George Stephanopoulos Hosts 9/11 Truther Jesse Ventura to Rant About 'Nazi' U.S. Government
For the second time in less than six months, Good Morning America
offered 9/11 truther Jesse Ventura a platform to hype his conspiracy
theories and smear the U.S. government as "Nazi." This occurred
on the same day
that GMA reporter Bianna Golodryga hit Republicans for having
connections to birthers and wondered when the President will "fight
back" against such charges.
In contrast, although co-host George Stephanopoulos did press Ventura
on his conspiratorial beliefs, he also joked around with the former
Minnesota governor. At one point, he fawned,
"You've had such a varied career. You were even once on a soap opera. Young and the Restless." Stephanopoulos then played a clip of the former politician on that show.
Ventura appeared on GMA to promote his book
63 Documents the Government Doesn't Want You to Read.
He slammed the U.S. government by attacking, "There are dedicated,
patriotic people in government, but when you read this book, the scary
part of this book for me,
you could substitute the word Nazi and it would work." Stephanopoulos just moved on to his next question.
In
fairness, the GMA anchor did grill Ventura. At one point, he sputtered,
"I [have] a hard time believing that you actually believe" 9/11
conspiracy theories. Stephanopoulos challenged the actor over his
contention that Osama bin Laden wasn't involved in the attacks on the
World Trade Center
Yet, why does ABC giving Ventura opportunities to promote such claims?
Stephanopoulos hosted the former wrestler on October 13, 2010 and asked
similar questions, including "I was struck, you know, you're looking at
all kinds of different conspiracies, but I was struck especially by
something you said that, about 9/11...You say that many clues that are
out there, have not been, would lead you to different conclusions."
A transcript of the April 4 segment, which aired at 8:50am EDT, follows:
GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: But, let's get right into to it.
JESSE VENTURA: Sure.
STEPHANOPOULOS: Because we talked about this a little bit your last
time on the show as well. This whole idea that you have some documents
which you say at least reinforce the idea that the government has
advance knowledge that 9/11 could happen-
VENTURA: Absolutely.
STEPHANOPOULOS: -and didn't work to stop it. Now, I find a hard time [sic] believing that you actually believe that.
VENTURA: Why? They- I'm a Vietnam veteran and they lied to me about the
Gulf of Tonkin incident and that was the false flag operation that put
us into the Vietnam War where 58,000 of my generation were killed. And
now, I was teaching at Harvard when McNamara came through and admitted
it never happened. False flag operations, if you go through history,
happen all the time before these wars.
STEPHANOPOULOS: But, that's very different from saying that the
government knew 9/11 was coming, knew the planes were coming and didn't
try to stop it.
VENTURA: Well, take a look at my book. It's no more shocking than our
government going down to Nicaragua and infecting hundreds of people with
syphilis to see if penicillin works. George, let me state this, there
are great people that work in government. There are dedicated, patriotic
people in government, but when you read this book, the scary part of
this book for me, you could substitute the word Nazi and it would work.
STEPHANOPOULOS: But, the documents you use on 9/11 show- There's one
document that suggests that tower seven fell down faster than it could
have fallen just by natural-
VENTURA: It doesn't suggest it, it says it. It said it fell at free fall-
STEPHANOPOULOS: So, then you say-
VENTURA: Wait a minute. That means you gotta defy the laws of physics.
That means that everything was removed in which for anything to fall at
free fall-
STEPHANOPOULOS: But you make that leap to then the idea that it was demolished by explosives inside by the government.
VENTURA: I don't make- I don't make a leap. Why didn't they check for
explosives- they never did- if not to eliminate them? They didn't do
that. This book, this book is all documents that are all out in the
public domain. I'm not Wikileaks. I didn't steal anything. You just
gotta find them and there are documents here so disturbing, like the
CIA's assassination manual. Excuse me? Assassination is just a nice word
for first degree murder. And we have a manual that tells how to do it
and everything about it? As far as I know, George, first degree murder
is illegal in every country in the world.
STEPHANOPOULOS: But, aren't there some cases where it would be
justified? A tyrant who is killing hundreds of thousands of people?
VENTURA: Who makes the call? I'll say this too about, if we go back to
bin Laden, why haven't we indicted him? That gives us reason to go get
him. We haven't indicted him. The government has never come forward,
convened a grand jury, presented one shred of evidence that he did it,
officially and get an indictment.
STEPHANOPOULOS: So, you don't believe he was behind it either?
VENTURA: I don't know. But my government has lied to me so often, they've lost their credibility with me, George.
STEPHANOPOULOS: And you do have the documents you say support some of these theories.
VENTURA: Well, and the good thing about this book, it's not me telling
you about the documents. I give you my opinion. But then we reprint
every document, so the reader can read for themselves.
STEPHANOPOULOS: I want to switch gears. You've had such a varied
career. You were even once on a soap opera. Young and the Restless.
[Ventura laughs.]
[Cut to clip of Young and the Restless where Ventura is talking about running for President.]
STEPHANOPOULOS: How about 2012? No way?
VENTURA: I will tell you this, if Ron Paul runs as an independent, I
would give great consideration to being his running mate. As you see, I
dedicated this book to Congressman Ron Paul.
STEPHANOPOULOS: Not if he runs as a- not if he runs as a Republican?
VENTURA: Never. I will not be a Democrat or a Republican. They are the
problem not the solution. We need to abolish political parties in this
country.
STEPHANOPOULOS: You got a couple Republicans coming from your state, Michele Bachmann and Tim Pawlenty.
VENTURA: Well, Michele Bachmann is actually my congresswoman. I live in her district.
STEPHANOPOULOS: And? Could she be president?
VENTURA: Not with my vote she won't be. [Laughs.]
STEPHANOPOULOS: Okay, Jesse Ventura. Thanks very much for coming and giving your candid views this morning.
— Scott Whitlock is the senior news analyst for the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter.