Two men and a Rubber Boat

2001-9-30 15:52:00

Concerning possibility number five Larry writes:
So of all the possibilities on the list, I would guess this one is not very likely because in the real world they're not effective.

JJ
I have heard this theory that explosives were planted in the Oklahoma City bombing through some type of conspiracy. This is always a possibility and many are also presenting the theory that explosives were used to make the Twin Towers crumble, but consider this.

Two men in a rubber boat with some dynamite caused $500,000,000 worth of damage to the U.S.S. Cole and cost 17 lives. There was no possibility of additional explosives added here and the impact and damage to us was great. I still maintain that if the terrorists attacked in five locations using conventional means, trucks or even small aircraft, they could not only cause a lot of damage, but terrorize and paralyze the nation. This must be a high priority on the watch list.

"The lines of demarcation between science and religion are a striking instance of this and have been clearly and forcefully drawn. The cleavage to which I refer has been drawn by the churchmen of the past and by no one else; the lines have been determined by the mystics, impractical and visionary, and by the fanatical devotees of some idea who were, nevertheless, unable to see the broad implications and the universal nature of these recognised ideas. I am generalising. There have been many devoted and holy sons of God who have never been guilty of the above stupidities and separative tendencies. At the same time as we recognise this, we must also recognise that orthodox religion has temporarily separated the two great concepts of spirit and matter in their thought and teaching, thereby pushing apart religion and science.

"The task of the new age workers is to bring these two apparent opposites together, to demonstrate that spirit and matter are not antagonistic to each other and that throughout the universe there is only spiritual substance, working on and producing the outer tangible forms." Djwahl Khul