Dear Editor,
I couldn’t believe my eyes when I read point five of Louis Black’s "Page Two" [
July 13]: His camp owns the legacy of the civil rights struggle, and the conspiracy movement dishonors and hinders it, as he distorts the conspiracist position (they are all nonactive "hobbyists," dogmatic, uneducated, cultlike, etc.). It is futile to disprove these lies again, as Black is the rigid dogmatist. But that’s not all; he then childishly, unapologetically declares something along the lines of, "Yes, I am insulting them because I believe they have insulted me."
This is where the attempt at dialogue by conspiracists with Black should end. "That’s all Folks!"
There are myriad crucial issues of our movement (Black mentions the conspiracy-launched activism against poison inoculations, unwittingly disproving his accusation of nonimpact). Chief among those are the criminally stolen elections of 2000, 2004 (after which the Democratic candidates rolled over and played dead), and 2008, which the neocons will successfully steal again.
But back to 9/11: The strongest indicator that it was an inside job is that the U.S. government destroyed all the evidence. The most spectacular crime in U.S. history, and the crime scene is sold for scrap. It is surely sheeplike to assume those who sabotaged the evidence cannot be the perpetrators or at the very least enablers.
Black and Bush, though not co-conspirators, are certainly both Looney Tunes.