The Sins of the World

The Code Red Virus and the Destruction of the World Trade Center: A Cover-Up of Financial Crimes?


Thesis Statement
While the official narrative of the September 11 attacks focuses on terrorism, an alternative theory suggests that the World Trade Center was compromised digitally before its physical destruction. The Code Red virus, a powerful computer worm active in the summer of 2001, may have played a critical role in exposing financial crimes within the towers. With crucial records at risk, the attack on the WTC may have served a dual purpose—not just as an act of terror, but as a calculated cover-up to erase billions in financial fraud.

  1. The Code Red Virus: A Silent Infiltrator
    In July 2001, just two months before the 9/11 attacks, the Code Red worm spread rapidly across the internet, infecting hundreds of thousands of servers running Microsoft IIS web software. The worm defaced websites, created backdoors, and disrupted government and corporate networks. It was particularly concerning because:

It exploited vulnerabilities in financial and corporate systems.
It had a “trigger date” set for coordinated execution.
It focused on U.S. government and corporate infrastructure.
By August 2001, cybersecurity experts were scrambling to contain the virus, but the damage had been done. Systems in major financial institutions—including those housed in the World Trade Center—may have been compromised. The potential for data breaches, unauthorized transfers, and evidence exposure was immense.

  1. The World Trade Center: A Hub for Financial Crime Investigations
    The Twin Towers housed some of the world’s most important financial institutions, including:

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) office investigating Wall Street fraud.
The FBI’s Financial Crimes Division, which was probing insider trading, money laundering, and stock market manipulations.
Marsh & McLennan, an insurance giant with deep ties to corporate risk assessment.
Cantor Fitzgerald, a major bond trading firm that managed U.S. Treasury securities.
If these institutions were affected by the Code Red virus, sensitive financial data may have been exposed. Audits, investigations, and potential legal actions could have been imminent. Erasing all records would be the only way to ensure that these crimes never saw the light of day.

  1. The Destruction of Crucial Evidence on 9/11
    On the morning of September 11, 2001, two planes struck the Twin Towers, leading to their total collapse. While the world watched in horror, few realized that the destruction conveniently erased massive amounts of financial data:

SEC records of major financial fraud investigations were destroyed. Cases linked to Enron, WorldCom, and other corporate scandals conveniently disappeared.
The FBI’s financial crime files, which included evidence against Wall Street insiders, were lost.
$240 billion in covert government bonds mysteriously vanished. These were related to a secretive financial operation known as “Project Hammer,” which aimed to destabilize the Soviet economy in the late 1980s.
Even stranger, Building 7, which collapsed without being hit by a plane, housed offices of the SEC, IRS, and Secret Service—all handling financial crime investigations. Why did this building fall in a controlled-demolition style, hours after the Twin Towers?

  1. Was the Attack a Cyber-Warfare Precursor?
    The Code Red virus may have served as the opening act—a way to disable systems, steal information, or plant digital evidence before physical destruction wiped the slate clean. This raises key questions:

Was the WTC infrastructure digitally compromised before the attack?
Did the virus expose major financial fraud, requiring a full cover-up?
Were certain key financial players aware of the impending attack and used it to erase incriminating data?
Considering that Wall Street rebounded almost instantly after 9/11, while thousands of lives were lost, it begs the question—who truly benefited?

  1. Cui Bono? Who Benefited from the Data Wipe?
    When examining any major crime, the key question is always who benefits? The destruction of financial records on 9/11 conveniently covered up crimes tied to:

Corporate fraud (Enron, WorldCom, Tyco).
Government black budget programs (missing trillions at the Pentagon).
Insider trading schemes involving military contractors and financial elites.
Additionally, reports surfaced of suspicious financial activity in the days leading up to 9/11:

Unusual short-selling of airline stocks. Someone profited enormously from betting against American Airlines and United Airlines.
Massive data transfers out of WTC servers. Some analysts claim that billions in financial transactions were moved in the early hours of 9/11.
If the Code Red virus had compromised these systems, it may have served as a trigger event, accelerating plans to eliminate the evidence physically through controlled demolition.

