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Strange Letter From Plane Passenger Lengthy Post

#1 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2006-December-04, 21:08

I ran across this today and don't know what to make of it. Supposedly, it is a copy of a letter sent by a woman who was a passenger on the airplane from which the 6 Muslims were removed. I have heard nothing about this and cannot find any verification of its claims. Any ideas?

Quote

November 21, 2006

US Airways Airline

To all news stations concerned:

In reference to the removal of the six Muslim gentlemen from flight 300 at the Minneapolis –St. Paul airport last light, prior to the planes departure.

I was a passenger on that flight, sitting in seat 5-E originally and later temporarily sitting in the front row of first class, while waiting for everyone to disembark the plane for a safety check. Having been on the plane, witnessed what transpired first hand and talked at great length with the first class steward regarding other facts, I am “ENRAGED” at the national AND local news reports I have seen this morning.

The facts reported are incomplete and inaccurate. This event was immediately jumped on by their attorney, who told the American people on CNBC they need to get over 911, stop being paranoid about Muslums and he even threatened a huge law suit against US Airways for the discriminating and humiliating treatment of his clients.

I am convinced this entire thing may have been done to intimidate not only US Airways, but all airlines and airports in order to get them to back off on their security efforts.

This is only part of the real story.

In defense of US Airways: They did a splendid job of handling the situation. No panic was created, we felt protected at all times. They did not make a knee jerk reaction as a result of one passenger passing them as note as reported by the media.

Most importantly, the public needs to be told that there was a series of "many suspicious events”, which were observed by the crew and several passengers. The captain made his decision based on all of these events and not just one note.

Their attorney is trying to turn this into a “right to pray in a public place issue” and it is not that at all. He is claiming they were removed from the plane for praying in public. And inferring it is wrong to discriminate against them for this. Claiming that we Americans don’t understand their religion and their need to pray everyday at specific times, he stated that WE need to be more tolerant of their religious beliefs.

He (their attorney) made a statement trying to draw an analogy of the right to carry a bible or a rosary on a plane. This is nothing more than a smoke screen to make this a human rights issue and intimidate the airline industry. They were already claiming discrimination to Fox TV news when I got home from the airport.

Something does not smell right here.

This has all of the earmarks of a preplanned “set up” with their attorney all ready to go.

I am sure their attorney has made a point of contacting all of you immediately, even last night, in order to get their slanted side of the story out first. Do not be fooled by this propaganda. You in the media have a moral responsibility to investigate all of the facts, not just statements you are fed by them.

I would encourage you to interview the planes’ captain, the first class steward and the gate ticket taker to confirm the following facts.

These are the correct facts:

The airline employee taking tickets reported to the crew that she felt very uncomfortable with the men and so she engaged one of them in a conversation to feel him out. I assume he spoke English to her in their conversation. She stated she felt uncomfortable with them and she felt they were extreme fundamentalists. She needs to be interviewed by the news media for her side of the story.

Several passengers observed the men praying and chanting near the gate prior to boarding. They were sitting apart from everyone else, behind the wall which stands behind the ticket counter at the gate. I was eating dinner while they were praying and chanting and did not observe this part, but spoke with a passenger, after we disembarked who has observed this.

I seem to remember hearing something on the news after 911 about the terrorists praying at the airport prior to departing on 911. If this is true then there is a legitimate cause for concern and doing so created an inflammatory situation. If it is their custom to pray at a certain time each day at sunset, they know this in advance and easily could have taken the 7pm flight, two hours later, doing their prayers prior to arriving at the airport. One question is: were they intentionally trying to create fear in the passengers by praying loudly in public, hoping to get removed from the plane?

I took a seat next to the men about 20 minutes prior to boarding. (I had been having dinner earlier and did not observe their prayers.) They spoke no English while seated next to me only Arabic, or what ever language they speak. One of the gentlemen acted very intense and nervous. He was on one phone call the entire time talking very fast while he paced back and forth in front of me. I said nothing to anyone about this, but was later told by first class passengers that this same conversation continued for at least another hour from his front row seat in first class. A man in the third row of first class told me he had a very uncomfortable feeling about this man.

