Weeks ago Anon posted BTTFvideo connecting to TwinTowers- did some digging - result.
August 5, 1974, was the day the Nixon Presidency ended. On that day, Nixon heeded a Supreme Court ruling and released the so-called smoking-gun tape, a recording of a meeting, held two years earlier, with his chief of staff, H. R. Haldeman.
When Nixon released the tape, he acknowledged that it would lead to his impeachment. Three days later, he resigned the Presidency.
Haldeman’s idea of asking the C.I.A. to tell the F.B.I. to “stay the hell out of” the Watergate investigation. The coverup is clearly of Haldeman’s design. Nixon’s words are simple: “All right. Fine.” Then, “Right, fine.”
Haldeman’s idea seemed clever. He believed the F.B.I. was close to concluding that the break-in at the Democratic National Committee offices at the Watergate hotel was the work of a C.I.A.-led operation, which had something to do with Cuba and the Bay of Pigs. Nobody would have to actually lie, he seems to suggest—it wasn’t “unusual” for the C.I.A. to warn the F.B.I. to drop an investigation that could harm national security.
https://www.newyorker.com/news-desk/swamp-chronicles/the-day-trump-told-us-there-was-attempted-collusion-with-russia
Enter Back to the Future / The Wire 911 connection
Philippe Petit’s (nickname- le coup) legacy will forever be linked to the Twin Towers; the buildings the aerialist walked a high-wire between.
Seventeen years on from the terrorist attack that led to the destruction of the towers, Petit has spoken about his daredevil stunt in relation to the catastrophic event.
Like a bank robber plotting an elaborate heist, the obsessive Petit staked out the World Trade Center. On more than 200 reconnaissance missions to the Twin Towers, he meticulously studied how office workers entered and exited the buildings. He noted the colors of the helmets worn by the construction workers and the tools they carried. He watched how delivery vans entered and exited the subterranean garage and rented a surveyor’s wheel from a hardware store to precisely measure the distance between the skyscrapers. On nearly every trip, he eluded the guards and snuck onto the rooftops to scout locations for securing his cables. He took a helicopter ride to view the towers from above and even posed as a journalist from an architecture magazine to interview construction workers on top of the Twin Towers while his friends snapped photographs of the rooftops. On trips back to France, Petit built wooden models of the World Trade Center and practiced on a wire that corresponded exactly to the distance between the two towers.
Finally, on August 6, 1974, Petit was ready to implement his covert operation to pull off the illicit walk. - Setup. August 7th actual walk. Finally after 45 minutes, Petit returned to solid ground.
Petit was booked for disorderly conduct and criminal trespassing. Under details of the complaint, an officer wrote only: “Man on Wire.” That afternoon, Manhattan’s district attorney dropped all charges in return for a free aerial performance in Central Park. Even the owners of the World Trade Center forgave Petit and gave him a lifetime pass to the observation deck.
https://www.history.com/news/the-twin-towers-high-wire-walk-40-years-ago
https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/art/news/911-anniversary-never-forget-philippe-petit-twin-towers-buildings-a8532556.html