Was it my imagination that most people believed in a 9/11 conspiracy? - eviltoast

It’s a bit shocking to me when I see people online putting 9/11 conspiracies in the same box as “MAGA” conspiracies (for lack of a better term, sorry).

For reference, I was 24 in 2001 living in central NJ. Even without social media or fake news websites or what cable news has become today, I have vivid memories of people having the firm belief that there was something up with the attack on 9/11. Was this just my social circle?

Jet fuel melting steel beams was one of the more fringe and unfounded (and quickly debunked) ideas but the rest of everything on that day was questionable. Tower seven falling, the missing plane debris at the pentagon and central PA, the military / president not responding to known threats, if a person with limited flight time could hit a tower, the fact that Bush attacked a country that had nothing to do with the event, and so much more are still, I thought, reasonable questions - especially when looked at together.

This is not about rehashing each theory. Or maybe it is? Have I missed that everything has been debunked?

I mean, I still believe 9/11 was an inside job or at least high level officials, including Bush, were aware it was going to happen and did nothing to stop it. I thought this was still a common opinion of most or many Americans over the age of forty.

  • palebluethought@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    No, this was just your social circle. I know literally zero people who ever bought into any of that crap

    • InverseParallax@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Seriously, it was pretty fringe to be openly truther back then.

      It wasn’t till Obama that we started getting all these batshit insane morons on parade.

      Birtherism really pushed it, but basically losing 2008 made the right desperate, they were willing to recruit from anybody, anywhere, right when social media started its upswing.

      I think we can say most of our modern conspiracitardacy was fairly quiet till the social media wave.

      • oxjox@lemmy.mlOP
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        3 months ago

        That is not what I recall. What I do recall was both republicans and democrats having serious concerns that the government knew something we didn’t and that we were attacking a country for the president’s personal vendetta. This is based on my personal interactions with friends, family, and coworkers, as well as national and local news and newspapers. Granted, I’m from central NJ so perhaps we on higher alert and more “purple” than the rest of the country.

        batshit insane morons

        Was it birtherism or just Sarah Palin?

        I think we can say most of our modern conspiracitardacy was fairly quiet till the social media wave.

        I fully agree that social media has made things worse in this, and almost every, regard. Though, I’m trying to understand the mindset of Americans in 2001, not today, not post 2008.

        The conspiracy around 9/11 was that the government knew more than they were telling us. That perhaps they were well aware of the event, possibly took part in it, and/or used it to manipulate public sentiment for invading Iraq for no other good reason or perhaps (ok, this I admit is crazy) setting up a new world order where we give up our rights for the sake of “national defense”. There would be no Wikileaks if there was no 9/11.

        I admit this are a bit fringe-sounding but we were all aware of this back then. Didn’t most people believe there was some plausibility in these theories?

        Don’t most people today believe the government knows more about 9/11 than they’ve told us?

    • Serinus@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Well, this one is real

      Bush attacked a country that had nothing to do with the event

    • Iheartcheese@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      I knew a dude who swore up and down the jets had missile launchers on the front they fired just before impact.

    • oxjox@lemmy.mlOP
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      3 months ago

      So your evidence that it was only spoken about in my social circle is that your social circle didn’t talk about it?

      • palebluethought@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        No, that’s my evidence that it wasn’t ubiquitous and typical.

        Maybe not just your social circle, but social-circle-specific.

    • massive_bereavement@fedia.io
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      3 months ago

      As I mention above, the central power in SA needs us to keep other regional powers at check and the Wahhabi in power.

      Even if government officials where involved on the attacks, that would be against the direct interests of the Saudi Crown.

      In all cases, 9/11 was stated by the perpetrators to be used as an attempt to take the US out of SA (sacred land for Muslims) and every one had allegiances with either the Muslim Brotherhood (and through it Iran), Al Qaeda or, like in Bin Laden’s case, both.

      This guy though fell from grace and started his campaign against the US during the Iraqi invasion, when the king and government decided that his plan of fighting with faith wasn’t as sensible as US tanks and planes.

      In fact he tried to convince the Saudi scholars to issue a fatwa against the US deployment, but they preferred to keep their necks.

      What I’m trying to say is, the SA government is a cruel, despotic and brutal regime but had little to no benefit from aiding in 9/11. Did they fuck up? I guess royally so, but I don’t see why would bite our hand.

      Then again, I know nothing…

  • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    I have vivid memories of people having the firm belief that there was something up with the attack on 9/11. Was this just my social circle?

    “Conspiracy” covers a lot of area.

    There’s people that think explosives were planted because “jet fuel can’t melt steel beams” and they’ve always been ridiculed.

    There are people that look at facts that the different intelligence agencies had all the information to put it together, but due to Dick Cheney requiring each agency only report to him, he was the only one that saw every piece of the puzzle and would have known enough to stop it. GW didn’t even know enough, because Cheney was the only one talking directly to GW.

    So some people have always thought Cheney (whether on his own or not) allowed 9/11 to happen to justify the wars he started under Regean and HW to continue indefinitely.

