The U.S. government has just released a list of English-language pdf files found in Osama bin Laden's compound after he was killed. From Rosie Gray's report in BuzzFeed:
Commies from Mars
"Of the 38 full length English language books he had in his possession, about half of them were conspiracy theory books" about the Illuminati, Freemasons, and other conspiracy topics[, said an intelligence official.] Texts listed on the "bookshelf" include Bloodlines of the Illuminati by the American conspiracy theorist Fritz Springmeier; The New Pearl Harbor: Disturbing Questions About the Bush Administration and 9/11, by the 9/11 conspiracy theorist David Ray Griffin; materials from Congressional hearings about Project MKUltra, the so-called "mind control" program conducted by the CIA in the 1950s and 1960s; and The Secrets of the Federal Reserve, a book by the Holocaust denier and anti-Semite Eustace Mullins.
Wait. Back up. Osama bin Laden was reading 9/11 truth literature? Too bad these weren't physical books; I would have loved to have read his notes in the margins.
Bin Laden also had a copy of The 9/11 Commission Report (it would have been interesting to read his annotations on that one too) and an article titled "Website Claims Steve Jackson Game Foretold 9/11." Other writers in his digital bookshelf, some conspiracy-focused and some not, include Bob Woodward, Noam Chomsky, Antony Sutton, CIA Director Michael Hayden, and the authors of the HP Printer Owner's Manual. Plus "scans of several pages from" the 2008 Guinness Book of World Records Children's Edition, which the government includes on a list of "documents probably used by other compound residents." (Don't be so sure, fellas.)
The government's full list of bin Laden's reading materials is here. Springmeier was a devotee of John Todd, whose vast conspiracy narrative stretched from Ayn Rand to Elton John; you can read more about him here. An obligatory Onion video is here:
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"Plus "scans of several pages from" the 2008 Guinness Book of World Records Children's Edition..."
I'll now forevermore picture bin Laden on the john giggling at a picture of two obese brothers riding on tiny motor scooters while blackhawks circle above his compound.
Other writers in his digital bookshelf, some conspiracy-focused and some not, include Bob Woodward, Noam Chomsky, Antony Sutton, CIA Director Michael Hayden, and the authors of the HP Printer Owner's Manual.
No Richman?! So disappointed in Bin Laden right now.
According to Sy Hersh, there was hardly any 'evidence' collected at all from the Bin Laden compound/prison, what little there was seemed to reveal that he wasn't actually plotting the takeover of the world anymore, and this focus on alleged 'conspiracy books' is in fact just a conspiracy to provide cover for their conspiracy
I cleaned out an old (2008) hard drive a while back, and i found a lot of "weird shit*" there as well
mainly random ebooks/papers on arcane topics that i was sure would be amusing future reference material. Some of them i have no idea why i bothered saving them. I suspect some of them can actually be traced back to things Jesse Walker pointed out. For instance, what am i doing with a copy of, "The Strange Case of (Walt) Whitman's Brain"? Something I havent' read fully, but seems to have something to do with someone who dropped the poet's brain on the floor and broke it, and so threw it in the trash.
Maybe he found it entertaining. Or maybe he learned that some of the crazy shit people say about the CIA in the Muslim world also might be total bullshit.
Personally if I was party of a secret conspiracy I would find conspiracy theories fascinating.
I was more into Car Wars than Illuminati. I liked mounting a Vulcan MG on my compact car's roof.
-1 Servants of Cthulhu
"[...]vast conspiracy narrative stretched from Ayn Rand to Elton John[...]"
I'd rather not read about that. It's too amusing just to consider it instead of having it blown to smithereens by the stupidity of the author.
Hmmm....I was under the impression that minimal or no digital storage devices were recovered?
Hillary initially deleted them - then the IRS "found" them.
Now you know.
She's a naughty little girl hag.
A Brief Guide to Understanding Islam by I. A. Ibrahim
Ah-HA!
Somehow I knew he was an idiot loon.
I bet he was a big Michael Moore fan as well.
He was. Some of his speeches excerpted Michael Moore.
Without a doubt.
Antony Sutton's books are eye opening. I highly recommend that all libertarians read them. Reason should run an article on his work.
"Plus "scans of several pages from" the 2008 Guinness Book of World Records Children's Edition..."
I'll now forevermore picture bin Laden on the john giggling at a picture of two obese brothers riding on tiny motor scooters while blackhawks circle above his compound.
"From Rosie Gray's report in BuzzFeed:"
11 books you wouldn't believe Osama bin Laden read?
15 Signs Your Compound is in Abbottabad
Shocking!
You won't BELIEVE number 8!
He also had a guide to suicide prevention and delta force 2 gaming manual.
DF2 was a fun game.
"Wait. Back up. Osama bin Laden was reading 9/11 truth literature? "
No wait, you back up... He wanted to audit the Fed? You know who else wants to audit the Fed?
Henry Gonzalez?
Barney Frank?
Ron Paul?
No Richman?! So disappointed in Bin Laden right now.
Osama bin Laden is no better than Adam Lanza.
I thought he was a powerless old cripple living a life of squalor because the Empire needed a scapegoat?
And he was going to go public, so the Elders of Zion contacted the White House through their Freemason agents and BOOM!
/Richman
No, no no... It was the Clintonian Faction of the Columbian Illiminati
Well, he was friends with Adam Lanza on facebook, and there's really no difference between him and Richman.
Wait a minute. Buzzfeed has reporters?
Reporters hate this one trick!
According to Sy Hersh, there was hardly any 'evidence' collected at all from the Bin Laden compound/prison, what little there was seemed to reveal that he wasn't actually plotting the takeover of the world anymore, and this focus on alleged 'conspiracy books' is in fact just a conspiracy to provide cover for their conspiracy
I cleaned out an old (2008) hard drive a while back, and i found a lot of "weird shit*" there as well
mainly random ebooks/papers on arcane topics that i was sure would be amusing future reference material. Some of them i have no idea why i bothered saving them. I suspect some of them can actually be traced back to things Jesse Walker pointed out. For instance, what am i doing with a copy of, "The Strange Case of (Walt) Whitman's Brain"? Something I havent' read fully, but seems to have something to do with someone who dropped the poet's brain on the floor and broke it, and so threw it in the trash.
(*aside from the obligatory tentacle porn)
Well, yeah.
"Full text restricted to subscribers." Damn! Please email me a copy (@gmail.com).
I would have loved to have read his notes in the margins.
You read Arabic, Jesse?
Maybe he found it entertaining. Or maybe he learned that some of the crazy shit people say about the CIA in the Muslim world also might be total bullshit.
Personally if I was party of a secret conspiracy I would find conspiracy theories fascinating.