Their seating arrangement was very unusual and it raised a red flag to the crew. Only one of the 6 sat in first class, with the telephone, although they were all together. The rest sat in coach. The second one sat in the first row of coach in front of me; I think another mid way back in the plane and the rest in the very rear of the plane. They were there early enough to get seats together but chose to spread out.

Another strange thing the crew noticed was the way they boarded. When they made the call for first class passengers the other 5 boarded as well.

The one in first class, which had been on the telephone, did not stay seated in his first class seat, but walked back to the rear of the plane twice to talk to his friends, during the delay.

One of the passengers sitting close to them in the rear of the plane overheard their conversation and became very nervous. I believe he may have been the one who sent the note up to the crew and captain. I was told later that there was mention of Allah and the word terrorists in their conversation.

A woman passenger, who understood their language, indicated they were making slanderous remarks about the American people, thinking no one would know what they were saying. This raised concern also.

The most suspicious thing, which has not yet been mentioned on the news, and needs to come out publicly, is the fact that the man in the first class front row asked for and was given a seat belt extender as did one of the men in the rear of the plane.

This can be confirmed by the male steward serving first class on the flight. The strange and totally unexplainable thing about this request by them was the fact that neither of these men was fat enough to even need an extender strap for their seatbelt in the first place and the crew noticed that they not even put it on but placed them on the floor by their feet. Why ask for them and not use them, especially if you don’t even need one?

I was a witness to the seat belt extender on the floor in first class, as the steward asked me to hand him so he could show it to the FBI and the Police. It was a totally detachable strap about 18" in length that could easily be used as a noose around a flight attendant or passenger’s neck to create a hostage situation on the plane.

With one in the back of the plane and another in the front and their people positioned in between they were perfectly positioned to take control of the entire plane with out any weapons.

The captain, crew, police and FBI all obviously also felt this was a real possibility when combined with the note passed to them by an obviously shaken man who had heard some of their conversation. Put all of this together along with the fact that the ticket agent at the gate was not comfortable and a couple of other passenger observations it added up to a situation of possible danger.

Should the Airline, crew and captain be blamed for deciding to protect the safely of several hundred passengers after their lengthy deliberation of the facts?

No, it was not just a note from a paranoid passenger as reported on television, but many things that just added up to a very uncomfortable feeling. The airline, police and FBI acted responsibly, professionally and in the interest of the majority of passengers. Any potential law suits from these people are totally unfounded and ludicrous.

Doesn’t the fact that these men already had an attorney lined up to immediately alert the media seem like a “pre-set up deal” to get the airlines and security to back off and ease up on the high alert issue?

Did they even tell their own attorney about the seat belt extenders sitting on the floor? Probably not.

With all of their accusations on CNBC’s morning news about passenger paranoia put aside there is still no answer to a very simple question… What were they going to do with the seat belt extenders?

Why did they have one in the front and one in the back of the plane and why were they sitting on the floor by their feet and not in use?

I can only determine two possible scenarios:

Either they were planning to use the seat belt extenders to subdue hostages and take over the plane and were caught by their suspicious activities…

Or, it was done intentionally to induce suspicion and make a big public fuss to intimidate security at the airports.

They claim we have discriminated against them and they were humiliated. They fail to accept the fact that what happened to them on flight 300 was a direct result of their own people’s hateful behavior on 911, while once more trying to put the blame for everything on the Americans.

What about the human rights of the several hundred people sitting on flight 300?

Most of the passengers were going home for the Thanksgiving holiday. Don’t we have the right to get home safely for Thanksgiving? Any psychologist will tell you they were simply trying to project the blame for this unfortunate event back at the airline in order to avoid any personal responsibility for their actions, or the actions of the 911 terrorists.

Upon watching the 5 o’clock news tonight I heard more about this incident. Now they are reporting the men to be clerics. Last night at 1 pm they were calling themselves scholars who were attending a conference.

It would be interesting what kind of a conference they had been attending. I question, from my close personal observations of them prior to boarding that they are either. I would also like to see this investigated also. I believe there is a real story here that the American public deserves. US Airlines has been caught off guard by these accusations and is being painted as the bad guy, stating they will make their own internal investigation.

Why, all of a sudden now, are they made to look guilty by the media? Only the media can clear the air on the truth here. They need your help and support in this matter.

