Monday, March 20, 2006

Laugh of the Week

I know it's only Monday, but I'll go out on a limb and declare the following to be the funniest sentence of the week.

From
Prison Planet:


Actor Charlie Sheen has joined a growing army of other highly credible public figures in questioning the official story of 9/11 and calling for a new independent investigation of the attack and the circumstances surrounding it.

HAHAHAHAHA

"Highly credible public figure"? Charlie Sheen?

HAHAHAHAHA

The article states:


Speaking to The Alex Jones Show on the GCN Radio Network, the star of current hit comedy show Two and a Half Men and dozens of movies including Platoon and Young Guns, Sheen elaborated on why he had problems believing the government's version of events.

..."It seems to me like 19 amateurs with box cutters taking over four commercial airliners and hitting 75% of their targets, that feels like a conspiracy theory. It raises a lot of questions."

Sheen described the climate of acceptance for serious discussion about 9/11 as being far more fertile than it was a couple of years ago.

"It feels like from the people I talk to in and around my circles, it seems like the worm is turning."

The key phrase is "people I talk to in and around my circles."

Obviously, Charlie is trapped in the goofy Hollywood lib bubble.


Sheen described his immediate skepticism regarding the official reason for the collapse of the twin towers and building 7 on the day of 9/11.

"I was up early and we were gonna do a pre-shoot on Spin City, the show I used to do, I was watching the news and the north tower was burning. I saw the south tower hit live, that famous wide shot where it disappears behind the building and then we see the tremendous fireball."

"There was a feeling, it just didn't look any commercial jetliner I've flown on any time in my life and then when the buildings came down later on that day I said to my brother 'call me insane, but did it sorta look like those buildings came down in a controlled demolition'?"

OK. You're insane.

Sheen said that most people's gut instinct, that the buildings had been deliberately imploded, was washed away by the incessant flood of the official version of events from day one.

...Sheen said that "September 11 wasn't the Zapruder film, it was the Zapruder film festival," and that the inquiry had to be, "headed, if this is possible, by some neutral investigative committee. What if we used retired political foreign nationals? What if we used experts that don't have any ties whatsoever to this administration?"

"It is up to us to reveal the truth. It is up to us because we owe it to the families, we owe it to the victims. We owe it to everybody's life who was drastically altered, horrifically that day and forever. We owe it to them to uncover what happened."

The opening sentence of the article is hilarious. Considering Charlie Sheen a highly credible public figure is just too funny. I'd put him one notch above Tonya Harding or Joey Buttafuoco in the credibility order.

Once I composed myself and read on, I thought Charlie just seemed a bit nutty.

By the end of the piece, I was absolutely disgusted.

I wonder if he'll regret that interview.

Probably not. Some people aren't the regretting kind.


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