From out of nowhere... HARVARD PROF PROMOTES GOVT INFILTRATION OF 9/11 TRUTH!!

Obama staffer wants ‘cognitive infiltration’ of 9/11 conspiracy groups
See the paper on "Conspiracy Theories" by two Harvard Law profs here.
Here's an ominous sounding, but in fact probably just laughable, excerpt:
We suggest several policy responses that can dampen the supply of conspiracy theorizing, in part by introducing diverse viewpoints and new factual assumptions into the hard-core groups that produce such theories. Our principal claim here involves the potential value of cognitive infiltration of extremist groups, designed to introduce informational diversity into such groups and to expose indefensible conspiracy theories as such.
Of course, we know two things--that this is exactly what some people (fake truthers) are doing, and second that it is always pretty obvious to most serious truthers what the disinfo is. Doesn't say much for the intellectual calibre of law school profs--remember who is also one--Alan Dershowitz.
What I think is even more interesting is that per the link above, this paper quietly came out in 2008 and is only now being brought to light by a few "conspiracy sites" like Prison Planet, 911Blogger, etc. And only about a week ago, Jon Gold (prophetically?) posted this at TrueFaction:
Pretty obviously hinting at the answer that is now being provided--"these people" are government infiltrators! Sowing division and disruption! Fascinating, as always, to see such obvious machinations at play, especially when they involve people (Harvard Law profs) in RT's own backyard!
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Interesting trivia...
Cass Sunstein, Doug Feith, and Ben Bernanke all graduated from Harvard College in 1975... Sunstein was a member of the Harvard Lampoon--more a social club than a humor magazine, but still--maybe he's trying to be funny in his paper?
more interesting trivia on Sunstein
He married a college sweetheart, Lisa Ruddick, and they both coincidentally started teaching at UChicago in 1981.
See here: http://abovethelaw.com/2008/02/the_real_reason_cass_sunsteins_1.php for some more interesting personal history, including the (real) reason he came to Harvard! Here's a random quote:
"If one of the parties were to speak about the break-up, we’d guess it would be Professor Nussbaum. She seems quite comfortable with sharing details of her private life. See, e.g., this “power couple” profile, in 02138 magazine:
Nussbaum says about Sunstein, “I guess what’s so surprising and so great is that he combines qualities: He’s brilliant, he’s dazzling, he’s aggressively masculine and has a tremendous level of emotional articulateness.”"
Uncanny... good catch.
I wish I had thought to document it at the time but it was one of those things that made me raise an eyebrow but then faded into the background. This trope -- the bolded, all-caps "who are these people?!" -- was posted by Gold several times in the weeks just prior to the discussion of this paper. I believe one other instance was among the posts that were purged when Adam Syed deleted his post about an OCT v. 2.0 over at blogger. In retrospect, it DOES seem like pre-emptive manuevering, perhaps intended to to deflect attention from one group that sounds very much like it fits the bill.
And btw...
"Crippled epistemology" sounds like a pitch-perfect description of one standard tactic employed by the fake truth crowd. We don't KNOW what happened on 9/11! That's why we need a NEW INVESTIGATION. [/whiny voice] The fact that some elements of the OCT are accepted without evidence is obscured, and the individual's confidence in her own perceptions (about the manner of destruction of the WTC, for example, as revealed in the video record) is undermined.
uncanny
I've never heard of Crippled Epistemology but your description is spot on.
The obvious demolition of WTC 7 changes everything. I'm insulted when people claim that 'we don't know what happened on 9/11'. Yea we do. Someone, not Muslims terrorists, planned 9/11 to make it appear that Muslim terrorists were responsible. They planted incriminating evidence against "Muslims", planted explosives in WTC 1, 2 and 7, and engineered the hijacking diversion to hide the obvious demolitions.
When Jon Gold, LooseNuke, Victronix, Jim and the 911Blogger crew lambaste others because they focus on a possible staged Pentagon attack or possible fake cell phone calls on 9/11/2001, it's insulting...a slap in the face that defies common sense.
It only makes sense that these events were staged. When you take the next step and look at the evidence, the case is made even stronger that these events, like the others, were staged.
right on
the "you don't know what happened on 9/11--NO one does" line of Jon Gold's is something he repeats so often that it seems to be part of the script he gets from his handlers...
I wanted to do some reading
I wanted to do some reading on "crippled epistemology" and after a Google search, the first page I landed on was:
What a coincidence that the first paragraph mentions a guy I'd never heard of until yesterday:
There are books which give one a profound Aha! experience. Cass Sunstein’s splendid book Why Societies Need Dissent combined with a concept used in the book but taken from an article (The Crippled Epistemology of Extremism [pdf]) provided me which such an experience.
Inklings of what Sunstein covers I had already worked out for myself in general terms, but he provides a much more precise vocabulary and backing from a sleigh of empirical studies I had no idea existed.
well..