Let’s not sweep this under the rug as yesterday’s news. I challenge the news media to investigate the real facts of these backgrounds, what had they been attending in Minneapolis as well as interview the crew and people involved bringing the real truth to the American public. They deserve the truth, for the future of their own safely. Please do not just let this matter drop.

Thank you!

Pauline Klemmer (telephone number and address removed for safety)

"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#2 User is offline   sceptic 

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Posted 2006-December-04, 21:17

interesting letter
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#3 User is offline   cherdano 

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Posted 2006-December-04, 22:18

Here is a story that happened to me in march 2002; unfortunately I don't remember the airline, but I could look it up (I think US Airways).

I took a plane from an East Coast airport to Frankfurt; I arrived very late at the gate (my previous flight had been delayed) and was among the last passengers to board. The crew was somewhat oddly gathered add only place, discussing s.th. I took my seat, then nothing happened for some 30 min, except some excuses for delays. Well, another 45 min nothing happened. Then finally, an onboard announcement asked 6 passengers to take their belonging and come to the front door. They calmly did so.

About 45 min later, the captain explained this was all a mistake, that these 6 men had been suspected due to having done some flight training, but had turned out to be pilots of Pakistan air on their way home. He deeply apologized, explained that we had nothing to worry about because they were really pilots AND they had been scheduled to go on another flight.

After about 60 min more (i.e. 3h delay total), we finally took off.

Ok, I tried to report objectively up to now.
1. Apparently this whole decision had been the personal responsibility of the pilot. What a non-sense. A pilot is trained to fly planes, not to judge security risks.
2. What a humiliating experience for these 6 pilots.
3. I feel really safe now in all American airlines, as I know that terrorist suspects will be asked politely to leave the plane. What a horrible non-sense.
4. To expand no.1, I think it's just 1000% wrong to let people do judgements as "she felt very uncomfortable with the men" unless they are really trained to do so.
5. To expand no. 4, I think it is fundamentally wrong to make these security risk assessments private decisions by companies. If you outsource this police work to airlines, you will always end up with some fuzzy profiling, that will be racist, discriminatory and still wrong in 99.99% of all cases. The price is too high.

I know pretty much nothing about the case Winston mentions, but I hope these "terrorist suspects" were asked to leave the plane for creating a stir, not for being terrorist suspects. That would just be embarrassingly silly (and even if this was "set up", the reactions as described in the letter above would prove them right).
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#4 User is offline   Robert 

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Posted 2006-December-04, 22:30

Hi everyone

Maybe before 9-11 six men might take over a plane with a box cutter or a seat extender. If I had to act alone, it would not take place again except over my dead body. I think that there might just be a couple of more Americans around that would also object in the strongest possible terms.

I saw comments about this same flight on another forum. It seemed to be a possible 'set up' according to information posted on that site. I shall await more facts before I decide, however, I will not be surprised 'if' someone is 'jerking our chain.'

I faced bayonets in basic training, so I guess that a seat extender would not cause any real terror.

We let certain elements on several planes and lost the Twin Towers as a result. If we are more careful now, perhaps those several thousand dead give us a reason to be slightly more careful.

Regards,
Robert(ex-U.S. Army)
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#5 User is offline   Al_U_Card 

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Posted 2006-December-05, 06:05

"He who lives by the sword, dies by the sword." How sad.

The "Pax Romana" was in fact economic prosperity, the soldiers were there to keep theft down to a "tolerable" minimum.

Unfortunately, for the U.S. to successfully "democratize" the world, their culture of openness and excess would have done the job had the greed of certain individuals not got in the way.

The Chinese will be next on the list. They will "economize" the world and who knows, perhaps I will be able to learn Mandarin before I need to learn Portugese.
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#6 User is offline   hrothgar 

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Posted 2006-December-05, 08:00

Here's a bit of background information.

The incident in question happened on a flight from Minneapolis MN to Phoenix AZ on November 20th. Six Muslim clerics were traveling to a meeting of the North American Imam's Federation to discuss improving cultural understanding between Muslims and the rest of American society. The clerics were handcuffed and lead from the plane after engaging in "suspicious" activities.

I've looked over the account and some of the commentaries surrounding it. I'm pretty comfortable in saying that the entire situation strikes me as idiotic.

