David Icke understood the seriousness of the tragedy as he wrote Alice in Wonderland and the World Trade Center Disaster. The date, September 11, 2001, takes us to a whole new world of obscurity where we are forced to believe the official storyline without considering the dark secrets of the cosmos.
Media poodles…woof, woof, lick, lick.
We’re encouraged to go down the metaphorical rabbit hole with Alice after we’ve drunk the magical solution from the bottle and we’ve eaten the yellow cake that goes with it. We fall into a fantasy world populated with peculiar “reptilian” creatures. Our senses have become detached as we slip into a world of chaos and the tale that governs our logic.
The author presents a real agenda behind the 9/11 crisis and the alleged crime families that were involved. He takes a great deal of time to explain the background, a shady cast of characters, the motives, and what he refers to as a “Problem-Reaction-Solution” technique. First you have a crisis, a solution, and then a reaction. This is critical thinking 101, something that is not done enough of in this world.
You have puppet parliaments, intellectual prostitutes, a pet goat story, and a forever John Wayne mentality that solves the murder mystery and it’s bye bye freedom time, as storytime rolls on and on and on.
Mirror mirror on the wall, what’s the fairest movie of them all?
In a house of cards we see one of the most sophisticated systems in the entire world; a most unique installation capable of reading a license plate on your car bumper on any given day. Yet, a scenario reveals itself as a complete “no show” and it’s back to a square on the Grand Chessboard, once again.
Icke takes us to the hijackers , the script, the evidence or lack of, and Casino Prophets that forecast the stock market of the future.
The contestant makes one final wager. Category is… “put and call” options. Fascinating. I’m seeing magic numbers appear on the screen. Quick, I need more of that solution from the bottle.
Then there’s Operation Northwoods, smoke and mirrors, and a hide and seek game with more half-truths. Just keep taking the tablets Mr. President, because you’re definitely going to be needing them.
Who was that masked bandit? Have you ever seen a video with him in it? Was it authentic? Just ask Z. Brzezinski. He may know a thing or two about Soviet Empire or the dark occupation of Afghanistan land. While you’re at it, ask Mr. B who funded the nice little Radical Camps near the caves and their sunny vacations to Alabama.
You might want to ask Mr. Kerry about that nice little National Bank of Georgia, the funding to groupies and the Ollie gang. Sorry David, I must have jammed the keyboard mate. It got stuck on BCCI.
It’s nothing but a bad movie with b movie actors and the Golden Age of Hollywood is all but over. The “Great Train Robbery” is pulled by masked bandits while the engineer ordered to fill the train up before ordering the pushing of the remote control.
Icke has a gift of cutting through the chase and getting to the cold hard facts. It takes guts to do this, especially if you know that criticism is sure to follow. I certainly admire him for his courage.
His book is at the top of the 9/11 category, and he rightly takes quotes from another book par excellence, Crossing The Rubicon: The Decline of the American Empire, by Michael Ruppert. With both of these books, one will have a working knowledge of historical events leading up to that day and thereafter. There are several out there that are informative, including the one by David Ray Griffin, The New Pearl Harbor: Disturbing Questions About the Bush Administration and 9/11.
Alice in Wonderland and the World Trade Center Disaster is a most interesting read and David Icke is quite the philosopher. One doesn’t have to agree with everything in the book and one shouldn’t. It’s just theory and that’s all it is. Take it or leave it.
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