Showing posts with label loose change. Show all posts
Showing posts with label loose change. Show all posts

Feb 17, 2015

The 9/11 Truth Movement's Dangers by Christopher Hayes

This is a reprint of a Nation article by CBS on December 2006.  It contains a fair bit of context about how the theories presented by the "truther" fraud sounded compelling during the Bush administration's era of lack of transparency and a general analysis of why suspicion by itself isn't a bad thing.  Suspicion only become conspiracism when it continues beyond known facts or credible methodology.

This article only adressed the theories and political climate, particularly around the release of "Loose Change".  It does not touch on the fringe right-wing players behind the conspiracy scene or their politics, agenda or motives.

I'm reprinting in whole because I'm worried the history of sane coverage of the emerging "movement" is disappearing; already the Nation copy is gone.  This can give undue credence to the meme by certain dishonest "debunkers" anyone sucked into the "Truth" movement was just randomly "nuts".  It was a political fraud, every last bit of it. The only people responsible for a fraud are the people who created it and wittingly promoted it.


-------------

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/the-9-11-truth-movements-dangers/

The Nation December 8, 2006, 3:54 PM

The 9/11 Truth Movement's Dangers

 This column was written by Christopher Hayes



According to a July poll conducted by Scripps News Service, one-third of Americans think the government either carried out the 9/11 attacks or intentionally allowed them to happen in order to provide a pretext for war in the Middle East. This is at once alarming and unsurprising. Alarming, because if tens of millions of Americans really believe their government was complicit in the murder of 3,000 of their fellow citizens, they seem remarkably sanguine about this fact. By and large, life continues as before, even though tens of millions of people apparently believe they are being governed by mass murderers. Unsurprising, because the government these Americans suspect of complicity in 9/11 has acquired a justified reputation for deception: weapons of mass destruction, secret prisons, illegal wiretapping. What else are they hiding?

This pattern of deception has not only fed diffuse public cynicism but has provided an opening for alternate theories of 9/11 to flourish. As these theories — propounded by the so-called 9/11 Truth Movement — seep toward the edges of the mainstream, they have raised the specter of the return (if it ever left) of what Richard Hofstadter famously described as "the paranoid style in American politics." But the real danger posed by the Truth Movement isn't paranoia. Rather, the danger is that it will discredit and deform the salutary skepticism Americans increasingly show toward their leaders.

The Truth Movement's recent growth can be largely attributed to the Internet-distributed documentary "Loose Change." A low-budget film produced by two 20-somethings that purports to debunk the official story of 9/11, it's been viewed over the Internet millions of times. Complementing "Loose Change" are the more highbrow offerings of a handful of writers and scholars, many of whom are associated with Scholars for 9/11 Truth. Two of these academics, retired theologian David Ray Griffin and retired Brigham Young University physics professor Steven Jones, have written books and articles that serve as the movement's canon. Videos of their lectures circulate among the burgeoning portions of the Internet devoted to the cause of the "truthers." A variety of groups have chapters across the country and organize conferences that draw hundreds. In the last election cycle, the website www.911truth.org even produced a questionnaire with pointed inquiries for candidates, just like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce or the Sierra Club. The Truth Movement's relationship to the truth may be tenuous, but that it is a movement is no longer in doubt.

Truth activists often maintain they are simply "raising questions," and as such tend to focus with dogged persistence on physical minutiae: the lampposts near the Pentagon that should have been knocked down by Flight 77, the altitude in Pennsylvania at which cellphones on Flight 93 should have stopped working, the temperature at which jet fuel burns and at which steel melts. They then use these perceived inconsistencies to argue that the central events of 9/11 — the plane hitting the Pentagon, the towers collapsing — were not what they appeared to be. So: The eyewitness accounts of those who heard explosions in the World Trade Center, combined with the facts that jet fuel burns at 1,500 degrees Fahrenheit and steel melts at 2,500, shows that the towers were brought down by controlled explosions from inside the buildings, not by the planes crashing into them.

If the official story is wrong, then what did happen? As you might expect, there's quite a bit of dissension on this point. Like any movement, the Truth Movement is beset by internecine fights between different factions: those who subscribe to what are termed LIHOP theories (that the government "let it happen on purpose") and the more radical MIHOP ("made it happen on purpose") contingent. Even within these groups, there are divisions: Some believe the WTC was detonated with explosives after the planes hit and some don't even think there were any planes.