One the one hand, I don't believe that the clerics were doing anything particularly suspicious. Most of the "evidence" against them is easily explained by the fact that the individuals in question happened to be traveling to the same conference, but booked their flights separately. In addition to this, the Imams had the affrontary to speak in Arabic, talk on the phone, and even pray. This isn't the sort of thing that you want to do in the presence of narrow minded bigots.

On the other hand, I question whether the Imams were particularly wise to have pulled out prayer rugs in the middle of an airport. I'm not sure how much choice they had with respect to time or place, however that was just asking for trouble.
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#7 User is offline   mike777 

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Posted 2006-December-05, 12:16

In early 2002 I was the last person to board for a flight. I had been searched twice at the gate which was why I was the last person to board. As I entered the plane I was asked my name and where I was flying too. I told them. I was surrounded and asked why my boarding pass had another name, a female one and was a ticket to another city that this plane was not flying too. I told them I had no idea the agent ten feet away gave me this boarding pass. Turns out they gave me the boarding pass with someone elses name at the gate next door to my gate!

As for this incident the facts seem to be in great dispute it seems much more than just praying may or may not have been involved.
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#8 Guest_Jlall_*

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Posted 2006-December-05, 13:54

As a young dark skinned male who frequently travels alone and sometimes sports a beard it will come as no shock that I have been randomly searched, scrutinized with questioning, strip searched, and delayed before so perhaps I am biased but this whole thing seems completely crazy to me.

Let's see, I wonder what this woman's attitude is in general. This quote just about sums it up: "They fail to accept the fact that what happened to them on flight 300 was a direct result of their own people’s hateful behavior on 911." LOL. What a joke. I doubt she even knows whether these people were american citizens or not. The fact that they speak in arabic doesn't suggest they aren't... my father speaks in hindi with his family. This is perfectly rational when you grew up speaking in that language and are around others who also did. She also refers to "them" and "us" frequently. Basically this woman is clearly a hysterical racist.

Then you have some of her claims. People were "uncomfortable." Well, that is because they're prejudiced. A man overheard them say the words terrorist and allah? I didn't know terrorist was an arabic word...didn't she say they weren't speaking in english? And this wasn't the person who allegedly knew the language, it was just someone who was very uncomfortable. And imagine a cleric saying Allah...what a shocker.

The evidence against these men is entirely circumstantial and fear based. You can make anything out of any situation, humans are very good at detecting paterns, but when it comes down to it this is a complete witch hunt.
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#9 User is offline   Rain 

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Posted 2006-December-05, 15:03

I'm going to pray on my next flight. Hope I don't get arrested. :)
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#10 User is offline   mike777 

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Posted 2006-December-05, 16:48

Rain, on Dec 5 2006, 04:03 PM, said:

I'm going to pray on my next flight. Hope I don't get arrested.  :)

Are you suggesting if you start praying out loud to Allah in a foreign language with a group of passengers on a western airline you will be shocked and sue if they call the flight attendant? May be a good way to make money fast because it will happen if you fly often enough on a plane full of tourists.
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#11 User is offline   cherdano 

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Posted 2006-December-05, 17:06

Btw, it is interesting to search on news.google.com for this incident. Many links come from apparently extremist websites ("How the Imams Terrorized an Airliner").

I agree with Justin that the letter quoted by Winston shows clear, if possibly unconscious, racism. (Or implicit stereotypes at the very least, as psychologists would call it.)
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#12 User is offline   mike777 

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Posted 2006-December-05, 17:36

Racism exists in so many forms....heck you can be born and raised in Germany and not be allowed to become a citizen...:) Of course this is true in many countries.
Bloodlines matter in a heck of alot of countries..see Japan...

See religion in....
See most of Africa.....southern Asia..etc etc.....
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#13 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2006-December-05, 20:09

Jlall, on Dec 5 2006, 02:54 PM, said:

As a young dark skinned male who frequently travels alone and sometimes sports a beard it will come as no shock that I have been randomly searched, scrutinized with questioning, strip searched, and delayed before so perhaps I am biased but this whole thing seems completely crazy to me.

