- "....did Dillinger leave his home
address in a bank safe he busted into? Did Al Capone leave a box of chocolates
with a card with his name on it at the "Valentine Day" massacre
in Chicago? Did John Gotti leave a calling card on Paul Castellano's bullet
riddled body after the dapper don and buddy popped the Gambino crime family
boss and chauffeur in front of Spark's Steak House in Manhattan?"
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-
- You know. A false flag op is when a nation
attacks itself but makes it appear that an enemy has committed the attack.
This way it stirs its more or less peace-loving people into going to war
with the demonized "enemy." It's false flag ops 1.1.
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- And Flagg is not a misspelling of flag
but the name of a former FBI agent, Warren Flagg who (along with a former
federal prosecutor) helped direct the New England investigation of the
Sept. 11 attacks. Flagg was nice enough in a Newsday.com piece by Michael
Dorman to mention that "one bag found in Boston contained far more
than what the commission report cited, including the names of the hijackers,
their assignments and their al-Qaida connections." Gee, what luck!
-
- How wonderfully thoughtful of the hijackers
to leave what Flagg termed this "Rosetta stone" behind so everything
could be figured out so quickly and with such ease. You have to admit that
was white of those dusky Mid-Easterners. One of the pieces of luggage was
said to include "Arab-language papers amounting to Atta's last will
and testament, along with instructions to the other hijackers to prepare
themselves physically and spiritually for death." Boy, this Atta guy
thought of everything. But why go blabbing it all in two suitcases? He
was supposed to be a terrorist not a PR man.
-
- And if that weren't enough, Mohamed Attta,
purportedly the leader of the gang of 19, and who purportedly piloted Flight
11 into Tower 1, reminded the guys: "Check all of your items -- your
bag, your clothes, knives, your will, your Ids, your passport, your papers.
. . . Make sure that nobody is following you." Then, by another amazing
coincidence, similar papers were found in the wreckage of another airliner.
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- In still another coincidence, slugabed
Atta and co-conspirator Abuldaziz AlAlmorai checked out of room 232 of
the Comfort Inn south of Portland at 5:33 a.m. on 9/11, driving their rented
blue Nissan Altima to the airport, arriving in a lot at 6 a.m. with only
a few minutes to catch a commuter flight to Boston's Logan Airport. In
fact, their last-minute check-in caused their two bags not to make that
flight. What? Yes, start the day with a screw-up and it ends in disaster.
Or did it, at least for them?
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- I mean, as they go off to catch their
later American Airlines Flight 11, their bags (or should we call them Baggs
to rhyme with Flaggs?) came late to Logan and, 'mirable dictu' as Virgil
would say, were discovered by the right security people. What's more, Atta
and Almari's bags had all kinds of goodies in them: correspondence from
the University Atta went to in Egypt, Almari's international driver's license
and passport, a videocassette for a Boeing 757 flight simulator, a folding
knife and pepper spray, extra heavy duty weapons they figured they didn't
need.
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- As agent Flagg would say, "It had
all these Arab-language papers that amounted to the Rosetta stone of the
investigation." His sidekick, a former federal prosecutor, who did
not wish to be identified publicly (and who could blame him?), certainly
supported Flagg's account. Aren't you wondering by now why these "turrists"
would want to lug their plans, scams, IDs et al, in a couple of bags and
dump them in a last minute check-in? Generally, a gate attendant will tell
you if your baggage will make your flight or land on a later one. This
means you'd be leaving all this heavy-duty info spinning in the wind.
-
- I mean, did Dillinger leave his home
address in a bank safe he busted into? Did Al Capone leave a box of chocolates
with a card with his name on it at the "Valentine Day" massacre
in Chicago? Did John Gotti leave a calling card on Paul Castellano's bullet
riddled body after the dapper don and buddy popped the Gambino crime family
boss and chauffeur in front of Spark's Steak House in Manhattan? C'mon,
you're pulling my leg.
-
- I mean what kind of malefactors would
be that stupid, unless they were setting up a false-flag op? Like, "see,
everybody we're the guys that did it, 9/11; we are Arabs, see the writing;
hey, here's a knife, some maps, a CD to fly a 757; hello, don't look so
hard. We give up, ha-ha, but we'll be dead by the time you read this. And
so will some 2,900 people. So you can blame The War on Terror on us as
soon as possible, ASAP. Right. Here are the clues." It's like Catch
Us If Can, the ultimate reality TV show. Oh god, why has thou forsaken
us. Cause we're so dumb.
