Tarpley: "Synthetic Terror 9/11: Made in USA"
This is an excellent, fascinating and important book on 9/11. It is a must-read.
The book details the secret connections of terror groups to state-intelligence agencies, the history of "synthetic" state-sponsored terror, the economics and geopolitics of 9/11, how 9/11 was carried out, the secret government coup that occurred on 9/11 and the political and psychological aftermath of 9/11.
Tarpley delves into the Bush psyche and into the psychology and philosophy of the neocons and other strange creatures who inhabit the world of the US military-industrial-intelligence complex.
It is easily the best overall synthesis of the events of 9/11 that I have read so far. It is also very smooth reading; it does not get bogged down on sidetrack issues like Ruppert's "Crossing the Rubicon" or Hopsickers' "Welcome to Terrorland".
The part I like best is that Tarpley is not afraid to put forward his ideas and to speculate on what happened with 9/11. There is nothing wishy-washy in what he has to say. He may be wrong on some of the points, but at least he is putting out a set of very interesting key ideas that can be pursued further.
Thus, I give my highest possible recommendation to this book.
Note-- I read the PDF, since the book is only being printed now. The PDF therefore was a little slow-going as I was limited by being on the computer. You can order the book and PDF here.
The book details the secret connections of terror groups to state-intelligence agencies, the history of "synthetic" state-sponsored terror, the economics and geopolitics of 9/11, how 9/11 was carried out, the secret government coup that occurred on 9/11 and the political and psychological aftermath of 9/11.
Tarpley delves into the Bush psyche and into the psychology and philosophy of the neocons and other strange creatures who inhabit the world of the US military-industrial-intelligence complex.
It is easily the best overall synthesis of the events of 9/11 that I have read so far. It is also very smooth reading; it does not get bogged down on sidetrack issues like Ruppert's "Crossing the Rubicon" or Hopsickers' "Welcome to Terrorland".
The part I like best is that Tarpley is not afraid to put forward his ideas and to speculate on what happened with 9/11. There is nothing wishy-washy in what he has to say. He may be wrong on some of the points, but at least he is putting out a set of very interesting key ideas that can be pursued further.
Thus, I give my highest possible recommendation to this book.
Note-- I read the PDF, since the book is only being printed now. The PDF therefore was a little slow-going as I was limited by being on the computer. You can order the book and PDF here.
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