Conclusion: A Crime Hidden in the Rubble


The destruction of the World Trade Center on 9/11 was not just a terrorist attack—it may have been a coordinated financial cover-up. The Code Red virus created a crisis in cybersecurity, potentially exposing fraudulent financial activity within the towers. With investigations closing in, the ultimate solution may have been to destroy the evidence entirely.

In the aftermath, the global financial system continued without missing a beat. Wall Street recovered. The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq secured new financial interests. And those responsible for the missing money? They walked away clean—buried under the debris of history’s greatest distraction.

What do you think of this post?
  • Awesome (0)
  • Interesting (0)
  • Useful (0)
  • Boring (0)
  • Sucks (0)

Salva Me – The Only Way Out

Joe & Nelly: The Only Way Out

Joe sat across from Nelly in the dimly lit visitor’s room of the psychiatric ward. The sterile white walls pressed in around them, the fluorescent lights humming like an unseen force watching over them. She looked tired, worn from the weight of too many battles fought alone. Yet, even here, even in this place meant to break souls, she was radiant.

“The Portuguese Marilyn Monroe,” Joe murmured, his voice barely above a whisper.

Nelly gave a half-smile, brushing a strand of hair from her face. “Marilyn didn’t make it out, Joe.”

“Then we make it out together,” he said, leaning forward. “The only way out is together.”

Her eyes, dark with old pain, searched his face for doubt. She found none.

“You don’t understand, Joe. They don’t let people like me go.”

Joe scoffed. “They don’t let people like us go. But I’m not leaving without you. I don’t care how many doctors, how many pills, how many locked doors. We walk out of here, Nelly. We walk out, or I tear this place down with my bare hands.”

For the first time in a long time, she believed.

What do you think of this post?
  • Awesome (0)
  • Interesting (0)
  • Useful (0)
  • Boring (0)
  • Sucks (0)

Today’s Bogdanov 1

Bogdanov Dumps Wojak’s Christmas

It was a cold December evening in Paris, the kind that made the Seine shimmer like silver beneath the streetlights. Wojak sat alone in his tiny apartment, staring at the screen of his old computer. The pixels of his stock portfolio bled red—his Christmas was ruined.

“Zut alors…” Wojak muttered, clutching his head. “I put everything into it… le pump! They said it was guaranteed!

The cheap string lights around his desk flickered as a Skype call rang through. The number was untraceable, the kind that only belonged to the shadows of the financial elite. His trembling hand clicked ‘Answer.’

On screen, the twin faces of the Bogdanov brothers materialized. Their sharp, otherworldly cheekbones cast unnatural shadows across their grins. They leaned in close, their piercing blue eyes reflecting infinite knowledge—and infinite power.

“Ah, mon pauvre Wojak,” Igor Bogdanov purred, his voice thick with a French aristocratic accent. “You really believed… zat you could win?”

Grichka chuckled, adjusting his silk cravat. “Zis is not a game, Wojak. Zis is le marché—and we own it.”

Wojak’s lip trembled. “B-but… I was supposed to make it this time. I was going to buy gifts, pay rent, maybe even… afford une baguette avec le brie!

Igor smirked, producing a single golden Bitcoin from his pocket, rolling it across his knuckles with effortless precision. “Gifts? Hah! Zis is capitalism, Wojak. You were given hope… but hope is for les pauvres.”

“Dump it,” Grichka said with a snap of his fingers.

The sound of algorithmic trading filled the air—millions of automated sell orders executed in an instant. Wojak’s screen flashed violently—his investments, his dreams, his Christmas—obliterated in a split second.

He fell to his knees, a silent scream escaping his lips. “No… non…!

Igor exhaled, adjusting his diamond-encrusted cufflinks. “Bonne nuit, Wojak,” he whispered. “Joyeux Noël…”

And with that, the call ended. The Bogdanovs faded into the digital abyss, leaving only the cold, lifeless glow of Wojak’s screen—his balance now zéro.

Outside, the city twinkled with festive lights, as if mocking him.

Christmas was dumped.

What do you think of this post?
  • Awesome (0)
  • Interesting (0)
  • Useful (0)
  • Boring (0)
  • Sucks (0)
Translate »