 To the extent that there is a unified theory of the nature of the conspiracy, it is based, in part, on the precedent of the Reichstag fire in Germany in the 1930s. The idea is that just as the Nazis staged a fire in the Reichstag in order to frighten the populace and consolidate power, the Bush Administration, military contractors, oil barons and the CIA staged 9/11 so as to provide cause and latitude to pursue its imperial ambitions unfettered by dissent and criticism. But the example of the Reichstag fire itself is instructive. While during and after the war many observers, including officials of the U.S. government, suspected the fire was a Nazi plot, the consensus among historians is that it was, in fact, the product of a lone zealous anarchist. That fact changes little about the Nazi regime, or its use of the fire for its own ends. It's true the Nazis were the chief beneficiaries of the fire, but that doesn't mean they started it, and the same goes for the Bush Administration and 9/11.

The Reichstag example also holds a lesson for those who would dismiss the very notion of a conspiracy as necessarily absurd. It was perfectly reasonable to suspect the Nazis of setting the fire, so long as the evidence suggested that might have been the case. The problem isn't with conspiracy theories as such; the problem is continuing to assert the existence of a conspiracy even after the evidence shows it to be virtually impossible.

In March 2005 Popular Mechanics assembled a team of engineers, physicists, flight experts and the like to critically examine some of the Truth Movement's most common claims. They found them almost entirely without merit. To pick just one example, steel might not melt at 1,500 degrees, the temperature at which jet fuel burns, but it does begin to lose a lot of its strength, enough to cause the support beams to fail.

And yet no amount of debunking seems to work. The Internet empowers people with esoteric interests to spend all kinds of time pursuing their hobbies, and if the Truth Movement was the political equivalent of Lord of the Rings fan fiction or furries, there wouldn't be much reason to pay attention. But the public opinion trend lines are moving in the truthers' direction, even after the official 9/11 Commission report was supposed to settle the matter once and for all.

Of course, the ommission report was something of a whitewash — Bush would only be interviewed in the presence of Dick Cheney, the commission was denied access to other key witnesses, and just this year we learned of a meeting convened by George Tenet the summer before the attacks to warn Condoleezza Rice about al Qaeda's plotting, a meeting that was nowhere mentioned in the report.

So it's hard to blame people for thinking we're not getting the whole story. For six years, the government has prevaricated and the press has largely failed to point out this simple truth. Critics like The New Yorker's Nicholas Lemann might lament the resurgence of the "paranoid style," but the seeds of paranoia have taken root partly because of the complete lack of appropriate skepticism by the establishment press, a complementary impulse to the paranoid style that might be called the "credulous style."

In the credulous style all political actors are acting with good intentions and in good faith. Mistakes are made, but never because of ulterior motives or undue influence from the various locii of corporate power. When people in power advocate strenuously for a position it is because they believe in it. When their advocacy leads to policies that create misery, it is due not to any evil intentions or greed or corruption, but rather simple human error. Ahmad Chalabi summed up this worldview perfectly. Faced with the utter absence of the WMD he and his cohorts had long touted in Iraq, he replied, "We are heroes in error."

For a long time the credulous style has dominated the establishment, but its hold intensified after 9/11. When the government speaks, particularly about the Enemy, it must be presumed to be telling the truth. From the reporting about Iraq's alleged WMD to the current spate of stories about how "dangerous" Iran is, time and again the press has reacted to official pronouncements about threats with a near total absence of skepticism. Each time the government announces the indictment of domestic terrorists allegedly plotting our demise, the press devotes itself to the story with obsessive relish, only to later note, on page A22 or in a casual aside, that the whole thing was bunk.

In August 2003, to cite just one example, the New York dailies breathlessly reported what one U.S. official called an "incredible triumph in the war against terrorism," the arrest of Hemant Lakhani, a supposed terrorist mastermind caught red-handed attempting to acquire a surface-to-air missile. Only later did the government admit that the "plot" consisted of an FBI informant begging Lakhani to find him a missile, while a Russian intelligence officer called up Lakhani and offered to sell him one.

Yet after nearly a dozen such instances, the establishment media continue to earnestly report each new alleged threat or indictment, secure in the belief that their proximity to policy-makers gets it closer to the truth. But proximity can obscure more than clarify. It's hard to imagine that the guy sitting next to you at the White House correspondents' dinner is plotting to, say, send the country into a disastrous and illegal war, or is spying on Americans in blatant defiance of federal statutes. Bob Woodward, the journalist with the most access to the Bush Administration, was just about the last one to realize that the White House is disingenuous and cynical, that it has manipulated the machinery of state for its narrow political ends.

