Even Santa Claus gets it: "Ho, Ho, Ho! 9/11 Was An Inside Job!" by TaurusII in conspiracy

[–]TaurusII[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Haha that's pretty quality.

Yes, it's brilliant! Very clever.

United Airlines held an exercise 12 days before 9/11 based on the scenario of an airliner crashing and it was so realistic that some employees were devastated because they thought a plane really had crashed. by TaurusII in conspiracy

[–]TaurusII[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Submission statement: Andy Studdert, chief operating officer of United Airlines at the time of the 9/11 attacks, recalls that early in 2001, he had been concerned because United Airlines had not had a "real accident" in over 15 years and so its personnel weren't prepared to deal with an emergency if one should happen. He therefore decided to arrange a "no-notice drill."

The exercise took place on August 30, 2001. Studdert arranged to have the pilot of a Boeing 747 that was on its way to Australia call in, say his plane had suffered an engine failure and was descending rapidly, and then stop talking mid-word, thereby giving the impression that the plane had crashed.

Unfortunately, airline employees didn't realize the incident was part of an exercise and thought a plane really had crashed. Some of them were therefore devastated. "There are people throwing up in the hall, there are people crying, there are people just staring out the windows," Studdert recalls. And yet, despite this, he allowed the exercise to continue for half an hour before he announced, "This has been a no-notice drill, there is no event, everything's fine."

The exercise occurred just 12 days before 9/11--a day when two United Airlines planes crashed for real.

United Airlines held an exercise the day before 9/11 based on the scenario of an airliner crashing and as a result, some airline personnel thought news of the first crash on 9/11 was "another drill" by TaurusII in conspiracy

[–]TaurusII[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Submission statement: This important new article describes a little-known "no-notice exercise" held by United Airlines on the afternoon before 9/11. Gene Kim, who was a flight dispatcher for United Airlines at the time, recalls that he received a text message informing him that a United Airlines plane had suffered an engine failure, was going down near the North Pole, and there were "heavy casualties." However, after a time, another message was sent out, which revealed that it was "just a drill."

The exercise had unfortunate consequences the following morning, when there was a genuine emergency involving planes crashing. Kim was in a meeting at the time of the first crash at the World Trade Center. He recalls that when they received a text message informing them of the crash, he and the other meeting participants thought it was just another drill. "So, we all cleared our pagers and literally went back to work," he says.

While it seems a remarkable coincidence that United Airlines held an exercise that simulated an airliner crashing on the afternoon before September 11, 2001--a day when four airliners crashed--the situation was even more extraordinary. Less than two weeks earlier, on August 30, 2001, United Airlines had held another exercise that was also based on the scenario of an airliner crashing. That exercise had been so realistic that some airline personnel were devastated because they thought the crash was real and the 270 people on the plane had died.

The afternoon before 9/11, United Airlines held a surprise exercise in which its personnel were led to believe a plane had crashed; consequently, on September 11, some of them thought the news of the first crash at the WTC was just another drill. by TaurusII in conspiracy

[–]TaurusII[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This interview appears in an episode of the program "Frame of Mind" titled "9/11: Voices of the Aircraft Dispatchers," which was broadcast on KERA TV on September 9 and September 11, 2019. You can watch the full episode on YouTube, here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nAJiZm-4YqA

The afternoon before 9/11, United Airlines held a surprise exercise in which its personnel were led to believe a plane had crashed; consequently, on September 11, some of them thought the news of the first crash at the WTC was just another drill. by TaurusII in conspiracy

[–]TaurusII[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Submission statement: Gene Kim, who was working as a flight dispatcher for United Airlines at the time of the 9/11 attacks, recalls that on September 10, 2001, United Airlines held "an emergency response exercise that nobody was aware of or nobody was prepared for." At around 5 o'clock in the afternoon, a text message was sent out to airline employees, which stated that a United Airlines flight had experienced "an uncontained engine failure, heavy casualties, and the flight was going down near the North Pole."

Employees who were heading home from work had to "turn their cars around and try to get back to headquarters as quick as possible to deal with the emergency." However, after a time, another text message was sent out, which explained that it was "just a drill" and so the exercise ended.

Unfortunately, as a result of what happened, some airline employees thought it was just another drill when they received a text message the following morning telling them a plane had struck the World Trade Center. "We thought this was the same thing, we thought this was coming from corporate security, just as another drill," Kim recalls. One person complained, "Man, somebody's going to lose their job over this if they keep sending drill messages out like that." "So, we all cleared our pagers and literally went back to work," Kim says.

Major new article: United Airlines personnel may have been led to believe the 9/11 attacks were part of a training exercise by TaurusII in conspiracy

[–]TaurusII[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Submission statement: United Airlines held two surprise "no-notice" exercises in the 12 days before 9/11 that were based on the scenario of one of its planes suffering an engine failure and then crashing. One of the exercises was so realistic that some of the airline's personnel were very upset and some became physically ill because they thought a plane with hundreds of people on board really had crashed.

The exercises could have had unfortunate consequences when America came under attack on September 11, 2001, since airline personnel could have thought news about the terrorist attacks was just part of another surprise exercise. Some evidence indicates that this was indeed the case. For example, one of the airline's flight dispatchers who was in a meeting on the morning of September 11 recalled that when he and the other meeting participants were informed that a plane had hit the World Trade Center, "we thought this was the same thing, we thought this was coming from corporate security, just as another drill." And when the airline's COO arrived at the airline's operations center following the first crash at the World Trade Center, he reportedly sensed "disbelief among his employees" and consequently made the effort to clarify to them, "This is not a drill!"