Let's see, I wonder what this woman's attitude is in general. This quote just about sums it up: "They fail to accept the fact that what happened to them on flight 300 was a direct result of their own people’s hateful behavior on 911." LOL. What a joke. I doubt she even knows whether these people were american citizens or not. The fact that they speak in arabic doesn't suggest they aren't... my father speaks in hindi with his family. This is perfectly rational when you grew up speaking in that language and are around others who also did. She also refers to "them" and "us" frequently. Basically this woman is clearly a hysterical racist.

Then you have some of her claims. People were "uncomfortable." Well, that is because they're prejudiced. A man overheard them say the words terrorist and allah? I didn't know terrorist was an arabic word...didn't she say they weren't speaking in english? And this wasn't the person who allegedly knew the language, it was just someone who was very uncomfortable. And imagine a cleric saying Allah...what a shocker.

The evidence against these men is entirely circumstantial and fear based. You can make anything out of any situation, humans are very good at detecting paterns, but when it comes down to it this is a complete witch hunt.

Justin, your point is well taken and I agree some of this is hysterics.

There is another side, though.

Regardless of right or wrong, it was a poor choice for these 6 clerics to chose a flight that coincided with prayers at the airport.

Coming in as an obvious group and then sitting by what appeared by choice separated in the airplane would raise concerns.

Asking for seat extenders when not needed is admitedly odd.

However, none of this should matter - security had cleared these people to fly on this aircraft - the only option available should have been for those uncomfortable to change their flights and not the other way around.

Because what you say is right - uncomfortable feeling come from within, reactions or feelings about a situation. The correct response would be if uncomfortable with the situation, leave, change flights, take a bus, whatever, but not to force others to change their actions to modify your feelings. To insist other alter their behavior to fit your world view is the heart of bigotry, a masquerade for control.
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#14 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2006-December-05, 20:20

hrothgar, on Dec 5 2006, 09:00 AM, said:

Here's a bit of background information.

The incident in question happened on a flight from Minneapolis MN to Phoenix AZ on November 20th.  Six Muslim clerics were traveling to a meeting of the North American Imam's Federation to discuss improving cultural understanding between Muslims and the rest of American society.  The clerics were handcuffed and lead from the plane after engaging in "suspicious" activities.

I've looked over the account and some of the commentaries surrounding it.  I'm pretty comfortable in saying that the entire situation strikes me as idiotic.

One the one hand, I don't believe that the clerics were doing anything particularly suspicious.  Most of the "evidence" against them is easily explained by the fact that the individuals in question happened to be traveling to the same conference, but booked their flights separately.  In addition to this, the Imams had the affrontary to speak in Arabic, talk on the phone, and even pray.  This isn't the sort of thing that you want to do in the presence of narrow minded bigots. 

On the other hand, I question whether the Imams were particularly wise to have pulled out prayer rugs in the middle of an airport.  I'm not sure how much choice they had with respect to time or place, however that was just asking for trouble.

I agree. Furthermore, isn't this a form of vigilanteeism? If the laws cleared these clerics for takeoff, how can anyone force them off the plane without making a citizen's arrest and thereby opening themselves up to legal consequences?

It is true that they may have been some oddities - poor choice for sure to time trip to coincide with prayers at the airport. The lapbelt extenders, if true, is surely odd.

Regardless, as I replied to Justin, the solution is either to make a citizen's arrest or leave. Any other action is a mockery of the law.
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#15 User is offline   hrothgar 

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Posted 2006-December-05, 20:29

Winstonm, on Dec 6 2006, 05:09 AM, said:


>Coming in as an obvious group and then sitting by what appeared by choice >separated in the airplane would raise concerns.

How often do you fly? People get separated at checkin all the time. Unless the plane is empty the odds that five or six people are going to get ajoining seats are somewhere between slim and none.

>Regardless of right or wrong, it was a poor choice for these 6 clerics to chose
>a flight that coincided with prayers at the airport.

I'm not sure whether the clerics had much choice here. Islam requires daily prayer five times each day at fairly set intervals. Prayer takes place during the early morning, noon, mid-afternoon, evening, sunset and evening. A devout muslim who is about to take a long flight might not have much choice about praying in the airport.

The US is a very racist society. The far right is trying to use fear of the "other" to drum up political support. Take a look at the commentary on the internet surrounding this letter. Worse yet, look at the witch hunt over the fact that Keith Ellison wants to use the Koran rather than the Bible during a photo op. These idiots are scared shitless and acting completely irrationally...

