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Interlink
Releases New Book by David Ray Griffin
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The
New Pearl Harbor Revisited
9/11,
the Cover Up, and the Exposé
David Ray Griffin
6"
x 9" - 358 pages
ISBN 9781566567299 - paperback - $20
"This latest book by David Ray Griffin is
scholarly research at its best. Meticulous
empirical investigation and painstaking
analysis are combined to refute the official
9/11 narrative. Every event surrounding the
tragic events of September 11, 2001, is
subjected to close scrutiny, ultimately with a
view to revealing the lies and upholding the
truth. In this fascinating and skillfully
researched exposé, Griffin demonstrates
unequivocally that the 9/11 attacks were an
inside job."--Michel
Chossudovsky, Professor of Economics and
author of America's
War on Terrorism
In 2004, David Ray Griffin published The
New Pearl Harbor: Disturbing Questions about
the Bush Administration and 9/11.
Translated into several languages, it helped
spark a worldwide movement demanding
"9/11 truth." Even as it became
increasingly outdated, it continued to be
widely cited as the best introduction to the
issues.
Griffin has now written The
New Pearl Harbor Revisited, which
provides a chapter-by-chapter updating of the
information provided in that earlier book. It
shows that the case against the official
account constructed by independent researchers
- who now include architects, engineers,
physicists, pilots, politicians, and former
military officers - is far stronger than it
was in 2004, leaving no doubt that 9/11 was a
false-flag operation, designed to give the
Bush-Cheney administration a pretext to attack
oil-rich Muslim nations.
Taken together, these two books provide
everything one needs to make an informed
decision about 9/11 - whether one is a
journalist, a political leader, a religious
leader, or an ordinary citizen concerned about
truth, democracy, and the rule of law.
David Ray
Griffin, who has published over 30
books, is professor of philosophy of religion
and theology, emeritus, at Claremont School of
Theology and Claremont Graduate University in
Claremont, California, where he remains a
co-director of the Center for Process Studies.
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