. . . on the road and we’re in Chatham for the night. We’ve walked about 27 miles on Routes 6, 6A, and 28. Cold and windy out, but at least no snow as we heard there was in Boston. Response largely positive from people on sidewalks and elsewhere. (More on this another day.)
From motorists big smiles, various kinds of friendly beeps on car and truck horns, V signs, waves, thumbs up. All they see are the square signs we tied to our chests and backpacks reading “9/11 Truth” in orange-bordered letters and numbers on white.
On the eve of the walk most of the small crowd that attended our Provincetown Library talk – perhaps 15 people in all – was with us before we opened our mouths. Q&A lasted an hour of good discussion. A retired couple unfamiliar with the topic beforehand asked a lot of questions, signed the 9/11 Truth Action Project petition to Congress after the talk, and on Friday surprised us by showing up in their car a few miles out to wish us well.
The petition reads in part: “I hearby petition for, and demand, an independent, comprehensive investigation, satisfying all standards specified by the 9/11 Truth Action Project, including subpoena power, testimony under oath, and study of all available evidence, leading to transparency and accountability for the crimes of September 11, 2001, and justice for its victims.”
Several others at the event signed the petition as well. So far on the road we have gathered only five signatures for it, mostly because the hundreds of people in cars and trucks are on their way somewhere and can’t stop.
If you didn’t know about the petition, please visit the 9/11 Truth Action Project website at https://www.911tap.org/ and spend some time with it. You can sign the petition online.
Our apologies for not posting from the road until now. We’ll try to do so every day.
— Mark
These posts are great for a predominantly armchair activist like the present writer. Please keep them coming, when you can. You’re covering some serious distance and any gaps will not be held against you, at all. I honk my horn for your patriotism!