A
former Congressman says that the U.S. government created Al-Qaeda
and was involved in bombing its own citizens on 9/11, telling
a national radio show that elements of the Bush administration
assisted the attacks on the WTC and the Pentagon.
Alex
begins this report by taking calls and discussing the presidential
candidacy of Congressman Ron Paul. Has Paul's recent announcement
derailed the Ron Paul Revolution or are we too naive to abandon
the cause at such an early stage? Alex explains that taking
stock of the progress made and safeguarding what we have achieved
was the shrewdest move.
Former White
House adviser Karl Rove received an ignominious superlative
Thursday night after a speech this week in which he mused that
the 9/11 terrorist attacks were delivered by history.
In
1976, when George H.W. Bush was CIA director, the U.S. government
tolerated right-wing terrorist cells inside the United States
and mostly looked the other way when these killers topped even
Palestinian terrorists in spilling blood, including a lethal
car bombing in Washington, D.C., according to newly obtained
internal government documents.
A
U.S. missile strike that appeared Thursday to have shattered
a crippled spy satellite and vaporized its hazardous hydrazine
fuel sent up cheers among Pentagon planners, who for three weeks
had worked feverishly to turn an anti-missile system into one
that could track and kill an object orbiting the Earth.
As
Senators Clinton and Obama prepared to debate in their state,
Texans were marching in protest over the NAFTA superhighway
known as the Trans-Texas Corridor, or I-69, the primary purpose
of which is to speed the delivery of goods coming in from Mexico
to proposed inland ports.
U.S. President
George W. Bush said on Thursday he would not compromise with
the Democratic-led Congress on his demand that phone companies
that took part in his warrantless domestic spying program be
shielded from lawsuits.