! Wake-up  World  Wake-up !
~ It's Time to Rise and Shine ~


We as spiritual beings or souls come to earth in order to experience the human condition. This includes the good and the bad scenarios of this world. Our world is a duality planet and no amount of love or grace will eliminate evil or nastiness. We will return again and again until we have pierced the illusions of this density. The purpose of human life is to awaken to universal truth. This also means that we must awaken to the lies and deceit mankind is subjected to. To pierce the third density illusion is a must in order to remove ourselves from the wheel of human existences. Love is the Answer by means of Knowledge and Awareness!




We know it crashed, but not why 

By WILLIAM BUNCH

SHANKSVILLE, Pa. -- Ernie Stuhl is the mayor of this tiny farming 
borough that was so brutally placed on America's psychic map on the 
morning of Sept. 11, when United Airlines Flight 93 slammed nose-down 
into the edge of a barren strip-mine moonscape a couple of miles 
outside of town. A 77-year-old World War II veteran and retired Dodge 
dealer, he's certainly no conspiracy theorist.

And, when you ask Stuhl for his theory of what caused the jetliner to 
crash that morning, he will give you the prevailing theory -- that a 
cockpit battle between the hijackers and burly, heroic passengers 
somehow caused the Boeing 757 to spiral out of control. "There's no 
doubt in my mind that they did put it down before it got to 
Washington and caused more damage," he said.

But press the mayor for details, and he will add something 
surprising. "I know of two people -- I will not mention names -- that 
heard a missile," Stuhl said. "They both live very close, within a 
couple of hundred yards. . .This one fellow's served in Vietnam and 
he says he's heard them, and he heard one that day." The mayor adds 
that based on what he knows about that morning, military F-16 fighter 
jets were "very, very close."

If the mayor of Shanksville still seems conflicted about what caused 
the crash of Flight 93 two months ago, he is hardly alone. As the 
initial shock of Sept. 11 wears off, the crash some 80 miles east of 
Pittsburgh, and what caused it, is beginning to emerge as the 
greatest mystery from the worst terrorist attack in American history.

No one has fully explained why the plane went down, or what exactly 
happened during an eight-minute gap from the time all cell phone 
calls from the plane stopped and the time it crashed. And the FBI, 
which assumed control of the probe from the National Transportation 
Safety Board, refuses to release data from either of the 
critical "black boxes," the cockpit voice recorder and the flight 
data recorder.

Citing the ongoing war on terrorism, the FBI says it can't say when 
it will release the data -- or indeed, if it ever will.

"It's evidence in an ongoing criminal investigation," an FBI 
spokesman in Pittsburgh, Jeff Killeen, said last week.
This week, the nation was rocked by another jetliner crash -- 
American Airlines Flight 587 in New York -- and the difference in the 
way the probes have been handled is remarkable. In the latest crash, 
federal officials released detailed information about the cockpit 
voice recorder in less than 36 hours.

In the case of Flight 93, both the FBI and the nation's air-defense 
agency -- NORAD -- have said the aircraft was not shot down. Said 
Killeen: "The evidence points to activity on the plane itself - and 
not elsewhere."

While almost all of the attention given Flight 93 has focused on the 
bravery of the passengers, the question of why it ultimately went 
down is not academic. To win the war on terrorism, some say America 
and its government must continue to occupy the moral high ground -- 
and the failure to release the data in the face of lingering rumors 
poses a credibility risk.

Predictably, the lack of official information has given rise to a 
flurry of debate on America's channel for unofficial news: the 
Internet. Already, there is a Web site (www.flight93crash.com) that 
summarizes everything known about the crash. And while much of the 
mainstream media has lost interest in the story, articles suggesting 
that the government shot down Flight 93 and has lied about it have 
flourished on left-wing Internet sites and publications.

Of course, in 2001, Internet conspiracy theories are hardly shocking. 
What is surprising is this: Go to Shanksville and the surrounding 
farm fields where people actually saw or heard the jetliner go down 
at roughly 10:06 that morning and there are a number of people -- 
including witnesses -- who also think that Flight 93 was shot down, 
or at least aren't ruling it out.
Laura Temyer, who lives several miles north of the crash site in 
Hooversville, was hanging some clothes outside that morning when she 
heard an airplane pass overhead. That struck her as unusual since 
she'd just heard on TV that all flights were grounded.

"I heard like a boom and the engine sounded funny," she told the 
Daily News. "I heard two more booms -- and then I did not hear 
anything."

What does Temyer think she heard? "I think the plane was shot down," 
insists Temyer, who said she has twice told her story to the FBI. 
What's more, she insists that people she knows in state law 
enforcement have told her the same thing, that the plane was shot 
down and that decompression sucked objects from the aircraft, 
explaining why there was a wide debris field.

