Sunday, July 24, 2005
Don't They Call Those Red Flags?
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5744,16034303%5E7583,00.html
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WITH hindsight, the defining encounter of the age was not between Mohammed Atta's jet and the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001, but that between Mohammed Atta and Johnelle Bryant a year earlier. Bryant is an official with the US Department of Agriculture in Florida, and the late Atta had gone to see her about getting a $US650,000 government loan to convert a plane into the world's largest crop-duster. A novel idea.I dunno but if I was a government official and denied a man like that a loan for a giant "crop duster" afterwhich he then threatened to slit my throat and then asked if how I would like it if Washington D.C. was destroyed I would really think of that as a red flag that he might not have good intentions.
The meeting got off to a rocky start when Atta refused to deal with Bryant because she was but a woman. But, after this unpleasantness had been smoothed out, things went swimmingly. When it was explained to him that, alas, he wouldn't get the 650 grand in cash that day, Atta threatened to cut Bryant's throat. He then pointed to a picture behind her desk showing an aerial view of downtown Washington - the White House, the Pentagon et al - and asked: "How would America like it if another country destroyed that city and some of the monuments in it?"
But maybe that is why I'm not a government official.