Personally, I find it interesting to note that the last attempted suicide bombing here in the US was committed by a devout Christian trying to take down an abortion clinic.
http://www.thephoeni...ektid28087.aspx

Of course we never see much discussion about our own homebreed nut jobs...
Alderaan delenda est
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#16 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2006-December-05, 20:45

Quote

How often do you fly? People get separated at checkin all the time. Unless the plane is empty the odds that five or six people are going to get ajoining seats are somewhere between slim and none.


Totally agree...note in my post I said "what appeared" as a reference to the letter writer who stated the clerics boarded together and had a choice of seats. I do not know if the letter writer is correct or not, as other than Southwest (changing I think), seats are assigned.

Quote

I'm not sure whether the clerics had much choice here


Again, I have no quibble and do not claim to know if a choice was available. It is certainly just as possible they had no option but to take a flight that coincided with the prayers.

And of course the letter is slanted by the letter writer's own fears and bigotry, so we have to factor that into account as well. From what I got from the letter, she was simply trying to show that to her perception it wasn't as clear and dried as the story shown on the news.

I do think the letter shows without question how powerful is propoganda about terrorists, whether it is a real threat or an contrived, convenient threat. The constant repetition about the war on terror and terroist threats has worked. It is obvious to me this women is terrified of Muslims.
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#17 User is offline   mike777 

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Posted 2006-December-05, 20:59

More of this issue on tv tonight. The facts are really in dispute.

If you are sure of the facts in this case and care to make an opinion fine.

My best guess is this sort of thing will just throw the airlines back into bankruptcy with all the lawsuits on both sides.
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#18 User is offline   cherdano 

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Posted 2006-December-05, 21:50

Winstonm, on Dec 6 2006, 04:09 AM, said:

Asking for seat extenders when not needed is admitedly odd.

Quiz question, you get 30 seconds: What could you use a seat extender for?

A:
Spoiler
Excellent idea in fact, I may use it in future flights.
The easiest way to count losers is to line up the people who talk about loser count, and count them. -Kieran Dyke
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#19 User is offline   glen 

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Posted 2006-December-05, 22:06

Let's take a look at that letter...
[quote]November 21, 2006

US Airways Airline

To all news stations concerned:[/quote]
To "all news stations concerned"?

[quote]Having been on the plane, witnessed what transpired first hand and talked at great length with the first class steward regarding other facts
...
The facts reported are incomplete and inaccurate.[/quote]
...now we skip a whole pile of ranting, to get to ..

[quote]These are the correct facts:

The airline employee taking tickets reported to the crew that she felt very uncomfortable with the men and so she engaged one of them in a conversation to feel him out. I assume he spoke English to her in their conversation. She stated she felt uncomfortable with them and she felt they were extreme fundamentalists. [/quote]First, this passenger did not hear this converstation. Next, how would the ticket agent determine they were extreme fundamentalists?
[quote]Several passengers observed the men praying and chanting near the gate prior to boarding. They were sitting apart from everyone else, behind the wall which stands behind the ticket counter at the gate. I was eating dinner while they were praying and chanting and did not observe this part, but spoke with a passenger, after we disembarked who has observed this.

If it is their custom to pray at a certain time each day at sunset, they know this in advance and easily could have taken the 7pm flight, two hours later, doing their prayers prior to arriving at the airport. One question is: were they intentionally trying to create fear in the passengers by praying loudly in public, hoping to get removed from the plane?[/quote]"If it is their custom to pray at a certain time each day at sunset..." - what do you mean, If? How about Since it is their custom...
[quote]I took a seat next to the men about 20 minutes prior to boarding. (I had been having dinner earlier and did not observe their prayers.)

They spoke no English while seated next to me only Arabic, or what ever language they speak. One of the gentlemen acted very intense and nervous. He was on one phone call the entire time talking very fast while he paced back and forth in front of me. I said nothing to anyone about this, but was later told by first class passengers that this same conversation continued for at least another hour from his front row seat in first class. A man in the third row of first class told me he had a very uncomfortable feeling about this man.[/quote] the unfomfortable feeling due to the long phone call in non-English?