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- But Flagg Asks the BIG Question
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- Yup, Agent Flagg goes on to ask . . ."How
do you think the government was able to identify all 19 hijackers almost
immediately after the attacks. They were identified through those papers
in the luggage. And that's how it was known so soon that al-Qaida was behind
the hijackings." Wow, is that how they made the connection? And so
fast?
-
- I was wondering about that. And how a
couple of months later FBI Director Robert Mueller said on CNN, that there
was no factual proof these were the guys. But hey, maybe he didn't have
his coffee that morning. The thing is what if you, we, America, were set
up that day? Er, say what?
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- What if the clues were put there to cover
the tracks of the real Bad Bush Boyz, not these lap dancer hounds, boozing
and coking joy boys, trained at American military bases, conspicuously
leaving a paper trail so blatant it'd make Hansel and Gretel's breadcrumbs
look like canary eggs. And yet these same document droppers were barely
able to get to the airport on time? They must have been exhausted driving
up to Portland just to fly back to make this smoke screen where supposedly
there would be less security to halt their efforts.
-
- But wait. Can we be sure when they got
back to Boston, if they did, that they even got on the planes? They weren't
on the manifests. Their DNA would have been boiled to a crisp in the hits.
And was it clear they even flew the planes?
-
- It's like the old Schnozzola, Jimmy Durante
himself would say: "What a revoltin' development this is." It's
revolting in every way, James. Nothing like we'd ever seen before. Except
maybe in the "Sinking of the Maine," "Operation Northwoods,"
"Operation Mongoose," "The Murrah Building Blow-Up"
in Oklahoma City, The Cuba-supporting lone gunman Lee Harvey Oswald, and
so on. Yeah, it's the Cubans. They did it all. Let's go smoke 'em out.
Our cigars are bigger than theirs.
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- Flagg Is Doing Okay Now
-
- Guess what. After 22 years on terrorism
and other cases, Flagg retired from the FBI before 9/11 and is now set
up in his own Manhattan-based investigative firm, Flaggman, Inc. Clever,
hah. He stays in touch with the Boyz at the FBI, both old buddies and prosecutors.
In fact, he first heard about the old Rosetta stone (I mean luggage)'s
importance to the whitewash (I mean investigation), on Sept 28, 2001, after
attending the funeral of John O'Neill.
-
- You remember O'Neill. He was the FBI
chief of terrorist head-hunting who, frustrated by having his Osama-chases
foiled time and time again, quit the FBI after 30 years of service. Unfortunately,
he died in Tower 2. Yes, O'Neill died trying to help people out of the
building, kind of guy he was, and maybe knew too much as well.
-
- At the funeral, Flagg met a young FBI
agent that he had helped train. The young agent had since left the agency
for Dubai, gulp, and told Flagg all about the Suitcase Revelations. Name
of the father, son and holy molly. Flagg rang up his old prosecutor buddy
and got confirmation of the young guy's account.
-
- "I was devasted because word had
already leaked out of the hijacker's identities," Flagg opined. Then
in a quick change of spirit added, "But I was also excited that the
FBI had so much evidence so quickly." Frigging miracle.
-
- Too bad the government couldn't put all
its previous intelligence together and stopped the whole thing, seeing
how it had been laid out before 9/11. Too bad NORAD fell apart that day.
Too bad that five simultaneous terror hijacking drills were going on, that
up to 22 planes filled the air controllers' screens, and nobody knew what
the hell was real and what wasn't. Too bad, right.
-
- But hey, the Bad Boyz left lots of breadcrumbs
like suitcases along the way that led right to the White House: Dick Cheney
in the Control Room, George Bush in a Florida school listening to kids
read a goat story, the Pentagon and Donald Rumsfeld ducking the missile,
NORAD, the CIA, FBI, Israeli and even Chinese black ops. And they lead
to others in the US entrusted with protecting us who instead turned on
us and took part in this Great American Tragedy. "What a revoltin
development this is." Yes James, you're right again. So let's revolt,
Mrs. Calabash, wherever you are.
-
- And last but not least. Did you know
that Flagg said it really was the second bag that identified all 19 hijackers?
Got that? Though he didn't comment on the fact that at least seven of the
"hijackers" have been noted alive, well and kicking in the Middle
East. But hey, that's what a "False Flagg" op is all about, blaming
the homegrown havoc on people you want to attack. Mmmm, gimme that Afghanistan,
gimme theme pipelines, gimme Iraq, gimme that oil, gimme da Mid-east today,
gimme da world tomorrow. Mmmm. Where'd I hear that song before? Jerry Mazza
is a freelance writer living in New York. Reach him at gvmaz@verizon.net.
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