meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
The Corbett Report Podcast

Episode 444 - Remembering Graeme MacQueen

The Corbett Report Podcast

The Corbett Report

Politics, News

4.91K Ratings

🗓️ 15 May 2023

⏱️ 52 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Esteemed scholar, researcher, author and 9/11 Truth and Justice advocate Dr. Graeme MacQueen passed away on April 25th. Today, James pays tribute to Dr. MacQueen's life and legacy with a remembrance of his groundbreaking work and the testimonies of his friends, colleagues and loved ones.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Graham was an incredibly encouraging collaborative person.

0:07.0

He kind of saw the best in everybody around him,

0:10.8

and he was just able to bring it out and really encourage others to follow their own

0:18.4

follow their path and contribute everything they could you You know, he did some really important work in his own right,

0:26.2

but it's the sort of the team player that he is,

0:31.0

the collaborator, just such a loving person.

0:35.4

And for me personally, I felt that, you know,

0:38.1

I think I ended up doing and have done so much more

0:41.2

in my activism around 9-11 because of Graham, because Graham encouraged me to keep going.

0:49.0

I want to say Graham was literally a gentle man. Even when he said he was angry about the lies of 9-11, he did not shout it.

0:58.8

All the more, you knew it was true. I don't recall again my memory is an issue here that he ever expressed anger at a person or persons he would name. He was not a complainer. His spirituality was deep and profound. When I last saw him at a meeting late last year at a friend's home, along with five other friends, he went on longer than usual on the question of some kind of afterlife.

1:26.3

He fitting his intelligence, his philosophy, and his Buddhism, he treated the question as a highly complex one, one challenging our deepest

1:34.4

understandings, and I don't mind saying I was spellbound by what he was saying,

1:40.3

and thinking as he spoke how deeply respectful I was of him. He had stage four

1:47.0

cancer of the prostate. He was not fooling himself about his mortality. He was exploring it as deeply as he explored everything.

1:56.5

When he first came to me he was he was quite sick and so I have obviously I knew about him but I had to sort of go back then and you know maybe

2:07.8

watch videos and things and any because you wouldn't hear a lot from him right?

2:12.3

Because he was very, very humble. because you wouldn't hear a lot from him, right?

2:12.6

Because he was very humble about all of that.

2:17.1

But so, yeah, my understanding of him

2:20.8

was not necessarily based on that. So from my perspective, I would say very much that his

2:26.4

activism came forth from this deep, it was like in the heart and soul of him he was deeply compassionate and

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from The Corbett Report, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of The Corbett Report and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.