    There’s people who claim Israel funded and caused it, when there isn’t really any evidence.

    There’s people who claim Israeli spies were caught celebrating… But that was undocumented immigrants celebrating they got the day off work.

    https://www.thejc.com/news/world/who-were-the-dancing-israelis-of-9-11-c7f9b960

    That’s how conspiracy theories spread.

    They took a kernal.of truth and build on it till it becomes something completely out of control.

    Immediately after 9/11 everyone had questions and that’s 100% normal, I think that’s what you’re remembering.

    It’s not the same as insisiting an unfounded conspiracy theory was true based on spurious evidence.

  • Linkerbaan@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    9/11 in itself would not be as sketchy if they did not use it as pretext to force through a ton of privacy violation laws which just so happened to be ready and only needed an excuse. And invade the middle east with a convenient pretext. And the FBI having advance warnings about 9/11 which were ignored.

    I don’t care about whether it was jet fuel or pre planted explosives. 9/11 was used as an excuse to invade countries which we now know had nothing to do with it. And at the time the government knew they were lying about those countries complicity. So I still believe there is more to the story than what is made public.

  • Curious Canid@lemmy.ca
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    3 months ago

    There is some evidence to suggest that the Saudis were involved in setting it up. Beyond that, there were endless conspiracy theories, none of which were widely believed. I’ve talked about it with a lot of people over the years and have yet to meet a single conspiracy theorist. The vast majority have never believed in a 9/11 conspiracy.

    • pandapoo@sh.itjust.works
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      3 months ago

      Not some evidence, clear and convincing evidence.

      The problem is that the Saudi “government” is essentially comprised of competing factions of slave owning inbred cousins.

      So saying the Saudi government was involved isn’t as clear cut as it sounds for the purpose of adjudicating any “punishment”.

      Now, if KSA wasn’t the lynchpin of America’s Middle Eastern security apparatus, and viewed as integral to the entire American imperial project, then the US Security State’s response would have likely been much different.

    • oxjox@lemmy.mlOP
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      3 months ago

      I’ve talked about it with a lot of people over the years and have yet to meet a single conspiracy theorist.

      These theories were floated, with legitimacy, on local and national news, at the time. Not in the sense of, “it’s theorized that there were antifa plants at Jan 6” but “look here at this video and you could see how some implosion experts are saying this is the pattern for a scheduled building collapse”. They were interviewing people in manhattan who had concerns about a government coverup.

      At the time, the regular news (before it got ridiculous) was pulling together all these theories and presenting them together. It was overwhelming that there was much more to this event. And it seems to have all been forgotten.

    • massive_bereavement@fedia.io
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      3 months ago

      Whom in the Saudis wanted to take such a risk? I mean the Wahhabi needs us to keep the cash and weapon flow going if they want to keep in check their rivals.

      I’m not disagreeing, just want to understand their motivations.

      After all, Bin Laden was not Wahhabi at all, at odds with the Royal Family and had an upbringing at Muslim Brotherhood camps, which at the end of the day are managed by Iran, one of the main powers in the region and the biggest threat to SA.

      In that regard, intentionally or not, Bin Laden strategy would weaken SA, which fits with what the Brotherhood wanted and ultimately fits with Iran’s regional objectives. But I can’t see how someone in power would want that unless they had pretensions to the crown, or rather following the Iranian philosophy, a possible republic’s government.

  • Album@lemmy.ca
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    3 months ago

    Never known a real person to think it was an inside job, just internet whackos…so yea same as the Maga crowd - or any other whackjob conspiracy like flat earth, big foot, vaccines cause autism…

    Central NJ - it’s so close… so to me its no surprise ppl are speculating and then that transitions into conspiracy theories that are perceived as fact.

    • kobra@lemm.ee
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      3 months ago

      Idk, I am similar to OP I think? From my perspective and memory, almost all of my social circle has some amount of confusion about different parts of the whole attack. Like how the fuck building 7 fell like it did or various aspects of the pentagon plane, or how we ended up in all the countries we did after the attack. But no, they weren’t “truthers” spewing these theories on Facebook or accusing some single government authority as the ones behind it.

  • Canopyflyer@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    I was 31 when the attacks happened.

    While I do think that there was an awareness that an attack was possible, or even in the works. I sincerely doubt that anyone truly thought that 3 airplanes were going to be flown into buildings on that day and one crash in a PA field. The US had the attitude that we were isolated and well defended enough that such attacks were unthinkable. The complete one sidedness of Gulf War 1 really gave the US an out of proportion notion of being invulnerable. Even though the WTC was bombed 9 years prior, two years after the end of GW1.

    Conspiracy denotes malicious intelligent intent. The reality is closer to stupidly complacent. Sometimes the two are hardly indistinguishable.

    • InverseParallax@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Yeah, I didn’t necessarily believe that, but I figured if they did, that was understandable in the circumstances.

  • Ibaudia@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    From my understanding it’s pretty widely known that most intelligence agencies though something could happen but not the specifics, and chose not to act on that information or communicate with one another.

