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    How did the 9/11...
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How many 9/11 hijackers were there?

                                 
 
                                                    And  Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free.
 
                                                                            John 8:32, CIA motto
 
     "They will, for example, sit in twos, and they will assign who will sit to the right of the other guy and who will sit to the
 
other side.  Two will sit in the front, two will sit in the back, and two will sit, for example, in the middle."
 
                                                                     Iraqi defector, Sabah Khodada, October 14, 2001
 
      "At 9:12, Renee May called her mother, Nancy May in Las Vegas.  She said her flight was being hijacked by six individuals
 
who had moved them to the rear of the plane."

                                                                           The 9/11 Commission Report   
                                                                  
                                                      When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable,
 
                                                      must be the truth.
 
                                                                  Sherlock Holmes, by Arthur Conan Doyle
 
 
 
     The 9/11 Commission believed that Renee May said  she saw six hijackers aboard Flight 77, or they wouldn't have
 
published it.  The fact that what she said is ignored for the rest of the report, and that they explicitly say there were five
 
hijackers on Flight 77, indicates they did not believe what she said, that they believe she made a, "mistake." 
 
     Yet, how could she have made such a mistake? You can easily understand how someone might see fewer hijackers than there
 
were, if from their location on the plane, for example, in the rear, a passenger or crew member couldn't see all of the hijackers.
 
     But how does Renee May see a hijacker who isn't there?  Where everyone else saw empty space, she saw an, "extra,"
 
hijacker?  She somehow confused one of the passengers with a hijacker?  It was clear who the hijackers were.  They were
 
were the ones killing and terrorizing the passengers, and  Renee May, a veteran flight attendant, could tell the differemce.
 
She had lost her ability to count to six? 
 
       The Commission's refusal to offer a reason for her, "mistake,"   obscures the fact that there is no reason for her to have made a
 
mistake about the number of hijackers she saw. 
 
     Perhaps, it is the Commission, who made a mistake. 
  
     Especially, since witnesses aboard other hijacked planes also saw at least six hijackers on their planes.  All it takes to see
 
this, is the ability to count to six.  For example, on Flight 11,  Flight attendant Ann Sweeney reported hijackers in seats 9G,
 
9D and 10B.  Another flight attendant, Betty Ong said there were hijackers in seats 2A, 2B, 9A, and 9B and a wounded
 
passenger in 10B.  These are the two flight attendants about whom the 9/11 Report stated, "tell us most of what we know
 
about how the hijacking happened."  Their count of the hijackers, deserves to be taken seriously, and on the seventh
 
anniversary of 9/11,  we will.  See (between 8:27-8:30 a.m.)  here.
 
     Here is an easy math question for you.  There are hijackers in seats 2A, 2B, 9A, 9B, 9D, 9G, and a wounded passenger
 
in 10B.  How many hijackers are there? 
 
                                                    You see but you do not observe.
 
                                                         Sherlock Holmes, by Arthur Conan Doyle
 
                                           
                                       in arithmetic, an error which in its individuality, may be inappreciable, produces at
 
                             length, by dint of multiplication at all points of the process, a result enormously at variance
 
                             with the truth.
 
                                                                     The Mystery of Marie Roget, by Edgar Allen Poe
 
 
      The correct answer  is six.  Six hijackers.
 
     Or seven, if Ann Sweeney was right and 10B was a  seat initially occupied by a hijacker who went into the cockpit,
 
and was later  taken by the wounded passenger. The probability of her being correct on this point is enhanced by the fact that
 
the hijacker known as Satam Al Suqami was identified by American Airlines as being in seat 10B.  See (Before 8:26 a.m.) here.
 
       Putting  that aside for the moment, it is clear that, between them, flight attendants Ong and Sweeney count at least
 
six hijackers on their plane, as did Renee May, on flight 77.
 
     Mathematics is a universal constant, and due its absolute and immutable nature, we all have the same math.
 
