A U.S. senator shouldn't entertain conspiracy theories
By the New York Daily News Editorial Board
The senior senator from Wisconsin, Republican Ron Johnson, is posing fresh questions about the deadliest attack on the United States in history, feeding into paranoid and dangerous conspiracy theories. Johnson asks as though theyre open questions: What actually happened on 9/11? What do we know? What is being covered up?
In an interview were loath to amplify, Johnson asserts that an investigation of World Trade Center Building 7 was corrupt and suggested its collapse was the result of a controlled demolition. He expresses the desire to hold Senate hearings on the topic.
We get that its high time in our history for conspiracy theorists to peddle nonsense, like Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy does, but as people who had friends and colleagues perish on that day, and following on editorials in this space that won a Pulitzer Prize for championing the very real health crisis faced by first responders who worked The Pile in the days and weeks after the attacks, we take this particular set of lies a bit personally.
The attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, are probably the most extensively studied events in the history of this nation. A joint congressional inquiry held 22 hearings, reviewing a half-million pages of documents, interviewing 300 individuals; and producing an 800-page report.
https://www.heraldnet.com/opinion/comment-a-u-s-senator-shouldnt-entertain-conspiracy-theories/

Ocelot II
(124,499 posts)for America's Dumbest Senator. Right now it seems like Johnson and Tuberville are tied for first place, with Blackburn a close second.
displacedvermoter
(3,701 posts)But I will keep keeping him out there, to make sure he eventually gets his due.
SWBTATTReg
(25,214 posts)character I respect (among many in his fellow crime mates).