When I first heard about LOL Superman, I was sure people were just confusing it with a similar video or that it was a case of the Mandela Effect. But now I think it’s very possible that the video really did exist.
We are talking about one of the biggest terrorist attacks of all time, and if you try to search on platforms like Google for images of the people who jumped, you will almost never find anything very graphic (the little content that exists has terrible image quality or is recorded from very far away).
Could LOL SUPERMAN have been leaked online in 2006? and it’s also very hard to find anything about the charred bodies after the towers collapsed. The FBI may have deleted any graphic photos and videos that appeared online because it’s a very sensitive topic for Americans and to prevent them from being used to disrupt the trial of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the mastermind behind the attacks (As far as I can remember, he was still on trial for his role in this crime, and had pleaded guilty.)
I’m pretty sure there are FBI files about that day that people will never know exist and that will never see the light of day, and this shockvideo is one of them.
I truly believe that the video exists based on the thousands of reports that have emerged over time: All of them claimed that the video was real and different from any other available on the internet, which showed the suicidals up close jumping from buildings, and having their bodies almost completely destroyed due to the force of the impacts.
Titles range from LOL SUPERMAN, superman flies (lol), skylight.mov, Falling Angels, sem-paraquedas, There’s No God, Lluvia de personas, It’s Raining Men and Man turns to jam, and someone has already reported that this video was used as a screamer in a Halo 2 video.
The reports are completely unrelated, they have all surfaced online over the years, and yes, I firmly believe that this video may actually exist. While this all happened in 2001, we are talking about a large city where many people had cameras, and all of the cameras were pointed at the World Trade Center that day. There’s no way there isn’t more graphic footage showing people jumping.
My theory is that someone recorded this video and shared it online, and since YouTube wasn’t as advanced as it is today and was slowly catching up when it came to automatically detecting and removing violent content, the video stayed online for a few days (another user has even reported that this video was deleted a few hours after it was posted). The FBI might be able to completely wipe something off the internet if they really wanted to.