      For every one in the world, two plus two always equals four, which brings us to the number of  hijackers on Flight 93, a flight that
 
the 9/11 Commission report tells us had only four hijackers.  You do the math.
 
     The most comprehensive count of the hijackers on Flight 93 is provided by Todd Beamer as reported in the, "Pittsburgh Post-
 
Gazette,".on October, 28, 2001.  "He could see three hijackers armed with knives.  One of them insisted he had a bomb.
 
Twenty-seven of  the passengers had been herded to the rear of the plane, where the one with the bomb was guarding
 
them, he said there were two of them in the cockpit.  A fourth was in first class."
 
     Now count them again according to where they are on the plane and what they are doing.  There are the three hijackers
 
with knives, one of whom claims to have a bomb, (3); the two in the cockpit, (2); the one in first class, (1); 3 + 2 + 1 = 6.
 
    There have been two hijackers in the cockpit since approximately 9:30.  He does not say that two of the three hijackers
 
went into the cockpit, leaving only one outside of it, something he would have reported, had it occurred.  The
 
two in the cockpit are two seperate hijackers from the three holding the passengers at the rear of the plane, one of whom
 
claims to have a bomb.  The one with the bomb is holding the passengers in the rear of the plane, but Beamer can  still see the
 
two hijackers who helped herd them  there long after we know there are two hijackers in the cockpit.  They are still there to
 
provide, "back up," to the one with the, "bomb," which was, no doubt,  a fake,  Without those two hijackers, we are left with
 
the picture of one hijacker, albeit with a fake bomb,  holding back all of the passengers by himself, something none of the
 
passengers report.and something that makes no sense, especially since with two hijackers in the cockpit, there can only be
 
two hijackers outside of it, and Beamer reports that one of them is sitting in first class, by himself.
 
     Beamer makes his call at 9:45.  Two hijackers have been in the cockpit for about fifteen minutes, so if there are four hijackers,
 
and since two plus two always equals four, there can only be two hijackers anywhere else on the plane.  This is not what Beamer
 
or any of the passengers report.  None of them say they have just been hijacked by four hijackers, two of whom forced their
 
way into the cockpit, and the remaining two have forced them to the rear of the plane, something they could  and would have said
 
if it were true.   Instead, they all report three or four hijackers outside of the cockpit, depending on whether or not they saw the 
 
hijacker  Beamer saw in first class, and after we know there are two hijackers in the cockpit. 
 
     For example, flight attendant, Sandra Bradshaw, told her husband, Phil, "'Have you heard what's going on?  My flight has
 
been hijacked by three guys with knives,'  Who was flying the plane? Phil asked his wife.  'I don't know who's flying the plane
 
or where we are,' she said."  Her call takes place at 9:50 and lasts until the passengers storm the cockpit, at 9:57.  At no point,
 
does she say that one or two of the three hijackers went into the cockpit, something she would have reported to her husband, had it
 
happened.  If there are four hijackers and she is seeing three of the four, one of them would have had to go into the cockpit,
 
since from the cockpit voice recorder we know there have been two hijackers in the cockpit for over twenty minutes,  leaving only
 
two hijackers outside of the cockpit for her to see, and  yet  she is seeing the same three hijackers Todd Beamer reported five minutes
 
earlier, holding the passengers at the rear of the plane. These are the only three hijackers she sees.  She doesn't see the rest of them,     
 
the two in the cockpit and the one Beamer  saw in first class.  She's been at the rear of the plane the entire time.  When you  add up
 
the three hijackers she sees, plus the two in the cockpit, and the one  Beamer sees in first class, they add up to six hijackers.
 
     There are other witnesses on board Flight 93 who know how many hijackers there are, the hijackers, themselves.
 
Their, "excited utterances,"  as heard on the cockpit voice recorder (CVR) are quite revealing as to how many hijackers there
 
are, where they are on the plane, and what they are doing.  To be continued.
 
    
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
      
 
 
 
                                                                                   
 
 
 
 
 
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