Like many of us, I've had numerous conversations about what happened on 9/11 and am still not entirely sure what exactly occurred. After all, other than the Covid scam, it’s one of the biggest events in my lifetime.
Actually, I would argue that the Covid scam was the biggest event in recent history, although 9/11 is certainly a close contender. (When last was most of the world locked down? Not even during WW2.)
That being said, the official 9/11 story is very obviously nonense.
The planes on 9/11 were a mirage—CGI and holograms fooled millions, with no real wreckage to back the official story.
— Morgan Reynolds, former chief economist, US Labor Department
What actually happened?

To be clear, the towers did collapse and there was an explosion at the Pentagon.
There was indeed a tragic event and a lot of people died.
It’s the specifics that matter.
For example, what caused the towers to collapse and did an aircraft actually crash into the Pentagon?
No plane hit the Pentagon—eyewitnesses saw a missile, and the 16-foot hole can’t fit a Boeing 757’s 125-foot wingspan.
— Thierry Meyssan, French political activist
And more alarmingly, did two Boeing 767s fly into the Twin Towers?
Yes, that’s a real question.
And no, jet fuel doesn’t collapse buildings, especially if there were, you know, no jets. Have you ever slowed down the official footage or looked at stills?

WTC’s collapse wasn’t from planes—steel doesn’t vaporise from jet fuel, but directed energy weapons could dustify it instantly.
— Judy Wood, mechanical engineer
Mark Conlon’s work
Mark is one of the few people I’ve come across who has deeply investigated the narrative surrounding the Twin Towers and, more specifically, he argues that neither of the two Boeing 767s crashed into the towers.
I strongly recommend going through his website.
Understandably, nobody wants to ask questions for fear of being labelled a clown. I mean, we all saw the planes fly into the Twin Towers.
'We all saw the planes'
Or did we?
🎙️ Podcast episode
Mark shared a slideshow, but you can follow by just listening. Either way, give Mark your time—this conversation is well worth every minute! 🔥