Meanwhile, those who realized this was the White House's MO from the beginning have been labeled conspiracy theorists. During the 2004 campaign Howard Dean made the charge that the White House was manipulating the terror threat level and recycling old intelligence. The Bush campaign responded by dismissing Dean as a "bizarre conspiracy theorist." A year later, after Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge retired, he admitted that Dean's charge was, indeed, the truth. The same accusation of conspiracy-mongering was routinely leveled at anyone who suggested that the war in Iraq was and is motivated by a desire for the United States to control the world's second-largest oil reserves.

For the Administration, "conspiracy" is a tremendously useful term, and can be applied even in the most seemingly bizarre conditions to declare an inquiry or criticism out of bounds. Responding to a question from NBC's Brian Williams as to whether he ever discusses official business with his father, Bush said such a suggestion was a "kind of conspiracy theory at its most rampant." The credulous style can brook no acknowledgment of unarticulated motives to our political actors, or consultations to which the public is not privy.

The public has been presented with two worldviews, one credulous, one paranoid, and both unsatisfactory. The more the former breaks apart, the greater the appeal of the latter. Conspiracy theories that claim to explain 9/11 are wrongheaded and a terrible waste of time, but the skeptical instinct is, on balance, salutary. It is right to suspect that the operations of government, the power elite and the military-industrial complex are often not what they seem; and proper to raise questions when the answers provided have been unconvincing. Given the untruths to which American citizens have been subjected these past six years, is it any surprise that a majority of them think the government's lying about what happened before and on 9/11?

Still, the persistent appeal of paranoid theories reflects a cynicism that the credulous media have failed to address, because they posit a world of good intentions and face-value pronouncements, one in which the suggestion that a government would mislead or abuse its citizens for its own gains or the gains of its benefactors is on its face absurd. The danger is that the more this government's cynicism and deception are laid bare, the more people — on the left in particular and among the public in general — will be drawn down the rabbit hole of delusion of the 9/11 Truth Movement.

To avoid such a fate, the public must come to trust that the gatekeepers of public discourse share their skepticism about the agenda its government is pursuing. The antidote, ultimately, to the Truth Movement is a press that refuses to allow the government to continue to lie.

By Christopher Hayes
Reprinted with permission from The Nation

 


 

Oct 13, 2014

Julia Child--007 ?

Now that the "truth" con is in its death spiral, in desperation  something--anything--in popular culture is being examined as a "clue".  To something.  I don't know what, but I suspect it'll be along the lines of 'I think I saw a guy on TV who might be  perp!!1!" paranoia.

This is how the "Mark Humphrey is the Harley Guy" garbage was started by Fred BsRegistration and Greg Thomson aka Ozzybinoswald, handily helped by Craig "Killtown" Lazo and his friends.  It turned out the Harley Guy was a radio personality called Mark Walsh and everyone was wrong.  A curious footnote many have forgotten: when Lazo was forced to admit they were wrong, he made a snarky comment about the "coincidence" they had the same first names.  

See, I don't believe it's a coincidence.  Some of the people uploading clips of the Harley Guy, sans Humphrey allegations, were the first to cave when proof of Mark Walsh came to light.  Those same people are associated with the Loose Change Forums where Lazo had posted previously.  One of those people even changed their story, saying they never suspected Humphrey, when before they said they thought it was a lead.

I have this archived, but they know who they are and it's really not important at the moment.  Suffice it to say, anyone in possession of the full Harley Guy clip would have had to deliberately edit the first part out where Mark Walsh is actually introduced.    Those people always knew the Harley Guy was Mark Walsh.    It's not a stretch to see a sleazy group of people pimping a conspiracy looking for a public figure they could pin it on.  Finding an actor named "Mark" wouldn't be too difficult. 

In the end it all backfired.  The TOS/TOU violations Lazo had to field from the fallout all by themselves may have been what made the hosting provider shut down his 911movement.org forum.    He can squeel his blackmail lies all day long, but the evidence is ample Lazo and company brought this one themselves.  All because the made up lies about strangers to prop up their conspiracy.

It looks like it's happening again, except this time at 911blogger.com.

