The Moral Decoding of 9-11: Beyond the U.S. Criminal State (2013) | John McMurtry | NotebookLM

This paper critically examines the events of September 11, 2001, rejecting the “official conspiracy theory” of nineteen Arab hijackers and arguing instead that 9-11 was a strategically constructed event orchestrated by the covert U.S. state. The author posits that this crisis served as the necessary “catastrophic and catalyzing event” desired by neo-conservative planners to overcome domestic and global resistance to a “supreme moral doctrine” of limitless transnational capital accumulation. By analyzing forensic anomalies—such as the rapid, explosive collapse of the fireproofed World Trade Center towers and the systematic erasure of crime scene evidence—the paper decodes the underlying value system driving U.S. imperialism. It asserts that the resulting 9-11 Wars in the Middle East and Central Asia, alongside the rollback of domestic civil liberties, were executed to establish “full spectrum dominance” and “supranational sovereignty” for a global banking and corporate elite. Furthermore, the paper critiques the complicity of the corporate media, governmental bodies like the 9-11 Commission, and institutions like NIST in maintaining a “ruling group-mind” that suppresses evidence of institutional criminality. Ultimately, the author calls for the exposure of this life-blind system and the application of international criminal law to hold the responsible institutional architects accountable for crimes against humanity.

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Understanding the U.S. War State (2003) | John McMurtry | NoteBookLM

This document provides a critical analysis of the United States’ historical and contemporary foreign policy, focusing specifically on the 2003 invasion of Iraq. It argues that the U.S. operates as a “war state” that utilizes false pretexts to justify illegal, aggressive military interventions aimed at securing global resources, particularly oil. The author asserts that this behavior is enabled by a compliant corporate media and a “ruling group-mind” within the American public and political class, which treats the U.S. national security apparatus as infallible and inherently good. Ultimately, the text condemns U.S. actions as supreme war crimes that systematically violate international law, the Nuremberg Charter, and the United Nations Security Council’s authority.

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