are going to see in support of such a conclusion, are more peculiarities. The writer does not have a smoking gun, and the evidence he presents suggests that all he holds is a water pistol. Such a grandiose conclusion requires rather more evidence than is presented. While the peculiarities indicate that we should be on guard against misinformation, the misinformation seems to travel in both directions. One hardly ever comes across a theorist that proclaims, in bold letters, that they were wrong in their previous conclusions. When they are wrong, they quietly drop that line and pursue another. But the introduction also contains a rather unique gem; why did they go straight to the CCTV tapes at Luton? It is a pearl. Why indeed? In this introduction is the indication why theorist are both useful, and useless. They are useful because they stimulate inquiring minds, and useless because more often than not conclusions the evidence points to are overstated. Time and time again, one breathlessly reads an expose’ that fails to deliver the knockout punch as required by the premise. There is not a single piece of information in the entire post that would lead one to conclude, not suspect, that MOSSAD had a hand in the bombing. Yet it is an expectation that is generated by the introduction. They then wonder why people distance themselves from this lunacy. They are not proving the theory but ensuring it will never even be seriously considered. It is not surprising at all, given that most of these pundits, like western journalist in Baghdad, never leave their rooms in pursuit of the story. They rely on information coming to them in neat emailbox drops. One wonders why none of these alternative investigative journalists cultivate contacts that can give them the inside scoop. It will enhance their credibility. There is not a monopoly of news coverage, skeptics can cover events as well. Perhaps it is hard work, and many will tell you that it is financially unrewarding. They must believe that there is no financial reward for reporting unpleasant truths. A perusal of some of the ‘9/11 truth’ websites reveals a readership that is possibly the most dedicated there is. The 9/11 truth movement generates enormous funds, little of which is pent on gathering and collating physical evidence, interviewing witnesses and following the trail the evidence points to. It is a purely intellectual exercise, no legwork involved in it at all. It is well known that the steel from WTC 1&II was sent to China. But before it went, it sat in storage for several months at an undisclosed storage facility. Before it was shipped, it was probably smelted. None of these avenues of investigation was followed up by the hundreds of alternative investigative journalist. It was assumed that nobody would possibly get their hands on a piece, or pieces of, genuine WTC steel. They just sat in their rooms speculating. In order to investigate, you have to do more than speculate. Now Dimitris wants me to spend precious time reading and refuting his speculations. It is not possible to read it because if one starts reading, you finds oneself skipping whole segments because it is so familiar we assume we know about it all already. You read it once, then find you have to read it a thousand times, because it is reproduced a million times. This is the problem with conspiracy literature; duplication upon endless duplication. Repeating it a million times ad-nausea does not ‘prove’ anything. How many repetitive ZOG articles do we have to read before they realize that we got it already? But Dimitris wants us to refute what is hardly proven; that we should find the theories ‘far-fetched’. No, they are well within the realm of possibility, but probably not for the reasons put forward. They are flags to lines of inquiry that can be pursued (on bicycles, taxis or other means of transportation). They cannot be pursued by geeks sitting in their rooms at home. Talk is cheap, and to date, all it is, is cheap talk. Joh Domingo