[quote]Their seating arrangement was very unusual and it raised a red flag to the crew. Only one of the 6 sat in first class, with the telephone, although they were all together. The rest sat in coach. The second one sat in the first row of coach in front of me; I think another mid way back in the plane and the rest in the very rear of the plane. They were there early enough to get seats together but chose to spread out.

Another strange thing the crew noticed was the way they boarded. When they made the call for first class passengers the other 5 boarded as well.

The one in first class, which had been on the telephone, did not stay seated in his first class seat, but walked back to the rear of the plane twice to talk to his friends, during the delay.[/quote] So "same conversation continued for at least another hour from his front row seat in first class" and this same man also walked back to the rear of the plane twice to talk?

[quote]One of the passengers sitting close to them in the rear of the plane overheard their conversation and became very nervous. I believe he may have been the one who sent the note up to the crew and captain. I was told later that there was mention of Allah and the word terrorists in their conversation.[/quote]Okay, so the guy heard Allah and terrorists in their foreign language conversation, but that's all he understood?

[quote]A woman passenger, who understood their language, indicated they were making slanderous remarks about the American people, thinking no one would know what they were saying. This raised concern also.[/quote]Now when did this women indicate this - did she stand up and say this to her fellow passengers? If the guy who heard Allah and terrorists passed the note up, did this woman give no note? Did she hear the word terrorists? Do terrorists even mention they are terrorists?

[quote]The most suspicious thing, which has not yet been mentioned on the news, and needs to come out publicly, is the fact that the man in the first class front row asked for and was given a seat belt extender as did one of the men in the rear of the plane.

This can be confirmed by the male steward serving first class on the flight. The strange and totally unexplainable thing about this request by them was the fact that neither of these men was fat enough to even need an extender strap for their seatbelt in the first place and the crew noticed that they not even put it on but placed them on the floor by their feet. Why ask for them and not use them, especially if you don’t even need one?

I was a witness to the seat belt extender on the floor in first class, as the steward asked me to hand him so he could show it to the FBI and the Police. It was a totally detachable strap about 18" in length that could easily be used as a noose around a flight attendant or passenger’s neck to create a hostage situation on the plane.

With one in the back of the plane and another in the front and their people positioned in between they were perfectly positioned to take control of the entire plane with out any weapons.[/quote]Umm, not the "entire plane" - they could take 50 hostages and the pilots would not open the door. They were actually "perfectly positioned" to be shot by air marshals, or just beaten up by "several hundred" other passengers, who feeling uncomfortable, might have wanted to take some action as soon as the double "seat belt extender" attack began.

[quote]The captain, crew, police and FBI all obviously also felt this was a real possibility when combined with the note passed to them by an obviously shaken man who had heard some of their conversation.[/quote]The police and FBI are not yet involved when the "real possibility" was determined.

[quote]Any potential law suits from these people are totally unfounded and ludicrous.[/quote]Hold on, does this letter writer work for a law firm for the airline?

[quote]I can only determine two possible scenarios:

Either they were planning to use the seat belt extenders to subdue hostages and take over the plane and were caught by their suspicious activities…

Or, it was done intentionally to induce suspicion and make a big public fuss to intimidate security at the airports.[/quote]That's it - only these possible two scenarios?

The latest news appears to be here, at the moment:

[url="http://washingtontimes.com/national/20061205-112831-5995r.htm"]Washington Times[/url]
'I hit my peak at seven' Taylor Swift
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#20 User is offline   Robert 

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Posted 2006-December-06, 01:17

Hi everyone

He who lives by the sword dies by the sword.

He who finds himself 'without' a sword had better have a gun 'if' the other person has a sword and intends to use it.

If you want peace, prepare for war.

Roman matrons told their men to 'come back carrying your shield or on it.' This custom declined, so did Rome.

Maybe a decent army is not all that bad of an idea. Certainly Poland in 1939 or France(plus other assorted nations) in 1940 would have been better off 'if' they had defeated the Nazi war machine. Russia just barely had the army needed(after tens of millions of war dead) to defeat the Nazi war machine in four years of bloodly fighting.

The police appear to back up the airline on this story from at least one newspaper. I will not say that whatever you read is the paper is true, however, some of it might be true.

Regards,
Robert
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