Shoestring has go it into his head the truth is out there--somewhere in the lives of pop culture figures like Julia Child.  Yes, that Julia Child:


Julia Child had worked as a spy in the past
Here's something perhaps worth noting: Julia Child, who was originally booked on Flight 11, had "a dynamic career as an intelligence officer" during World War II. She worked for the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), the forerunner of the CIA.
According to the CIA, Child "started out at OSS Headquarters in Washington. ... Working as a research assistant in the Secret Intelligence division, Julia typed up thousands of names on little white note cards, a system that was needed to keep track of officers during the days before computers." Shen then worked with the OSS Emergency Sea Rescue Equipment Section.
From 1944 to 1945, Child "worked in Ceylon, present day Sri Lanka, and Kunming, China." In these two years, she served as chief of the OSS Registry. Having top security clearances, she "knew every incoming and outgoing message that passed throughout her office, as her Registry was serving all the intelligence branches." And while she was in Ceylon, she "handled highly classified papers that dealt with the invasion of the Malay Peninsula." (Source: http://www.cia.gov/news-information/featured-story-archive/2007-featured-story-archive/julia-child.html.)
I wonder if Child continued any spying activities after the war ended, or at least maintained contacts within the intelligence community.
OH MY GOD!  JULIA CHILD IS SPYING FOR THE NEW WORLD ORDER!!!1!!1!

Take your tin foil beanie off a mo.  Yes, Child did spy work--while the western world was fighting Nazis:

World War II

Child joined the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) after finding that she was too tall to enlist in the Women's Army Corps (WACs) or in the U.S. Navy's WAVES.[6] She began her OSS career as a typist at its headquarters in Washington, but because of her education and experience soon was given a more responsible position as a top secret researcher working directly for the head of OSS, General William J. Donovan.[7]
As a research assistant in the Secret Intelligence division, she typed 10,000 names on white note cards to keep track of officers. For a year, she worked at the OSS Emergency Rescue Equipment Section (ERES) in Washington, D.C. as a file clerk and then as an assistant to developers of a shark repellent needed to ensure that sharks would not explode ordnance targeting German U-boats.

And for Child's contribution to defeating the Nazis, we thank her.

But maybe Shoestring, supporting the anti Semite front known as the "Truth Movement", might not appreciate the whole defeating Nazis thing. In any case, why does Shoestring think Child might be involved in intelligence after the war?   And why does he think anything she might have anything to do with the 9/11 attacks?  Something suspicious about her Ratatouille? Child talking about layers, but not using thermite to bring them down?  

If history is a lesson, "Shoestring" is trying to start trouble exploiting Ms. Child's memory.  It isn't the first time a "truther" did this.  One of Craig "Killtown" Lazo's most despicable acts was using the murder of Suzanne Jovin to prop up his conspiracies, an act that has been justifiably mocked around the internet.  Needless to say, if this 'Child is a Perp'  conspiracy gets legs, all information about the website owners and their activities will be sent whomever is managing Ms. Child's estate.

It's not just Child on the "shoestring" radar.  Michael Crichton is also being vetted as a "shady character":

Michael Crichton was on a plane similar to Flight 11 on Sept. 11
Here's something I found interesting, although it is difficult to know if it is of any significance:
Michael Crichton, the hugely successful author of books like Jurassic Park, Disclosure, and State of Fear, had a curious experience on September 11. The Observer reported, "Crichton was on an American Airlines flight that left New York for Los Angeles at 8am." The plane was therefore just like Flight 11, except it took off from New York rather than Boston. The Observer continued, "When the plane was ordered down, he called his office to be told everyone was in tears, convinced that he was dead." (See http://www.theguardian.com/books/2006/dec/03/sciencefictionfantasyandhorror.michaelcrichton.)
OH MY GOD!  CRITCHTON WAS ON A PLANE ON 911!!  EVERYONE ON A PLANE ON 911 MUST BE A NEW WORLD ORDER THUG!!!!11111!!

Let's try to help "Shoestring": the only significance is he was on a plane on 9/11. The only reason we know about it is Crichton gave an interview.

These are the feeble grasping of straws of a failing scam as it dies.  Shoestring's comment had three votes, now only two.  There is no group logging onto the board to help Shoe hunt down these perps, one of whom is dead.   It's unlikely it will turn into a Mark Humphrey Witch Hunt episode, because too many of the frauds are well known.  My guess is "Shoe" is one of those damaged broken people who has no life outside of the conspiracy community, and he's trying to find meaning in face of the devastation  evidence the "truth movement" is dead because it was based on a lie from the begining.

