ICH | September 11, 2001,
shook the United States to the core, a country that had been
nearly untouchable since its democratic inception. However,
immediately following this horrific tragedy, another equally
as impactful 'terrorist attack' occurred when weaponized
anthrax was sent to multiple Congressman and journalists
through the U.S. Postal Service.
The attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon were
both one-time events that happened in two prominent cities.
Unlike 9/11, the Anthrax Attacks localized terrorism and
spread fear to every corner of American life, where the
simple act of getting your mail could prove to be fatal.
Five people died as a result of breathing in the deadly
anthrax spores, including postal workers and one NY Post
reporter. Countless others were infected.
The Bush administration initially tried to link this 'second
wave of terrorism' to al-Qaeda with zero proof. Once that
talking point out-lived its usefulness, the official
narrative began leaning towards Saddam Hussein and his
mythological biological weapons program.
Establishment propagandists like John Mccaine and ABC news
reporters intentionally spread disinformation to plant the
seed in the public mind that the anthrax came from Iraq,
which eventually lead to Colin Powell's infamous 2003 WMD
speech at the UN. All the while, the U.S. government was
fully aware that the anthrax did not come from an external
source, because the strain showed tell-tale signs of being a
specific anthrax strain that was weaponized and manufactured
by the U.S. military.
Regardless, the idea of the Anthrax Attacks being executed
by an external terrorist organization remained conventional
wisdom the public was conditioned into believing in the
aftermath of 9/11. Eventually, two men were accused of being
the perpetrators behind the attacks, yet no charges were
ever brought to either of them. The first accused
individual, Steven Hatfill, ended up being rewarded a
multimillion dollar settlement from the government for being
wrongly accused before any evidence was presented against
him. The subsequent accused individual, Bruce Ivins,
allegedly committed suicide while the FBI was trying to
break him into confessing.
Ultimately, the FBI asked the National Academy of Sciences
(NAS) to verify its evidence pointing to Ivins as the main
suspect. Instead, the NAS concluded that the DNA in the
anthrax sent in the mail was in fact not a match to the
anthrax Ivins worked with. Before the National Academy of
Sciences finished their independent investigation, the FBI
rushed its preestablished conclusions about Ivins's guilt to
the press, and the case was closed. To this day, the FBI has
never commented on the many glaring contradictions in the
official government narrative about the Anthrax Attacks.
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