Rosie O'Donnell has never been one to shy away from speaking
her mind, but her latest controversial topic of conversation
on 'The View' brought up a taboo that most daytime talk shows
would never go near – the possibility of a conspiracy
on 9/11.
On Thursday’s show, during a discussion on the war on
terror and the prospect of war in Iran, O’Donnell veered
into the theory that World Trade Center 7, which fell hours
after the Twin Towers, was possibly destroyed purposely by explosives.
"I do believe that it was the first time in history that
fire has ever melted steel," O'Donnell said when questioned
on whether she thought the government was behind the collapse
of WTC 7. "I do believe that it defies physics for the
World Trade Center tower 7, which collapsed in on itself --
it is impossible for a building to fall the way it fell without
explosives being involved. Miraculously, the first time in history
steel was melted by fire," she said.
Her 'View' co-host Elizabeth Hasselbeck, who has been known
to go head-to-head with a conservative counterpoint to Rosie's
left-leaning opinions, listened as O'Donnell sold her case for
a conspiracy theory. O'Donnell then asked: "to say that
we don't know that it imploded ... is beyond ignorant. Look
at the film, get a physics expert from Yale, from Harvard, pick
the school. It defies reason. Imagine if somebody could convince
you of that?"
Hasselbeck kept her cool, replying "If someone could sit
here and prove that to me, I would open my mind to that."
Breaking the tension, but still keeping things politically
charged, co-host Joy Behar wrapped up the segment with an anti-Bush
zinger of her own, saying "Wait a second, Bush went to
Yale, how good could they be?"
The exchange follows a recent blog post by O'Donnell dealing
with the same subject.