I guess it's not so much of a coincidence. All results on this search mention Sustein which is probably why you brought it up? Interesting interesting reading.
puff piece on Sunstein from Harvard Crimson
http://www.thecrimson.com/article/2009/2/11/cass-r-sunstein-75-in-the/
Cass R. Sunstein ’75
By Joseph P. Shivers, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER
Published: Wednesday, February 11, 2009
In the trivia game known as “Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon,” the object is to start with a random actor, link to one of that actor’s co-stars, and then—in only five more steps—get to the ubiquitous actor Kevin Bacon. In 2007, two Vanderbilt professors set out to find Bacon’s legal scholar analogue: someone famous who collaborates often in a variety of genres and who gives no sign of slowing down anytime soon.
The man they selected is today’s most frequently cited legal scholar in America, the author of over 500 works including more than 15 books, a constitutional law expert whose interests range from how public policy can improve one’s life to how the online coalescence of like-minded groups can stifle dialogue and undermine democracy. He is Cass R. Sunstein ’75, President Barack H. Obama’s nominee for the head of the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, informally known as the regulatory czar. Under the new administration, Sunstein will have the task of supervising regulations from health care to the environment.
From the moment that Sunstein entered the Middlesex School, a preparatory school in Concord, Mass., in eighth grade, he seemed destined to excel in all aspects of student life. By his senior year, he was co-editor of the student newspaper, The Anvil, editor-in-chief of the yearbook, and a national-caliber squash player, having learned to play while at the school.
Middlesex classmate Robert E. Harvey recalls that Sunstein “was working so much that he wasn’t hanging out with an awful lot of people all the time.” Sunstein’s closest friend at Middlesex, Craig B. McArdle ’75, recalls the day before their graduation, when he asked Sunstein to play squash with him. He said that while sitting at his typewriter in his magazine-strewn room, Sunstein refused, declaring, “too much play and too little work makes Cass a dull boy.”
According to McArdle, such occurrences were common, especially during Sunstein’s years as an upperclassman when he decided to focus on writing. “He had this weird thing where he’d be hunched over the typewriter kind of like Glenn Gould over the piano,” says McArdle. “He’d type with one finger on each hand, incredibly fast. He’d just be concentrating, so focused, it was like somebody watching TV. You’d have to say [his name] several times to get his attention.”
After graduating with Middlesex’s highest honors, Sunstein brought his intellectual curiosity and his Advanced Placement credits to Harvard in the fall of 1972, where he set out on an Advanced Standing track in English. A Currier resident, Sunstein belonged to the Hasty Pudding and the Lampoon, a semi-secret Sorrento Square social organization that used to occasionally publish a so-called humor magazine.
Kurt E. Andersen ’76, a novelist, political writer, and former ’Poon editor, remembers Sunstein as “a dry and funny writer,” with “a kind of rigor in his work not true of everybody then or now.” Despite Sunstein’s humor, the castle never quite became his natural home. “He always seemed to me slightly abashed at the entire Lampoon thing,” says Andersen about the teetotaling undergrad. “I had a sense that he didn’t quite know what he was getting into.”
One area of undergraduate life that Sunstein seemed not to struggle with was romance. According to McArdle, most Middlesex graduates entered college with a distinct uneasiness around the opposite sex, but Sunstein managed to overcome this with his natural charms. McArdle recalls that Sunstein was “in many ways...kind of a chick magnet because he had this very innocent look and was bright.”
It was not until his third and senior year at Harvard that he decided to enter law school instead of pursuing English graduate work, Sunstein said in a 2008 interview with Fifteen Minutes. “I thought that law would have more opportunities and that you could take a lot of different paths if you went into law,” he said.
Despite his busy schedule, Sunstein remained well-known and well-liked by his classmates. “He was a very, very hard worker,” says Hugh C. Fortmiller, Jr. ’56, Sunstein’s English teacher and senior year academic advisor, “but he also had time to be a friend and an amusing conversationalist ... but he had a hell of a lot of responsibilities.”
Upon graduation from Harvard Law School in 1978, Sunstein clerked for Thurgood Marshall and later became a professor at the University of Chicago Law School, where he befriended Obama. Last year he left the University of Chicago to return to Cambridge and took up a post advising Obama during his presidential campaign. David A. Schkade, a professor at the University of California, San Diego, says he marveled at Sunstein’s work ethic, having worked with him to study the unpredictability of punitive damages in legal cases. “We’d have a conversation on Thursday and by Saturday night there’d be a 15-page draft in an e-mail,” he said.
One thing that has remained constant in Sunstein’s life is his love of squash. In 2008, Sunstein said that he played three to four times per week. The sport gave him chances to learn the power of colorful analogy from legendary coach Jack Barnaby ’32, to predict other players’ moves, and, in Sunstein’s first year at HLS, to achieve national supremacy by upsetting what then-assistant-coach David R. Fish ’72 called a “juggernaut of a Princeton team.”
Despite his cross-disciplinary excellence, Sunstein seems to generate goodwill among his colleagues and even his competitors. Harvey amicably recalls coming in second to Sunstein in the election for yearbook editor at Middlesex. “I’m very amused by that,” Harvey says, “because I’m not the second-most cited law professor in the United States.”