A list of materials quoted from/cited in this conversation: - The 9-11 bombings Are Not Acts of War
The 9-11 bombings Are Crimes
Against Humanity
- Crimes Against
Humanity -- Benjamin Ferencz Interview, 19 Sep 2001
- Introduction
to Crimes Against Humanity, May 2003
- A Summary of Useful Research & References on the
11 September 2001 World Trade Center and Pentagon Bombings, 11 Sep 2003 - Center for Cooperative
Research
- wanttoknow.info - For Those
Who Care About Our Future
Revealing Major Cover-ups & Working Together for a Better World
wanttoknow.info provides a concise, reliable introduction to incredibly important information
being hidden from public view. We specialize in providing information-packed summaries of major
cover-ups and powerful ideas on creating a brighter future.
- Broadening
Our Perspectives of 11 September 2001, Sep 2002
- Political
Deception - The Missing Link Behind 9-11, by Michel Chossudovsky, Jun 2002
- Kean
and failure on 9/11, by
John
Judge, 19 Dec 2003
- Guantánamo
Bay Prison, Precursor of an America Gulag
Establishing the
Precedent for Concentration Camps in America
- The Real Work
Before Us
- War on
Terror: The Police State Agenda, by Richard K. Moore, Nov 2001
- The
Biology of Globalization, by Elisabet Sahtouris, Sep 1997
- The
Big Picture, by Elisabet Sahtouris, Aug 1999
- Model Legal
Brief to Eliminate Corporate Rights, by Richard L. Grossman,
Thomas Alan Linzey, & Daniel E. Brannen, 23 Sep 2003
What does it say about our society and culture that since 1991, a "World-Trade-Center's worth of Iraqi children continue to die every month" as a direct result of the crimes against humanity perpetrated under the direction of the last three Presidents of the United States? What does this fact mean to each and every person in this nation-state who pays annual taxes, the largest portion of which goes to the ongoing expansion of the United States military? As tax-paying
members of the United States, can we reconcile our culpability for these Iraqi deaths with the deaths of people one year ago in New York, Washington D.C., and Pennsylvania?
--David Ratcliffe,
"Since 1991, a
World Trade Center's worth of Iraqi children continue to die every month," from Broadening
Our Perspectives of 11 September 2001, Sep 2002