Julia Child had nothing to do with the 911 attacks, and neither did Crichton and Humphrey for that matter.  This is out of control paranoid lunacy and the "leaders and website owners need to shut iy down before the get shut down.

As for Julia, we miss you.  Rest in peace and bon appetit








Jul 28, 2014

The Truth Movement and Loose Change: Selling Faux Legitimacy

This is important to note as a matter of record: the people from the far fringe right who founded and promoted the 9/11 "Truth" Movement went out of their way to appeal to the public and recruit persons to sell the "movement" as legit.  Public appeal would reach its apex through "Loose Change" and the three personalities recruited and/or manipulated to push it:  Dylan Avery, Jason Bermas and Korey Rowe.

There is much misguided anger directed at the Loose Change producers that would be better directed at Macromedia and the many interests who funded and egged on the trio. They've been called "traitors" and worse by pro-Bush debunkers, honest or otherwise.  An entire blog was dedicated to supposedly debunking the flawed facts in the film.  Years later, long after Loose Change has faded from public eye, the blog is still going allegedly exposing "truther" lies, but actually acting as platform for the same lies it claims to be exposing.  SLC purpose has always appeared to be a glorified gossip column trying to pass itself off as independent journalism.  It was easy to get legitimacy by mocking Loose Change; since then few who praised the blog in it's early days have revisited the site for an honest reappraisal. 

Even  rabid fans of the blog expressed wonder about the blog owners giving a platform to extremists:

 At 14 December, 2006 15:09,
 shawn said...
Ban ewing, please.

 At 14 December, 2006 17:12,  The Artistic Macrophage said...
ewing:

here is some advice. Provided you actually have the intellect to debate some of the 9/11 issues, you would actually get much more attention if you did debate, rather than spam. I can tell you that I personally immediately scroll over your posts without looking at them simply because they are spam.

TAM

 At 14 December, 2006 22:40,  Pat said...
Shawn, Ewing is Nico Haupt. I don't mind him spamming the comments because he does come up with interesting stuff as does BG.
 I suppose if one equates "interesting" garbage spam pushing a fraud with real journalism.

Hindsight being what it is, it's obvious "ewing" was a patsy in an elaborate fraud, his crazy act encouraged as a distraction.   For all it's 15 minutes of fame popular appeal "Loose Change" was never the problem, per se.  It was a symptom, or the latest reiteration of a problem: right extremists looking for new markets to sell New World Order woo, in this case one packaged and pitched to the anti war crowd.

"The Almond"; at JREF sums up the political climate of the time succinctly:

  8th October 2010, 05:18 AM
 The Almond

Perhaps more than you realize. In 2005~2006, when the 9/11 conspiracy theories were starting to become popular, many people thought it was a legitimate movement. By legitimate, I mean, news agencies and the public believed that a large, diverse group of people had conducted honest, thoughtful research and had realized that a conspiracy existed. This perception caused many people to see Loose Change (made by Bermas and Avery), and give the Truth movement the benefit of the doubt.

Of course, the first thing that was clear in 2006 was that this largely internet based fad was full of 3 groups of people:

1) Disaffected teenagers and 20-somethings who had nothing better to do
2) Neo-nazis, holocaust deniers
3) The insane, chronically uninformed or gullible

This little recent tidbit once again confirms what we've been saying for the past 4 years: The Truth movement is not a group of concerned citizens from all walks of life who are united by a logically consistent, evidence informed point of view. Rather, they're a loose agglomeration of disaffected 20-somethings, and when you step out of the internet reality they've created, they're living in their mom's basement, sucking down cheetos and wishing they were more popular and interesting.

The only point of contention I find with Almond's post is there should be four, not three categories.  By definition, if the anti-war public perceived a legitimate movement, some of them would join, making a fourth group:

4) Anit-war/anti Bush activists duped, for however long, by the previous three groups.
This last group is where most of the responsible truthers came from and why most of them are gone: once it was clear the movement refused to denounce the Holocaust denier/Nazis types, it was a short trip to the painful eye-opener that the Movement was always about pushing far right racist propaganda.  The anti-war hook was a sham to build a base.  "Loose Change" was a handy vehicle to support that sham.

