Isn't there a gas station where you return rental cars?
That said, it is a long way from the city, but plenty of airport hotels close by.
Isn't there a gas station where you return rental cars?
That said, it is a long way from the city, but plenty of airport hotels close by.
Yeah, there's a Conoco right there. But I"m pretty sure it's a haunted Conoco and now I know why.
My favorite passage from that website:
"Visitors of the airport often complain of feeling uneasy and distressed when inside the walls of this building, which one would think is the exact opposite reaction the builders would want for an airport."
Really? people in a US airport "feeling uneasy and distressed." Wow. Imgine what they say about JFK or Atlanta.
I would think it would be a lot more suspicious if everyone had a feeling of unexplained happiness and calm. Now that sounds like a diabolical plot.....
For anyone who has been to the Denver Airport you have to agree that horse is f***ed up and really looks evil.
Looking at the first picture, the first thing I thought of was the KKK
haha YO wrote:
For anyone who has been to the Denver Airport you have to agree that horse is f***ed up and really looks evil.
Got to agree. The first time a saw that thing my thought was "what the hell were the thinking?". A couple of things, there are a lot of airports on huge amounts of land, far from the city. DFW comes to mind as a perfect example. On the other hand there are bunkers and underground cities across America the the government has developed and tried to keep quiet for years, some of which are no longer even a secret (what is the one under the hotel in Virginia or something?). Anyway. I imagine the truth is somewhere in between in that there is something going on that the government wants hushed up but I somehow doubt its as extreme as the conspiracy theorists would have us believe.
The commenters on that website are a bunch of paranoid whack jobs!
vigilantcitizen.com basically shows that the airport has a lot of lousy modern art. So what?
As others have said there is a gas station right where you turn to drop off the rental cars, and quite a few hotels nearby.
And I believe Westin was approved to build a hotel right at the airport - but maybe that's on hold.
Anyway, I fly to DEN or at least transfer there at least 20 times a year and I've never noticed any of those murals or heard any of those things mentioned before.
My thoughts exactly...this conspiracy theory is rubbish.
concord wrote:
As others have said there is a gas station right where you turn to drop off the rental cars, and quite a few hotels nearby.
And I believe Westin was approved to build a hotel right at the airport - but maybe that's on hold.
Anyway, I fly to DEN or at least transfer there at least 20 times a year and I've never noticed any of those murals or heard any of those things mentioned before.
Don't you see? That's just what they want you think!
It isn't 20 miles from anything ... there are like 30,000 houses within ~6 miles - "Reunion" is a huge development. They are building a hotel at the airport. And now there are ~10 hotels in the area that are closer than "Reunion".
I worked for a contractor building drainage systems at DIA - we talked a lot.
Here are the 10 hotels.
Days Inn, Ramada, ...
As for the tunnels and all that crap ... they screwed up the underground baggage system, which shredded luggage left and right - never worked and was slower than carts, so they scrapped it. Since the tunnels and such were screwed up, they ended up spending incredible amounts of money trying to fix the damn thing.
8. The jet fuel on site can be pumped at 1000 gallons a minute, with an estimated 3 million gallons in 4 holding tanks. Far greater need than ever required.
That extra fuel supplies all the unmarked NWO jets that spray the helpless public with chemtrails.
yeah, that is where their chemtrail operation is based out of.
[quote]A few questions for the OP wrote:
How do you bury a building without creating a mountain?
First there is a mountain, then there is no mountain, then there is.
handy hank wrote:
You mean when the construction job was finished, the construction workers were no longer needed?!?
Not that I want to support this sort of rubbish, but the firing of the contractors is the only really odd thing about this story.
It is normal procedure on this sort of project to at least offer the maintenance contracts to the people who installed the machinery - after all most of the machinery is custom built and who would know it better?
To add to your theory, I recall reading that Federico Pena was instrumental in the airport project, which got a lot of bad press and was considered a debacle by some. Even so, Pena was made national Sec'y of Transportation(later was energy sec'y also).
According to his Wikipedia entry:
As mayor of Denver, Peña led the effort to build the airport. Several of his relatives and cousins were mysteriously awarded contracts to provide works of art to adorn this project, which was one of many ways the airport was catapulted into being over budget.
Maybe the horse was one of those art pieces....
Next thing ya know the airport workers will forget to chock the wheels.
no doubt the budget went from 1.8 billion to 4.5 billion because of the cost of murals and the horse!