Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
September 11, 2021
Some Thoughts On 9/11

Twenty years ago I was chief technology officer for a major news website. It was after lunch and I was testing new productivity tools for the news room. Someone came into my office and said that a plane had hit the WTC in New York City. I walked into the news room where several TV screens were filled with pictures of a smoking tower. 

The news folks were busy writing their first takes. Some of it was speculation. I mentioned that this was not the first plane to hit a skyscraper in NYC and called it an accident. That made it into one of the first take stories.

Still – even as an accident it was spectacular news and the page views per minute on the website went towards our capacity limits. Then the second plane hit and it was immediately clear to everyone that these were no accidents. The web traffic went through the roof.

We had had ample capacity to cover news peaks but this was way too much traffic for our normal site to handle. I told the server administrator to take down all side processes on the web-server machines we were using. We then started to minimize the content of the site. Everything that was generated dynamically was switched off. We minimized the numbers of pictures. We stopped all advertisement delivery. Other major news sites I tested were already dead – overwhelmed from the enormous amount of traffic. We were still up – but even loading the much cleaned up front page took more than 30 seconds.

I phoned up a number of IT guys I knew who administered public web sites for other purposes. I asked them to mirror our site through a side channel we had opened for that purpose. We then fiddled with the domain name servers to reroute a part of our traffic to those mirror sites. With those finally up and running we barely made it through the evening traffic peak without crashing everything. 

The traffic stayed above our nominal capacity for over a week. I stopped my news room productivity project and set down to design a new content delivery system which allowed for a dynamic addition of capacity. The design was quite expensive but three month later we implemented it.

9/11 touched a bit on my job but I was lucky to avoid its other deadly consequences.

Before working for that news site I had long worked with Americans on a daily basis. I had been to the U.S. over a dozen times during the previous years. It was immediately clear to me that its people would want revenge. They would not care much against whom it would be waged. That private prediction turned out to be right.

Little has changed since. The catharsis that 9/11 should have brought never happened. Most people still don't care about the wars of terror and who gets killed in them. I blame the media for that.

Today the New York Times and the Washington Post both report on the recent 'righteous' drone strike in Kabul:

Times Investigation: In U.S. Drone Strike, Evidence Suggests No ISIS Bomb
U.S. officials said a Reaper drone followed a car for hours and then fired based on evidence it was carrying explosives. But in-depth video analysis and interviews at the site cast doubt on that account.
.
Examining a ‘righteous’ strike
Expert analysis of deadly U.S. drone strike’s aftermath in Kabul suggests no evidence of explosives in targeted vehicle

Ten innocent persons, including 7 children, were killed in that strike.

I applaud those reports. But there have been some 15,000 other drone strike since 2007. Most of those have hit innocent people but there was little reporting about them.

Three days before the drone strike happened a much bigger massacre took place.

A suicide bomber hit at the gate of Kabul airport. The bomb killed several dozen people including U.S. soldiers. But what happened immediately after the bomb went off made the incident much deadlier. Those who guarded the airport opened fire on the large crowd that had hoped to be let in to catch a flight to somewhere. In total more than 170 people died, some of them were British citizens, others were Taliban guards, most were Afghan civilians.

Local Afghan news, a BBC report on Twitter, Russian public TV (at about 3 min, German translation), China's major news agency and other reporters all spoke to eye witnesses who all confirmed the story: "Most of those dead were killed by bullets."

But 'western' media have buried that story. The sole mention of it I could find is deep down in a long NYT report about the evacuations from Kabul:

For the first time, Pentagon officials publicly acknowledged the possibility that some people killed outside the airport on Thursday might have been shot by American service members after the suicide bombing.

Investigators are looking into whether the gunfire came from Americans at the gate, or from the Islamic State.

'Officials publicly acknowledged the possibility …'  Do they call THAT 'reporting'?

There were quite obviously no ISIS shooters at the gate.

Why ain't U.S. media all over a story during which the U.S. side killed more than 100 innocent people? Is it hyping the drone attack, which killed 10, to cover for the more embarrassing act during which troops under U.S. control massacred many more than that? Because those troops were the CIA's Afghan death squads who may soon be your neighbors?

Before 9/11 U.S. intelligence knew of Al-Qaeda sleeper cells and of plans for new attacks. Then came 9/11. I am by now one of those who thinks that they let it happen on purpose. That is because all the wars that followed had long been prepared for.

Following 9/11 the U.S. wars of terror displaced 37 million people and killed at least a million foreigners. The U.S. wars of terror are still going on today in Somalia, Yemen, Iraq, Syria, Libya and elsewhere.

Shouldn't 20 years be long enough to end those wars? To find some closure? To suppress the urge for revenge? To change the rather aggressive general U.S. mentality?

Unfortunately the answer to all those questions seems to be "No".

