Quiz: Whose Conduct, al Qaeda or U.S. Politicians, Resulted
In the Greatest Continuing Harm and Deaths to Americans?

Al Qaeda Terrorists have U.S. politicians to thank for the huge exponential increase in harm suffered by the United States and its people by the  politicians' response to the 9/11 attacks. (The success of the attacks that were made possible by the same U.S. leaders!)

Osama bin Laden and his al Qaeda group have many reasons to thank the culture and conduct of U.S. politicians, and the politicians' loyal and comatose shills. The pre-9/11 misconduct  by these same politicians made it possible for the easy success of and al Qaeda group, but by the reaction of these politicians to 9/11 directly enabled far greater harm to be inflicted upon the American people.

The reaction of U.S. politicians to the forewarned and easily preventable 9/11 hijackings expanded the harm far beyond what the al Qaeda group could have possibly comprehended in their wildest dreams. U.S. politicians focused very little on Osama bin Laden and the al Qaeda group. Instead, U.S. politicians, led by the serial lying President George Bush (Jr.) invaded Afghanistan and Iraq, killing tens of thousands of people that had no knowledge of the planned terrorist attacks and no involvement.  See comparison of blame for 9/11.

American Politicians' Post-9/11 Reaction Insured
Even Greater Calamities Upon American Public

If Osama bin Laden or the al Qaeda criminal group had anyone to thank for enabling not only the 9/11 and prior successes, it had to be the reaction to 9/11 by U.S. politicians and their many supporters and shills. The evidence has been available for years at this site and in the related books, and incredibly, of no concern to most Americans.

Osama Bin Laden and al Qaeda accomplished the following—with the primary help of corrupt U.S. politicians and bureaucrats:

Fortunately for the enablers in the United States, the narrow focus, the limited concentration, the obsession with trivia, by most Americans, insures that the 9/11 enablers will continue as before, just as they had continued before 9/11.


Making the Above Conduct Worse, Their Misconduct Was
Essential for al Qaeda's 9/11 Successes (and the Others)

The 9/11 hijackings could not have succeeded if any of the people involved in the two separate areas of corrupt conduct had not succeeded in their schemes. These two areas, already addressed, were:


Series of Scandals and Catastrophic Consequences
Far Too Big for the American Public to Know

The series of scandals with their catastrophic consequences are too big for the American public to know. Nothing of this nature had every been exposed, and public reaction to such a major series of events, involving so many leaders in and out of government, could not be anticipated. Were the details known to the American public, it could be expected that:

  • Confidence in government leaders, or even the form of government, would be gravely undermined.
     

  • Many members of Congress could be prosecuted (if it were not for complicity by U.S. Department of Justice employees), or voted out of office.
     

  • Confidence in the nation's highest law enforcement agency, the U.S. Department of Justice, would be undermined, and considered similar to a criminal organization used for political purposes.
     

  • Media people and media organizations would be implicated in cover-ups that enabled both 9/11 and the subsequent tragedies to occur.
     

  • Other people whose complicity requires examination of considerable evidence.


List of Documentary Books
On Endemic Corruption in the United States

   

   

   

     

   

   

 

All of the books are available at amazon.com, in print and on the Kindle, and at many other Internet sites. They bring together the various pieces of the puzzle to better understand the overall picture, and why the same conditions continue year after year. Information on the books by former government agent Rodney Stich

Sampling of early books reviews

Sampling of complimentary letters/faxes to author/activist Rodney Stich.