    The exact reasons aren’t known obviously. My gut tells me incompetence/apathy from government agencies. That’s not a very cinematic or compelling answer, though, and I think a lot of people look for more interesting narratives.

    Whenever a big tragedy like 9/11 happens, people tend to try and look for the Chekhov’s gun that shows a deeper meaning or dramatic orchestration. That’s just not real life though.

  • N0body@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 months ago

    There was a conspiracy involving 9/11, but it had nothing to do with secret thermite demolition or Israel or holograms or any of that nonsense. People were rightfully questioning how these hijackers were able to enter the US and stay under the radar while training for and executing the attack. We now know that Saudi officials helped them.

    It’s also worth noting that the Bush family has very, very deep ties to Saudi Arabia, which may have affected the investigation and how information concerning Saudi complicity was handled.

    • ɔiƚoxɘup@infosec.pub
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      3 months ago

      This exactly. It represented such a huge intelligence failure that it’s very hard to believe that it wasn’t allowed to happen to create an argument for war, that and it kinda rhymes with another (arguably preventable) event in history that was used to create a pretext for war… Pearl harbor. IMHO that was justified though, Nazis being pretty bad and all.

      Also tower 7 seemed very sketchy, and I never believed that there was a whole plane’s worth of rubble at the Pentagon.

      The Patriot act was also a product of that, which if you’ll recall is part of what Snowden uncovered.

  • Boozilla@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    A lot of people made fun of those theories and sarcastically pretended to believe in them. Maybe that’s what you remember. Our human memories are not very reliable.

  • MotoAsh@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    The only thing I remember people being remotely close to believing was that Bush was so incompetent that he allowed a terrorist attack to happen.

    It’s not really a theory that Bush was an incompetent fuckwit, but it’s highly debatable if they knew enough to stop it.

    • oxjox@lemmy.mlOP
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      3 months ago

      highly debatable if they knew enough to stop it.

      Well, the theory that was floated at the time was that they didn’t want to stop it. The very fringe suggested it was entirely planned by the US. They (Bush et al) knew this would provoke our military and provide an excuse to attack the Middle East. To finish was Bush senior didn’t.

      Again, I don’t really want to get down a rabbit hole of validating theories. I want to know if others recall this being a national conversation or if it was just the hundreds of people I knew and news outlets I was watching.

      • MotoAsh@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        I definitely remember some people screeing about Bush and Cheney wanting it, but IIRC, everyone was treating it like suspicion at most.

        The Epstein conspiracy theory was accepted FAR more readily, but then that’s basically guaranteed to be true to some degree, even if it was truly just the jailors being incompetent fuckwits that wanted to take justice in to their own hands.

      • Thebeardedsinglemalt@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        In my mind, it’s not that the intelligence community had indisputable evidence that said “these people are going to hijack these plans at this time and simultaneously crash them into these buildings”…but moreso “there is chatter about an upcoming attack involving hijacked planes” but they didn’t have enough to act on it.

        Now…with that part said, I 100% fully agree that this attack was used as a blank-check excuse to invade the Middle East carte clanche.

        • oxjox@lemmy.mlOP
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          3 months ago

          True. What ultimate came out of the event was the revelation that our intelligence communities were siloed from each other. This (embarrassing) point of failure may aid in explaining some of the questions in regard to preparedness.

  • Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    For the first few weeks, everybody wanted answers, and when people don’t get answers, we make them up.

    I remember hearing and seriously considering nearly all of the theories you mentioned, but as we started to get more answers, most people just forgot about, or stopped listening to the conspiracies.

    Unless, of course, you were DEDICATED to one of the conspiracies, and surrounded yourself with like minded people who dismissed any evidence that went against their beliefs. Much like MAGA when you mention all the evidence that Trump lost the last election, or committed over 34 felonies.

    • oxjox@lemmy.mlOP
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      3 months ago

      most people just forgot about, or stopped listening to the conspiracies.

      This is what I think happened. People just stopped caring and defaulted back to “trusting the government” or were distracted by other things like the war in Afghanistan and the 2008 financial crisis.

      In my mind, these theories were still prevalent for at least a few years after the attacks. And now, 20 years later, people forgot so much that they’ve accepted that only weirdo internet trolls believe in these fringe theories.

      • Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        In hindsight, there were signs that could have prevented or lessened the damage of 9-11, had we taken them seriously, but you never know which leads need to be seriously investigated, and which are baseless.

        Bush didn’t do 9-11. In an alternate timeline, it could have been prevented, but the systemic failures that allowed it to happen were more than we can put on any person or dept.

  • 🐋 Color 🍁 ♀@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    There are many people who like to fill in the gaps of things they don’t understand with conspiracy theories. It takes some degree of understanding of physics to understand why the buildings collapsed in the manner that they did, why hollow aluminium airliners accelerating to extreme speeds imposed so much damage to the buildings, and also why there is typically less aircraft wreckage to be found when especially high speed crashes are involved.

    In your case, it’s probably just your social circle as none of my friends believe in 9/11 conspiracy theories.