Comments

A video showing the first plane strike https://youtu.be/miA8Td4oNcY?t=68 Different from the first in that the main fireball looks be coming back out from the entry point rather than the opposite side of the building.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Sep 13 2021 22:19 utc | 301

Paul, Sep 13 2021 2:38 utc @ 269 wrote:
I noticed at an oil refinery shut down [regular maintenance], the protective concrete around the steel coulombs supporting the catalytic cracker plant were regularly jackhammered off to expose the steel beams for inspection for corrosion. The concrete was later replaced. Mere asbestos would not do the job in the event of a fire.
_________________________________________________________________
First of all, yes concrete has traditional been the material used to protect the steel from fire, while at the same time adding to the structural integrity. The Twin towers were cutting edge technology. They used exposed steel structures which meant that steel had to be protected from fire in some other way.
Oil refineries are an interesting case in that most of the major oil refineries built in the US were built more than 50 years ago. This is because while the American public was being mesmerized with Watergate and the downfall of Nixon the the petroleum and automobile industries were busy writing the Clean Air Act to work in their favor. The auto industry screwed themselves with the regulations that they thought would benefit the US corporations over their foreign competitors, but the oil companies managed to successfully turn the Clean Air Act into law that entrenched their monopolistic power. The result was that no major oil refineries have been built since the 1970’s. This increased the profitability of the existing oil refineries enormously while at the same time it means that that oil companies have to go to extreme measures to preserve their existing infrastructure. Its a lot cheaper for an oil company to rebuild an existing refinery than it is to build one from scratch (because of the environmental laws they wrote). Maintaining existing capital versus constructing new capital is not the way American capitalism usually works but in this case it has been enormously profitable for the oil industry because it has eliminated competition.

Posted by: jinn | Sep 13 2021 22:53 utc | 302

@Peter AU1 165
You weren’t in WTC on the day. The firemen of FDNYC were. Have you not seen that famous video of some of them discussing what they saw? “Molten steel”, says one of them, repeating it for emphasis. And there is that other famous video of molten steel pouring from a high corner of one of the towers, before it fell – presumably caused by one of the incendiary charges installed by the CD loaders having been accidentally ignited before it was due – ?
You’ve been so full of – often barely comprehensible, basic-physics free – bs in this thread, Peter, that I could almost wonder whether you’re one of the paid disinformation shills protecting the real perps’ arses, still, after all this time. Or, more likely I suppose, a man defending a pet theory of no great merit, that simply won’t stand up. But it’s your darling baby and you’re going to protect it all costs. I don’t know. But whatever your motive is, it’s surely buried you in bs.

Posted by: Rhisiart Gwilym | Sep 14 2021 9:18 utc | 303

OT
W.W. | Sep 13 2021 21:42 utc | 301
I checked out some of the other messages at MIB and I read this
https://t.me/s/MIB_MessageInABottle

What Is the Internet of Bodies?
The RAND Corporation Oct 29, 2020 – official statement:
Internet-connected “smart” devices are increasingly available in the marketplace, promising consumers and businesses improved convenience and efficiency. Within this broader Internet of Things (IoT) lies a growing industry of devices that monitor the human body and transmit the data collected via the internet. This development, which some have called the Internet of Bodies (IoB), includes an expanding array of devices that combine software, hardware, and communication capabilities to track personal health data, provide vital medical treatment, or enhance bodily comfort, function, health, or well-being. However, these devices also complicate a field already fraught with legal, regulatory, and ethical risks.
In this video, RAND mathematician Mary Lee examines this emerging collection of human body–centric and internet-connected technologies

Here’s my choice for the promotional music
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f9lK4UEWF70

Posted by: tucenz | Sep 14 2021 10:58 utc | 304

Posted by: tucenz | Sep 14 2021 10:58 utc | 305
Great post punk music, How about Australia’s radio Birdman? A great act live in Sydney in the day.
https://soundaboard.blogspot.com/2011/10/radio-birdman-live-in-sidney-1976.html
But now we digress. However, we need pleasant distractions to retain our sanity and focus.

Posted by: Paul | Sep 14 2021 11:25 utc | 305

posted by Tucenz@ 305
Sorry about the bad link to Radio Birdman. It’s a case of ‘you really had to be there to appreciate it’.
High energy on steroids.
Unfortunately, their favourite venue pub went gay and they got rid of the old crowd.and Radio Birdman performed elsewhere after that.
Here is a better link:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5W4x5qHG9sQ

