Quote Originally Posted by Klondyke View Post
CIA Agent Confesses On Deathbed: ‘We Blew Up WTC7 On 9/11’

79-year-old retired CIA agent, Malcom Howard, has made a series of astonishing claims since being released from hospital in New Jersey on Friday and told he has weeks to live. Mr. Howard claims he was involved in the “controlled demolition” of World Trade Center 7, the third building that was destroyed on 9/11.

Mr. Howard, who worked for the CIA for 36 years as an operative, claims he was tapped by senior CIA agents to work on the project due to his engineering background, and early career in the demolition business.

Trained as a civil engineer, Mr. Howard became an explosives expert after being headhunted by the CIA in early 1980s. Mr. Howard says has extensive experience in planting explosives in items as small as cigarette lighters and as large as “80 floor buildings.”

CIA Agent Confesses On Deathbed: 'We Blew Up WTC 7 On 9/11'

Explaining how the building was bought down, Mr. Howard says, “It was a classic controlled demolition with explosives. We used super-fine military grade nanothermite composite materials as explosives. The hard part was getting thousands of pounds of explosives, fuses and ignition mechanisms into the building without causing too much concern. But almost every single office in the Building 7 was rented by the CIA, the Secret Service, or the military, which made it easier.”
Except they weren't, you fucking idiot. And had he ever set foot in the building, he would have known that.

God you'll believe *anything* won't you? Don't let silly little things like facts get in the way, eh?


Tenant - Square Feet Leased
Salomon Smith Barney - 1,202,900
Internal Revenue Service Regional Council - 90,430
U.S. Secret Service - 85,343
American Express Bank International - 106,117
Standard Chartered Bank - 111,398
Provident Financial Management - 9,000
ITT Hartford Insurance Group - 122,590
First State Management Group - 4,000
Federal Home Loan Bank - 47,490
NAIC Securities - 22,500
Securities & Exchange Commission - 106,117
New York City Office of Emergency Management - 45,815