A group of longtime 9/11 researchers will participate Saturday in a 12-hour examination of “What Really Happened” at the Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001. The live-streamed online event begins 1 p.m. EDT. The cost to attend will depend on how much attendees choose to donate. For more information, click HERE.
Six researchers will present evidence and their conclusions concerning the contention by the Executive Branch of the U.S. government that a Boeing 757 jetliner, American Airlines Flight 77, piloted by an al Qaeda terrorist hijacker crashed into a side of the Defense Department headquarters.
Forum sponsors are Richard C. Gage, formerly of Architects & Engineers for 9/11 Truth, and the Lawyers’ Committee for 9/11 Inquiry, where he is a technical advisor.
“The Pentagon attack and resulting disinformation from our government and media,” Gage said in a statement, “have fostered a plethora of speculation and theories with consequent confusion and frustration in the 9/11 truth movement for the last 20 years.”
What really happened? Researchers will present evidence and their conclusions. Four hypotheses and their presenters (names in italics) include:
* A. PRE-PLACED EXPLOSIVES CAUSED SEVERAL EXPLOSIONS THAT DESTROYED PART OF A PENTAGON WALL — and not an airplane crashing into it. Barbara Honegger, an investigative researcher and one-time staffer in the Reagan White House.
* B. A MISSILE STRUCK THE PENTAGON. Thierry Meyssan, author of Pentagate and The Big Lie, and founder of Voltaire Network International, described as “a web of nonaligned press groups dedicated to the analysis of international relations.”
* C. NO PLANE HIT THE PENTAGON ON 9/11. Craig McKee, a Montreal-based journalist, creator of the Truth and Shadows website, and a AE911Truth staffer, and Adam Ruff, a researcher who has focused on the Pentagon 9/11 destruction for 10 years.
* D. A PLANE WITH THE DIMENSIONS OF A BOEING 757 IMPACTED THE PENTAGON. David Chandler, a physics teacher best known for research on the free fall of Building 7 at the World Trade Center that led the National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST) to change part of its report on the skyscraper’s collapse, and Wayne Coste, a licensed professional engineer.