But an eyewitness, Linda Shepley, said she had an unobstructed view 
of Flight 93's final two minutes and has reached the opposite 
conclusion. She recalls seeing the plane wobbling right and left, at 
a low altitude of roughly 2,500 feet, when suddenly the right wing 
abruptly dipped straight down, and the Boeing 757 plunged into the 
earth.

"It's not true," said Shepley of the persistent rumors. "If it had 
been shot down, there would have been pieces flying, but it was 
intact -- there was nothing wrong with it."

So what are the clues that have prompted the crash of Flight 93 to 
remain a lingering mystery?

 THE 911 CALL. At 9:58 a.m., roughly eight minutes before impact, a 
911 emergency dispatcher in neighboring Westmoreland County took a 
call from a frantic passenger who said he was locked in the bathroom 
of Flight 93 and that the plane had been hijacked. The caller said 
there had been an explosion aboard the plane and there was white 
smoke. Authorities have never explained the report, and the 911 tape 
itself was immediately confiscated by the FBI.
 THE DEBRIS FIELD. The reclaimed mine where the plane crashed is 
composed of very soft soil, and searchers say much of the wreckage 
was found buried 20-25 feet below the large crater. But despite that, 
there was also widely scattered debris in the immediate vicinity and 
further afield. Considerable debris washed up more than two miles 
away at Indian Lake, and a canceled check and brokerage statement 
from the plane was found in a deep valley some eight miles away that 
week.

 THE MYSTERY PLANE. Many people in the Shanksville area, including 
some interviewed by the Daily News, saw a fast-moving, unmarked small 
jet fly overhead a very short time after Flight 93 crashed. Several 
days later, authorities said they believe the plane was a Falcon 20 
private jet that was headed to nearby Johnstown but was asked to 
descend and survey the crash site. Yet officials have never 
identified the pilot nor explained why he was still airborne roughly 
30 minutes after the government ordered all aircraft to land at the 
closest airport.

 THE ENGINE. While the FBI and other authorities have said the plane 
was mostly obliterated by the roughly 500 mph impact, they also said 
an engine -- or at least a 1,000-pound piece of one -- was found "a 
considerable distance" from the crater. Stuhl, the Shanksville mayor, 
said it was found in the woods just west of the crash. That 
information is intriguing to shoot-down theory proponents, since the 
heat-seeking, air-to-air Sidewinder missiles aboard an F-16 would 
likely target one of the Boeing 757's two large engines.

 LOCATION OF F-16S. From Day 1, the government has given conflicting 
accounts about the exact whereabouts of three North Dakota Air 
National Guard F-16s, assigned to national air defense, based at 
Langley Air Force base in Virginia and scrambled at the height of the 
attacks. Just a few days after the crash, a federal flight controller 
told a Nashua, N.H., newspaper that an F-16 was "in hot pursuit" of 
the hijacked United jet, following so closely that it made 360-degree 
turns to stay in range. "He must have seen the whole thing," an 
unnamed aviation official said.

No one would argue that two months after Flight 93 tumbled into a 
Pennsylvania hillside killing all 44 aboard that there is more that 
we don't know about what happened in the flight's final minutes than 
we do know.

We don't even know for sure where the four hijackers were going. 
Based on the plane's general course, the conventional wisdom is that 
Flight 93 was headed toward Washington and a strike on the White 
House or the Capitol. But last month, the widely respected Times of 
London, quoting U.S. intelligence sources and noting the plane's low 
altitude and erratic course, suggested the real target might have 
been one of the state's nuclear power plants. At 500 mph, the Three 
Mile Island plant, near Harrisburg, was about than 10 or 15 minutes 
away.


WHETHER it was hero passengers or an F-16 fighter pilot who wanted 
the hijacked jetliner to come down away from a populated area, they 
did an amazing job in picking Shanksville.

The nearest sizable town, Somerset, is 10 miles away on winding back-
country roads -- where a visitor encountered as many dead raccoons as 
vehicles. Nestled along a creekbed in the rolling Allegheny 
foothills, Shanksville is a small cluster of red-brick homes and flag-
draped front porches.

The only commercial enterprise, a convenience store called Ida's, 
also rents videos and has the only ATM for miles around.

What happened here on Sept. 11 is already the stuff of American 
legend -- especially the battle cry of passenger Todd Beamer (left), 
whose overheard command of "Let's Roll" is on bumper stickers and has 
even been adopted by President Bush.

Four Middle Eastern hijackers sought to carry out their plan even 
though the mostly empty plane, bound from Newark, N.J., to San 
Francisco, had left the airport 42 minutes late because of mechanical 
problems. The delay meant that passengers -- who phoned family 
members and operators on their cell phones -- learned of the suicide 
attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon and knew that their 
only option was to fight the hijackers for control of the plane.