It won't end well.









Apr 27, 2014

Life after "Loose Change"

It's nice to see Avery seems to be free of the "truther" octopus , though he is marked.   I don't know if the author intended this, but the title is a clue to the phoniness of the movement Avery and company were seduced into fronting.  No one rises that fast to fame on very few credentials or history without a backing interest.  And that interest may not have your best interests:

 https://www.vocativ.com/usa/us-politics/rapid-rise-fall-dylan-avery/
The Rapid Rise and Fall of Dylan Avery

With his 9/11 conspiracy doc "Loose Change," director Dylan Avery became an Internet sensation and a leader of a movement. Then the film grew into a monster that nearly ruined his life
 Highlights:
At 30 years old, Avery is still dealing with the aftershocks of his movie, which he released in December 2005 when he was just 21. In a matter of months, Loose Change had been viewed on the Internet more than 10 million times, by 20,000 people per day (All before YouTube was a household name). Suddenly, Avery became a youth icon and a kind of national celebrity, galvanizing the 9/11 Truth Movement—those who fervently believed the Sept. 11 attacks were coordinated by the U.S. government.
He was referred to as “a real hero” and earned praise from renowned artists like director David Lynch, who said of the film: “It’s not so much what they say, it’s the things that make you look at what you thought you saw in a different light.”
...
Even now, the second edition’s appeal is obvious. The presentation is rough and edgy, a compilation of stitched-together images culled from raw TV news coverage of 9/11, set against a backdrop of hypnotic hip-hop beats. For 80 minutes, Avery, in his distinctly skeptical post-adolescent voice—the sound of youthful arrogance—directs the viewer’s attention to suspicious activity, basically saying what to think.
Early on, for instance, there is a picture from the Department of Justice’s terrorism manual, released in 2000, that shows the World Trade Center set in crosshairs. Soon afterward, a sentence from “Rebuilding America’s Defenses,” a 90-page report published that same year by a neoconservative think tank, pops up on the screen: “The process of transformation, even if it brings revolutionary change, is likely to be a long one, absent some catastrophic and catalyzing event—like a new Pearl Harbor.” (The quote’s context, describing a timetable for a technological makeover of the military, is conveniently left out of the narrative.)
Bold mine.  This was one of the many dishonest  and deceptive pieces of propaganda and Avery didn't start it.  He just fell for it.

Avery then points out that Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld are among the report’s authors, the setup for a key assertion that comes later in the film: The twin towers, made of steel, could not have been brought down solely by airliners, since steel melts at 2,750 degrees while jet fuel burns up at 1,500. We watch grainy footage of the structures collapsing, the nature of the destruction apparently consistent with that of a controlled demolition. Taken together, the sequence is enormously effective (though debunkers were quick to point out that steel loses half its strength at 1,200 degrees, enough to have brought down the towers).
So much for termites, er, thermite.

 “It came out when the 9/11 Truth Movement was at its peak,” says Jonathan Kay, author of Among the Truthers. “All this new technology was available. At the time, people were not used to grassroots activists making high-quality video propaganda. People assumed that if it had high production values, it was something to take seriously.
Kay, dense or oblivious about other connections in the "truth" movement, makes a very good point here that can be expanded into all sorts of promotions: T-shirts, webdesign, signage, etc.   It used to take a significant investment of resources and skills to create and print logos.  Now branding can be virtually instant and distinguishing a legitimate grassroots organization from conspiracy astroturf is almost impossible based on  production values alone.  [One of the more pathetic attempts to appear grassroots that's still used is crude signage in black felt or tape.  In the post digital world it just looks strange.]  
When the boys were 17, Rowe dropped out of high school and eventually enlisted in the Army, while Avery applied to film school, at SUNY Oneonta, but didn’t get in. After he graduated, in 2002, he took a job doing local construction and began to sketch out a screenplay. It was a fantastical caper about a couple of boys who, sensing something nefarious, decide to investigate 9/11, unearthing a vast conspiracy and becoming heroes in the process. “It was fun,” Avery explains. “About kids fucking shit up. The original script ended with a rally on the White House lawn, and then I think we all fake our own deaths.”
The plan was to splice the fictional story with real-life news footage, but then it turned into a documentary. “It was kind of a self-fulfilling prophecy,” he admits. “The feature script definitely paved the way for what was about to come.”
Hindsight being 20/20 it could also have been a flag for the psychological yearnings behind the fiction, yearnings that could be played.   

