by Attack Ships on Fire » Sun Jun 25, 2006 3:46 am
My thought on why, if the parlor game of cherades is indeed true, Rumsfeld mentioned the missing $2.3 trillion the day before 9/11 is the simple fact that if you're going to deliver bad news that will get you in hot water, make the news even worse and you'll quickly find out how fast the original bad news is forgotten.<br><br>An example:<br><br>Case 1: A teen comes stumbling through the door in the middle of the night. He was at a party. He drove home drunk. The worried parents have been waiting up for him because he never called, he's 4 hours overdue, etc. The teen gets grounded, loses car privledges. Life sucks for a few months.<br><br>Case 2: The teen doesn't get home at all because while he was driving drunk he crashed the car. He's in a hospital banged up. Instead of berating their teen, the worried parents get a phone call in the middle of the night from a police officer that tells them to go to the local hospital. The parents get there and see their son banged up. Grounding him is the last thing on their minds.<br><br>You deliver the bad news that will get you and your cronies into hot water the day before and then watch as it's forgotten about because a big bucket of shit lands on the world's front porch nice and early the next day. Jesus, even one better, the people that could have ratted you and your cronies out about all the money that's missing are now dead, and the lucky SOBs that called in sick, were on vacation or took the day off don't even have the original documents anymore that they could use against you if they wanted to resume their papertrail detective work.<br><br>It's almost as good as Tom Clancy, ain't it?<br><br>On a tangent, the wacky Charles Fort part of me wonders what you could buy with $2.3 trillion dollars. Could it buy you dozens of secret underground bases across America? Could it buy you a secret fleet of space vehicles? Suddenly all that talk by Gary McKinnon about classified websites containing lists of non-terrestrial officers starts to sound a little less like science fiction.<br><br>And that's not even including the years when military contractors "charged" the DoD $500 for a plunger. How many hundreds of billions disappeared on paper that were allocated for ultra expensive Home Depot tools? Add that to the $2.3 trillion and tell me what figure you come up with, then ask yourself what's really crazy: a military and a government that misplaces trillions of dollars and buys $10 tools for hundreds of dollars, or that the worst military assignment isn't being stationed in Nome, Alaska but on Charon Base, Pluto?<br><br><br> <p></p><i>Edited by: <A HREF=http://p216.ezboard.com/brigorousintuition.showUserPublicProfile?gid=attackshipsonfire>Attack Ships on Fire</A> at: 6/25/06 1:48 am<br></i>