The almost irrefutable evidence is that a group of burly and heroic 
male passengers -- including Beamer, Mark Bingham, Jeremy Glick, Tom 
Burnett, and Lou Nacke -- did just that. In the only piece of 
information from the cockpit voice recorder that has filtered into 
news reports, anonymous sources told USA Today last month that there 
is evidence of a struggle toward the end of the doomed flight.

But the cell phone calls from the passengers all stopped about 9:58 
a.m. -- roughly the same time that the caller to 911 in Westmoreland 
County stated there had been an explosion.
The plane didn't come down until 10:06 -- leaving an 8-minute gap of 
unaccounted for air time, and thus a great mystery.

The commonly accepted view, that a chaotic cockpit struggle caused 
the downing, is certainly a plausible explanation for the crash -- 
but it doesn't address the issue of how.

Who was at the controls for those final eight minutes? Would a 
hijacker deliberately crash the plane during such a battle? What 
rudders or other controls could have been set off, either in a 
scuffle or by accident, that could cause the highly automated jet to 
crash?

Many of the answers -- if not all -- should be contained on the black 
boxes recovered shortly after the crash. Without that data, however, 
a number of aviation experts contacted by the Daily News were 
reluctant to speculate.

"Those are the things that would answer those questions - without 
those I don't know how to answer," said Carl Vogt, a former chairman 
of the National Transportation Safety Board and now a Washington 
attorney.

When Flight 93 came down, the eyewitnesses seem to agree on a few 
basic facts -- that the Boeing 757 was headed south or southeast very 
fast, that it was flying erratically or banking from side to side, 
that its right wing dipped steeply down and that the jetliner came 
down at close to a 90-degree angle. A number of people quoted right 
after the crash said there were strange noises, that the engine 
seemed to race but then went eerily silent as the plane plummeted.

The plane seemed to be fully, or largely, intact. "I didn't see no 
smoke, nothing," said Nevin Lambert, an elderly farmer who witnessed 
the crash from his side yard less than a half-mile away.

Lambert also said he also later found a couple of pieces of debris, 
one a piece of metal, less than 12 inches across, with some 
insulation attached. To those who are debating the causes of the 
crash, the debris is particularly significant because heavier 
farflung debris would suggest that something happened to cause the 
plane to break up before it hit the ground. Authorities also sought 
to explain why a number of residents saw a small, unmarked jet 
circling over the crash site shortly after. Workers at a marina saw 
it, and so did Kathy Blades, who was in her small summer cottage 
about a quarter-mile from the impact site.

Blades and her son ran outside after the crash and saw the jet, with 
sleek back wings and an angled cockpit, race overhead. "My son 
said, 'I think we're under attack!' " She said she was so shocked by 
the crash she can't say exactly how long after the impact it was.
A few days later, the FBI offered a possible explanation for what the 
witnesses saw. Authorities said that a private Falcon 20 jet bound 
for nearby Johnstown was in the vicinity and was asked by authorities 
to descend and help survey the crash site. But the authorities didn't 
identify the owner of the jet, nor explain why it was airborne some 
40 minutes after the Federal Aviation Administration ordered all 
planes to land at the nearest airport.

 
SO where was the U.S. air defense at 10 a.m. -- 72 minutes after the 
first plane struck the World Trade Center and about a half-hour after 
air controllers and United started to suspect that Flight 93 had been 
hijacked?

At 9:24 that morning, the North American Aerospace Defense Command 
(NORAD) ordered three F-16s from Langley Air Force Base in Virginia 
to scramble. They were airborne at 9:30. It's not clear how close any 
of the planes were to Flight 93, although Deputy Defense Secretary 
Paul Wolfowitz said a few days later on TV that "we were already 
tracking that plane that crashed in Pennsylvania."

Vice President Dick Cheney said later that President Bush authorized 
the military to shoot down any civilian plane that did not respond to 
air-traffic control and appeared to be a threat. The order is said to 
have come before Bush left Florida, which was at 9:58 a.m.

The commander of the North Dakota Air National Guard, which was 
handling air defense out of Langley that morning, later told the New 
York Times that the unidentified pilots received a harrowing order.

"A person came on the radio," Major Gen. Mike Haugen said, "and 
identified themselves as being with the Secret Service and he 
said, 'I want you to protect the White House at all costs.'" What 
happened in those final 8 minutes?

Most Americans are quite comfortable with the conclusion that the 
struggle between the passengers and the hijackers caused the crash of 
Flight 93. Roxanne Sullivan, who lives at the end of Skyline Drive in 
Shanksville and helped erect and maintain one of the memorials, says 
she has absolutely no doubt that's what happened. How does she 
know? "Right here," she said, thumping her heart.

Not all her neighbors are so convinced.

"I think it was shot down," said Dennis Mock, who was not an 
eyewitness but lives closest to the crash site on the west 
side. "That's what people around here think."

Until the FBI decides to release the flight data, there will be 
little to convince him or his neighbors otherwise. 

© 2000 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc