Was 9/11 A Movie?

Was 9/11 A Movie?
by Dean Hartwell / / / EPUB


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"Was 9/11 a Movie?" reveals the latest findings of the author of "Planes without Passengers"!

Dean T. Hartwell brings together facts about the events of that day and concludes that what really happened resembled the making of a movie than a real event. Seen through this "lens," we may be able to identify the real villains.

The reader will review the official theories of each of the four alleged flights in the chapter entitled "Flights 11, 75, 93 and 175" with the aid of timelines. Factual assertions regarding issues raised follow each of the official theories in order to distinguish the author's own point of view and to provide framework for later discussion.

The flights are listed in numerical order for easy reference. Each flight is a story in its own right and can be analyzed both individually and as part of an overall story.

The middle of this book focuses upon Hartwell's search for the flights, passengers and phone calls. New assertions of fact, based upon issues that the official theory does not sufficiently cover, receive analysis. There is a special chapter about Barbara Olson and Todd Beamer, two passengers who have received heavy media attention, here. Alleged phone calls on each flight receive their own timelines.

A new timeline that depicts both official and alternative theory assertions comes up next.

The book then goes to a chapter called "Ask the Right Questions." By this point, the reader will have heard competing theories and competing assertions of fact. The question and answer format provide the most definitive answer to every question for which Hartwell has an answer.

All the facts in the world are of no help unless they relate to one another. The title chapter "9/11 as a Movie" fits in here to create a new story about the day's events to explain the facts in a manner that all readers can appreciate and understand.

By the end of the book, the reader will see a new way to "frame" the events of that day. Consideration of the idea that those events were staged and scripted like a movie will provide "glasses" for the reader to see clearly what looked blurry before.

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