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Warning

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Someone is deliberately deleting any reference to the use of the facility during the September 11 attacks, and most content relating to the underground bunker. Recommend viewing previous edits in the article's "history" section for the removed and deleted information. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 205.157.244.33 (talkcontribs) .

Hi there! A while back, I removed a fair bit of content from the article because it was not verifiable. I may do it again soon. It is very important that articles on Wikipedia are verifiable. --Takeel 12:44, 21 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Rather than remove it, it's probably better to leave it and insert a "fact" template (see Wikipedia:Weasel). That way a reader knows that the statement is unverified, while all the data remains (pending verification).McKorn (talk) 05:00, 9 January 2009 (UTC)[reply]

don't bother arguing with these idiots, just research where you found the information to start with and boycot these liars. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 90.206.228.193 (talk) 10:01, 18 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Just so you know, the site was uncovered much earlier than the 1974 air crash date...

It was just a hole in the side of a mountain in the mid 1960s when some traveler noticed that the little two lane road he was driving on was graded to interstate highway specs and he saw the work on the blast doors off in the woods. The East Village Other, a hippie underground newspaper in New York ran it, but only 'stoned out hippies' believed stuff like that. 64.134.238.68 (talk) 22:52, 20 April 2011 (UTC)Razer lcm@icerocket.com[reply]

Washingtonian Magazine also mentioned it

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IT was also fully mentioned in a Washingtonian Magazine that used most of that months issue to uncover Hidden Washington.

"In Pop Culture" section - info on The Sum of All Fears is wrong

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I just watched "The Sum of All Fears" yesterday, and upon reading this article tonight, I couldn't help but be confused at the part regarding the movie, which currently reads as such:

"A facility similar to Mount Weather is featured in the beginning of the 2002 film The Sum of All Fears, based on the Tom Clancy novel of the same name. The fictional U.S. president is taken to a facility located inside Sugarloaf Mountain in Maryland during a rehearsal of emergency operation plans following a Russian nuclear attack."

...I clearly remembered the scene in the beginning of the movie took place at Mount Weather, and I swore that's what it said. A quick trip back to Netflix confirmed my memory:

File:TSoAF2002-Mt.Weather.png

Thus, I'm confused as to where this information came from. I don't even recall a place called "Sugarloaf Mountain" in Maryland even being mentioned in the entire movie (correct me if I'm wrong), but it's pretty clear to me that the aforementioned scene did indeed take place at Mount Weather, in Virginia - not "Sugarloaf Mountain" in Maryland.

Should this information be corrected, or is there an explanation for this I may be unaware of? Thanks Jade Phoenix Pence (talk) 02:33, 12 January 2015 (UTC)Jade Phoenix Pence[reply]

area B

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618david (talk) 13:23, 24 February 2015 (UTC)someone said that Mt Weather was discovered before the plane crash in the 70's. They said someone driving bye noticed the blast doors. This cannot be true as the blast doors cannot be seen from the roadway. The reason you don't get much information about what really goes on there is because the site itself is not designated as Top Secret, but what goes on there is. Like the sign says when you enter Area B, What you see here and do here, Stays Here.618david (talk) 13:23, 24 February 2015 (UTC)[reply]

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