Posted by: Paul | Sep 14 2021 11:57 utc | 306

Posted by: tucenz | Sep 14 2021 10:58 utc | 305
Ha,the fall! Great idea for the soundtrack. I liked Mark E Smith more for his attitude than his music if I’m honest.
He was contemptuous of the whole world, probably due to his own insecurities and selfloathing. “Australians in Europe” for example is Smith being relatively melodic, catchy and at his contemptuous best.
One thing I liked about him is that he only ever compromised once regarding his music, and that was for love. During the Curious Orange phase his wife at the time, Brix, managed to convince him to actually produce music with a commercial market in mind. He swore he’d never do it again, but it was possibly his best album, music-wise anyway, certainly the most accessible.
Saw them play several times but the one that sticks out most in my mind was The Fall playing the Reading festival (91 or 92 I think).
Smith held a book in his hand, verbally insulted the crowd for a while, while the band played, then sat down on the stage with his back to the crowd pretending to be absorbed in the book while mumbling out lyrics for the rest of the less than 60 mins he was on stage.
Awful and brilliant at the same time. Half the crowd loved it, half hated it. VERY Mark E Smith.
Arrogant as hell, but talented too.
There’s a wonderful NME interview with Smith, Nick Cave and Shane McGowan from back in the very late 80’s.
By the end of the interview Smith and McGowan have teamed up and are slagging Cave off at every opportunity. Cave handles it well.
https://thequietus.com/articles/09277-mark-e-smith-nick-cave-shane-macgowan-nme-interview

Posted by: W.W. | Sep 14 2021 11:58 utc | 307

James | Sep 11 2021 18:14 utc | 3
I concur completely. It is as clear as daylight that while Saudi Arabia and Israel were involved in the day’s events, the coordination and planning was an internal USG effort. The Patriot act was already written, the stand-down of the air defenses was in place, the inconvenient documents were already in the Pentagon and building 7, which latter, like the other buildings, had been prepared for demolition, Cheyney was away from his desk, Bush was reading to school kids, Osama Bin-Laden’s family was on its way home, courtesy of the USG and so on. Just to rub it home, the Dancing Israelis and the Israeli natinals who were arrested while preparing to blow up bridges in NY, were quietly shipped home without ever being charged.

Posted by: foolisholdman | Sep 14 2021 13:06 utc | 308

Oh yes! And the Press, the MSM, were all prepared to cover it all up.

Posted by: foolisholdman | Sep 14 2021 13:08 utc | 309

karlof1 | Sep 11 2021 19:37 utc | 34

Perhaps Gordog can inform the bar about remote fly-by-wire capability 20 years ago.

I had a friend who told me that he had been a tea-boy on nuclear-capable bombers, that during the Cold War, took off and flew towards the USSR until they met Soviet air defences, when they turned round and flew home again. He said that these planes took off and landed under the pilot’s control, but apart from that flew under remote control, with the controls inside the plane being dead for most of the journey.

Posted by: foolisholdman | Sep 14 2021 13:39 utc | 310

Lurk | Sep 11 2021 20:41 utc | 52
“And it’s true me lads
True me lads, I’ve never been known to lie!
And if you go down to Derby,
They’ll tell you same as I!”
I ask you! Citing Wikipedia as a reliable source? Why not the NYT?

Posted by: foolisholdman | Sep 14 2021 13:56 utc | 311

Posted by foolisholdman @ 311
from one foolish old man to another: The games people play,
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4gVcQLO5Vxxx
It could be our downfall.too many games, Not enough reality. Where is the reality tab?

Posted by: Paul | Sep 14 2021 14:02 utc | 312

@Peter AU1 165

You’ve been so full of – often barely comprehensible, basic-physics free – bs in this thread, Peter, that I could almost wonder whether you’re one of the paid disinformation shills…

Posted by: Rhisiart Gwilym | Sep 14 2021 9:18 utc | 304

Wow! Personal insults, Edu-phobia + Projection?
That’s quite an ‘achievement’.

Posted by: Hoarsewhisperer | Sep 14 2021 14:34 utc | 313

@Paul | Sep 14 2021 14:02 utc | 313

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4gVcQLO5Vxxx

That one must have been good. Already “unavailable”.

Posted by: Norwegian | Sep 14 2021 14:52 utc | 314

Posted by: Paul | Sep 14 2021 14:02 utc | 313
“It could be our downfall.too many games, Not enough reality “.
Illustrations of the efficacy of Mr. Rove’s observation:
“We are an Empire
We create our own reality
To which others react.
When other are reacting
We create another reality
To which others react.
Through assigning significances to details and spectacles thereby aiding ignorance and obfuscation.
One of the purposes of blogs – an ideological variant of practices of divide and rule.
To practitioners the significances of “9/11” is what was facilitated and followed which the opponents seek to obscure by memorialisation, whilst the spectators chase their own tales pondering who did it and how was it done.
Such facilitates your falling down further daily.
Ring a ring of roses
A pocket full of posies
Atishoo, atishoo
We all fall down
(1881 version)

Posted by: MagdaTam | Sep 14 2021 14:59 utc | 315