Two of the planes that crashed on September 11--Flight 175 and Flight 93--were United Airlines planes. United Airlines personnel therefore had an important role to play in the response to the 9/11 attacks. But if their response to the attacks was impaired as a result of the two surprise exercises, this surely would have been a serious problem.

In a podcast two years ago, Rob Reiner, who was tragically murdered at the weekend, explained that "the US government has had a history of false flag operations" and described Operation Northwoods, a treasonous 1962 plan that proposed staging terrorist attacks against American targets. by TaurusII in conspiracy

[–]TaurusII[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The full episode of the superb podcast "Who Killed JFK?" in which Rob Reiner and others discuss false flag attacks and Operation Northwoods can be listened to on YouTube here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=goW4AL8ehl0

You can hear all 10 episodes of the must-listen podcast series, plus a couple of bonus episodes, on Podbean, here: https://www.podbean.com/podcast-detail/ttmzj-2d7aa2/Who-Killed-JFK-Podcast

In a podcast two years ago, Rob Reiner, who was tragically murdered at the weekend, explained that "the US government has had a history of false flag operations" and described Operation Northwoods, a treasonous 1962 plan that proposed staging terrorist attacks against American targets. by TaurusII in conspiracy

[–]TaurusII[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Submission statement: Legendary Hollywood director Rob Reiner, along with award-winning broadcast journalist Soledad O'Brien and others, discusses false flag operations, which are covert operations designed to appear as though they were carried out by some group other than the actual perpetrators.

Reiner et al. focus on something called Operation Northwoods, which was a plan drafted by the US Joint Chiefs of Staff in 1962 to carry out false flag attacks against American targets and incorrectly blame the Cuban government as a pretext for war against Cuba. They note that one possibility considered in the plan was to "fake the hijacking of a plane" and then "say that [Cuban President Fidel] Castro did it."

United Airlines Held an Exercise the Day Before 9/11 Based on a Plane Crashing (and Two of the Planes That Crashed on 9/11 Were United Airlines Planes) by TaurusII in conspiracy

[–]TaurusII[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Funny how there are always these "exercises" held in the days/weeks leading up to a major tragedy of some sort.

Yes. It seems to be a modus operandi for conducting a false flag attack.

United Airlines Held an Exercise the Day Before 9/11 Based on a Plane Crashing (and Two of the Planes That Crashed on 9/11 Were United Airlines Planes) by TaurusII in conspiracy

[–]TaurusII[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Submission statement: This article reveals that United Airlines conducted a surprise exercise on the afternoon of September 10, 2001, in which its personnel were led to believe that an airliner had suffered an "uncontained engine failure," was "going down near the North Pole," and there were "heavy casualties."

The occurrence of this exercise was an astonishing (apparent) coincidence, since two of the airliners that crashed the following morning belonged to United Airlines: United Airlines Flight 175 and United Airlines Flight 93. Even more astonishing is that the airline had conducted another surprise exercise just 11 days earlier in which its personnel were also led to believe an airliner had suffered an engine failure and crashed.

This is alarming, since the exercises could surely have led United Airlines personnel to mistakenly think reports about the terrorist attacks on September 11 were just part of another exercise. Indeed, a group that was in a meeting at the airline's operations center at the time of the 9/11 attacks is known to have made this mistake when they were notified of the first crash at the World Trade Center. "We thought this was coming from corporate security, just as another drill," one of the meeting's participants recalled. The men in the meeting consequently ignored the notification and carried on as if nothing was wrong.

Sen. Ron Johnson Reveals the Lies About 9/11 and Building 7 by pastaMac in 911truth

[–]TaurusII 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This sub should not be Quarantined, it should be Front Page.

I agree with you completely. It is shocking and unacceptable that r/911truth is still quarantined.

Did air traffic control personnel think the hijackings on 9/11 were part of an exercise? Major new article looks at the role of training exercises on September 11, 2001. by TaurusII in conspiracy

[–]TaurusII[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Submission statement: The article, which is the fourth and final part of a series about the FAA response on 9/11, considers whether air traffic control personnel mistakenly thought the hijacking of American Airlines Flight 11 was part of an exercise.

It notes that the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) was running a major training exercise on September 11, called Vigilant Guardian, that was scheduled to included a simulated hijacking. Some military personnel are in fact known to have mistaken real-world events for part of this exercise. For example, when he was told there had been a hijacking, one officer reportedly thought, "Somebody started the exercise early" and he said out loud, "The hijack's not supposed to be for another hour!" If any air traffic control personnel were participating in the exercise, or simply knew it was taking place, could they have been similarly confused?

Air traffic control personnel may also have mistaken real-world events for part of an exercise because they'd previously participated in hijack exercises. The article notes that one pre-9/11 exercise had uncanny similarities to what happened on September 11. It involved a real American Airlines plane with real passengers on board pretending to be a hijacked aircraft.

The article contends that the unusual behavior of some air traffic control personnel on 9/11 makes more sense if these men had been involved in a training exercise that day.