No, I don't want to spend a quarter of the night, or fifteen years of my life, watching docs which don't present anything new.
If this thing had a number of interesting points you agreed with, you'd post them... but in reality it's probably just a meandering piece of rubbish (the first twenty minutes was).
It's a bit like a Will Self vs Richard Littlejohn radio transcript I once read. The were both on Radio 5 (I think), as they both had books out... Will Self commented on Richard Littlejohn's book, laying into it massively.
I disagree.
I thought it was fascinating:
1. The eye witness accounts that there were multiple controlled demolitions in both of the towers
2. Tower 7 being demolished with explosives (one eye witness, a fireman, stating that he could see the explosions initiating on each floor).
3. The convenient military air defence exercise scheduled at the exact same time simulating the exact same attack, which meant reports weren't taken seriously or acted upon quickly enough.
4. The footage from the school where George Bush was, in which he looked completely unsurprised when told of the news, and further, the absolute inaction of the Secret Service in removing him immediately to a safe location.
5. The clip that Able Danger informed the FBI of the existence of the supposed terrorist cells well in advance. When Lt Col Shaffer went public with the information his career was destroyed.
6. The frankly obscene restrictions placed upon the 9/11 committee by the Bush Administration which prevented them having full and unrestricted view of classified information.
etc. etc. etc.
Does each snippet prove anything in isolation? No, of course not. When viewed collectively, it's a different story. What I find fascinating is that all of the eye witness material was captured at the time. I know very well that sometimes eye witnesses get things wrong, but that many witnesses aren't all wrong.
It's worthy of further consideration IMHO.
I'm off to bed. Will check again in the morning to see what wonderful new names I've been called.