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Just a couple of Arab businessmen. The BFD. Photoshop by Lushington Brady.

With the recent anniversary of the 9/11 horror, the usual conspiracy theories got a fresh airing on social media. But there’s one stunning fact about 9/11 that gets almost no mention — and it’s no conspiracy theory. It’s hard, indisputable fact.

Political correctness killed thousands of Americans.

This is not some sort of “racist”, right-wing conspiracy rant. It’s as undeniably true as the admitted fact that political correctness let tens of thousands of underage British girls — all whites or Sikhs — be raped, systematically and repeatedly, for decades by gangs of Pakistani Muslim men. Every official who was in a position to stop it knew that it was going on — but refused to do anything.

Again, not a conspiracy theory: police, social workers, politicians, have all admitted that they knew what was happening, but turned a blind eye because they didn’t want to be labelled “racist” or “Islamophobic”.

On 11 September, 2001, someone else didn’t want to get smeared as “Islamophobic”. Thousands of Americans died as a consequence.

Michael Tuohey was going to work like he had for 37 years, but little did he know that this day would change his life forever. On September 11, 2001, Tuohey, a ticket agent for U.S. Airways, checked in terrorist Mohammed Atta for a flight that started a chain of events that would change history.

Atta, in case you forgot, was the ringleader of the 9/11 attacks. If he’d been stopped at the airport gate, history would have been very, very different.

Atta didn’t get past security because he was completely innocuous. Quite the opposite.

Tuohey was working the U.S. Airways first-class check-in desk when two men, Atta and his companion Abdul Azziz-Alomari, approached his counter. From all outward appearances, the men seemed to be normal businessmen, but Tuohey felt something was wrong.

Instead of acting on the alarm bells going off in his head, Tuohey did a mental u-turn. Because he’d been conditioned by political correctness to ignore those alarm bells.

“I got an instant chill when I looked at [Atta]. I got this grip in my stomach and then, of course, I gave myself a political correct slap…I thought, ‘My God, Michael, these are just a couple of Arab businessmen.'”

But, in his gut, Tuohey knew they weren’t.

Just a couple of Arab businessmen. The BFD. Photoshop by Lushington Brady.
“It just sent chills through you. You see his picture in the paper (now). You see more life in that picture than there is in flesh and blood,” Tuohey said.

Then Tuohey went through an internal debate that still haunts him.

“I said to myself, ‘If this guy doesn’t look like an Arab terrorist, then nothing does.’ […]

It wasn’t just Atta’s demeanor that caught Tuohey’s attention.

“When I looked at their tickets, they had first-class, one-way tickets – $2,500 tickets. Very unusual,” he said. “I guess they’re not coming back.”

Guess what? They weren’t.

Neither were 3000 Americans.

If not for political correctness, they probably would have.

Then I gave myself a mental slap, because in this day and age, it’s not nice to say things like this,” he said. “You’ve checked in hundreds of Arabs and Hindus and Sikhs, and you’ve never done that. I felt kind of embarrassed.”

Steve Sailer: iSteve

In other words, he knew he wasn’t being “racist” or “Islamophobic”. He’d checked in “hundreds of Arabs and Hindus and Sikhs” and never seen the red flags he instantly did with Atta. That should have been enough to act.

Political correctness is a Muslim rapist or terrorist’s greatest ally.

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