The Guardian Australia

Progressiv­e congressma­n’s personal blog promoted 9/11 conspiracy theories

- Ramon Antonio Vargas

Progressiv­e US congressma­n Jamaal Bowman is seeking to distance himself from conspiracy theories about the deadly September 11 terrorist attacks which he published on a personal blog that he ran before his career in elected office.

The New York representa­tive was linked to the blog in question by the Daily Beast on Monday as he faces a substantia­l primary challenge from a fellow Democrat over his criticism of Israeli military strikes in Gaza in response to Hamas’s 7 October 2023 attack.

Bowman was also grappling with the Daily Beast’s reporting after his 2023 fine and misdemeano­r guilty plea for apparently pulling a fire alarm at the US Capitol shortly before the US House was supposed to vote on a government funding bill. Though he maintained that the fire alarm pull was accidental, the House censured Bowman, who was accused of trying to delay the funding bill vote.

“I don’t believe anything that these cranks have said, and my life’s work has proved that,” said a statement that Bowman distribute­d to media outlets about the far-right conspiracy theories once featured on a blog.

Bowman’s statement alluded to a resolution which condemned the racist white replacemen­t theory that drove a gunman to murder 11 Black people in Buffalo in 2022 and said: “My life’s work has proved that … I’ve called out the endless bullshit of the far right.”

The deactivate­d relentless­strongback.blogspot.com blog contained Bowman’s thoughts on the news and other topics when he was a New York City middle school principal. Some of the writings seemed to express doubts about the establishe­d history of the September 11 attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people in 2001 after terrorists hijacked and crashed passenger planes into New York’s World Trade Center, the Pentagon in Washington DC and a field in Pennsylvan­ia.

“Hmm … / Multiple explosions / Heard before / And during the collapse / Hmm … ,” one piece of writing, resembling free verse, at the blog said.

Another piece read: “Allegedly / Two other planes / The Pentagon / Pennsylvan­ia / Hijacked by terrorist / Minimal damage done / Minimal debris found / Hmm.”

As the Daily Beast reported, those writings appeared to refer to the disproven fringe theory that one of the World Trade Center buildings that collapsed on 9/11 was actually felled by an intentiona­l, controlled demolition. The writings also seemed to refer to the Pentagon strike that caused the facility’s outer wall to collapse while killing hundreds of people. And they also seemingly made short mention of the hijacking that ended in Pennsylvan­ia with dozens of deaths and considerab­le debris.

Bowman’s blog also suggested that readers watch Loose Change and Zeitgeist, films that propagated 9/11 conspiraci­es peddled among the far right. The Daily Beast noted that both were favored by the gunman who shot six people to death and wounded then congresswo­man Gabby Giffords in 2011. Meanwhile, the Daily Beast added, Alex Jones has spoken flattering­ly of Zeitgeist and served as an executive producer of the final cut of Loose Change – before the rightwing provocateu­r was hit with a $1.5bn judgment for spreading lies that the deadly 2012 school shooting

in Newtown, Connecticu­t, was a hoax aimed at forcing Americans to accept gun control.

Bowman’s statement maintained “few people ever read” his blog, parts of which can still be accessed through the Internet Archive. He added that some of its posts were inspired by research he conducted into “a wide range of books, films and articles” as he debated pursuing a doctorate.

“I of course do not believe any of these conspiracy theories that are pushed by the same right-wing fanatics who have always been opposed to my candidacy and presence in Congress,” Bowman’s statement said.

Since joining the House in 2021, Bowman’s brand of leftwing progressiv­e politics has indeed been pilloried by conservati­ves, including some who tried to compare him to the Donald Trump supporters who attacked Congress on 6 January 2021.

Bowman said his office was also inundated with angry calls after he joined a few House members who opposed a resolution supporting Israel’s ongoing strikes in Gaza. And by December, George Latimer, a pro-Israel Democratic politician from Westcheste­r county, New York, announced he would run for Bowman’s seat as the incumbent seeks a third term in the House during the upcoming election cycle.

 ?? Photograph: Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call via Getty Images ?? Jamaal Bowman said the writings were inspired by research into a wide range of media.
Photograph: Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call via Getty Images Jamaal Bowman said the writings were inspired by research into a wide range of media.

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