The next two years were a whirlwind. The boys toured the country, screening their film and attending Truth conferences, where they were the stars. They were courted by Alex Jones, the rabid conservative conspiracy theorist and radio host who, among other things, believes the MSG found in juice boxes and kettle chips is part of a “chemical warfare operation” to spread homosexuality. He was at the forefront of the Truth Movement and rubbed shoulders with celebrities like Charlie Sheen, who was a Truther himself and a big fan of Loose Change. In early fall 2006, Jones facilitated an introduction between Sheen and the boys, suggesting the actor might narrate the next version of the movie, which would, with his cache, lead to a theatrical release.
From here the rest is a foregone conclusion:  the rise, the heady feeling of self importance inflated by ego flattering "minders",   the attempts at manipulation, some successful, some not:

 Avery was tired and beginning to grow wary of both the Truth Movement and his place in it. “There were anti-Semites saying the Israeli intelligence agency pulled off 9/11,” he says. “They wanted me to put that stuff in my films.” In a bizarre twist, some in the movement accused him of working for the government, conducting a disinformation campaign to discredit Truthers.

This is one of the many signs Avery and others were drawn into a complex political fraud instigated by Holocaust deniers and White Power organizers.  that and the perennial lie there are "agents" in the movement.

Others, who disagreed with his ideas, berated him on a popular blog called Screw Loose Change, where commenters regularly said things like, “Jeez, fucking Hitler must be proud of Dylan.”

Ironically Screw Loose Change was one of the worst enablers of the "truther" fraud.  By refusing to distinguish between people inventing the theories and the people conned by them, they validated the con.  Calling everyone scammed by the "truth" movement a Nazi is not helpful and appears to confirm the false idea of "agents" spreading "disinfo".

Loose Change happened because I wanted to make a film,” he said. “It was born out of the passion of wanting to be a filmmaker. And then Loose Change took over my life, and it’s almost like filmmaking is completely out of the question.”
 ...

Yet he’s excited about his new film, Black and Blue, especially because it’s grounded in fact-based stories, not theories, about people who have been abused by the police. And though questions still linger about 9/11, such as why, on Sept. 6, 2001, the daily average for put-options on United Airlines stock quadrupled, he no longer tortures himself with speculation. “In my truly angry times, in 2005 or 2006, if you asked if the Bush administration planned the attacks, I would have said, ‘Fuck yeah’.”
But now?
“I don’t think Bush could plan a bowl of cereal,” he says.
 ...

 Avery is silent for a moment. “It’s a dark, dangerous world, the world of conspiracy. You make a commitment and either stick with it to the very end, or you don’t. It’s easy to get sucked in, and really hard to get sucked back out.”
 I don't know.  The minute I knew a network of racist con artists were behind all the major "truther" talking points, it was really easy for me.

.....

My biggest criticism of the interview is  Vocative itself, a relatively new media outlet.  It's great Dylan is coming forth with his story, but try to chose a media platform with a history, like Huffo or Salon.  No offense to "vocative", but it's only a year old:
Vocativ is an online news website founded by Mati Kochavi.[2] The site publishes trending worldwide stories and highly-produced, documentary-style videos for broadcast online and on television. Vocativ was launched in 2013 by Mati Kochavi. Vocativ has a team of about 80 news editors, writers and producers from publications like the New York Times, CNN and Reuters.[3][4] Vocativ utilizes "Deep-web" technology to publish news articles. Kochavi is an entrepreneur owning a security firm AGT International and 3i-MIND, a data-mining outlet.[5] In February, 2014, Vocativ announced a partnership with the NBCUniversal News Group to produce short video segments and prime time hours for the MSNBC cable network and other NBCUNG platforms. The New York Times reported that the chief executive of talent agency William Morris Endeavor, Ari Emmanuel, had taken a personal interest in Vocativ and that his company was negotiating for an equity stake.[6]
Those who have broken free of the "truth" movement need to be on guard against unconsciously falling into old patterns. This has the marks of Avery shunning the "mainstream media".  If he thought about it a moment, the mainstream media wasn't responsible for most of the attacks; it was cowboy bloggers operating off deceptive information, usually obtained from con artists and social engineers.  And while MSM is not undeserving of criticism, they are far and away more responsible than cowboy bloggers with an ax to grind against the left.

Good luck, Dylan.