Timothy McVeigh, an agnostic, and Terry Nichols, an atheist, were totally incompetent. They'd tried to build bombs before and had failed. Nichols visited Manila the Philippines several times in 1994, supposedly to pick up a mail order bride, but she never went with him. These visits coincided with the time Ramzi Yousef, mastermind of the 1993 WTC bombing, was in Manila planning another attack. Nichols comes back to the US and he and McVeigh coincidentally create a very similar type of truck bomb that Yousef had used in 1993 and use it to murder 168 people and injure 680 others in Oklahoma City.
22 eye witnesses reported seeing a John Doe #2, a dark-skinned man who was later identified through photographs as Hussain Hashem Al-Hussaini, a former member of Iraq's Republican Guard who fled to America after the first Gulf War.
After McVeigh and Nichols were caught the FBI dropped all mention of John Doe #2 and said the case was closed. They were trying to avoid all mention of Islamic terror out of fear of having to go to war in the Middle East to counter it.
Investigative reporter
Jayna Davis was assigned the task of looking into the Oklahoma City bombing the day of the attack. Over the years she found connections to Al Qaeda and Iraqi sleeper agents in the US, along with a plot by elements within the US government to cover up the true nature of the attacks.
Here is part 1 of an interview with Jayna Davis about her book The Third Terrorist and the Oklahoma City conspiracy.
Thursday, January 5, 2017
Friday, December 9, 2016
In Memoriam John Glenn
John Glenn, the first American into orbit, has left the Earth for the last time at the age of 95. He was a devoted husband and father, a Marine pilot, and an American hero of the kind we sorely need more of in these dark days. He will be dearly missed.
Monday, November 7, 2016
Janet Reno Dies and Goes to Hell!
Rot in Hell, bitch! I piss on your grave! Rot in Hell for all the Americans you murdered. Rot in Hell for Ruby Ridge. Rot in Hell for Waco. Rot in Hell for murdering children.
Thursday, October 20, 2016
Possible Voids in the Pyramid
Scientists working for the Scan Pyramids Project used muon detectors to discover two potential unknown voids within the Great Pyramid.
According to the statement, one void is located on the north face of the pyramid behind an area where four building blocks with "chevron" designs (an inverted v-shaped pattern) are visible. The chevrons would not have been visible in ancient times, as the designs would have been covered with casing stones that were stripped off the pyramid centuries ago. In addition, another void was discovered on the northeast corner of the pyramid about 344 feet (105 m) above the ground.
Zahi Hawass, who was the number 3 man in Egypt under Mubarak, says that there's no story here, nothing to see, move along. He says these people "Are scientists, not Egyptologists", so you should ignore the results of the scientific aparatus because Egyptology is a religion, and the official dogma of the religion says there are nothing unknown about the pyramids, because that throws into question Hawass' omniscience, which, as number 3 man, we dare not question.
According to the statement, one void is located on the north face of the pyramid behind an area where four building blocks with "chevron" designs (an inverted v-shaped pattern) are visible. The chevrons would not have been visible in ancient times, as the designs would have been covered with casing stones that were stripped off the pyramid centuries ago. In addition, another void was discovered on the northeast corner of the pyramid about 344 feet (105 m) above the ground.
Zahi Hawass, who was the number 3 man in Egypt under Mubarak, says that there's no story here, nothing to see, move along. He says these people "Are scientists, not Egyptologists", so you should ignore the results of the scientific aparatus because Egyptology is a religion, and the official dogma of the religion says there are nothing unknown about the pyramids, because that throws into question Hawass' omniscience, which, as number 3 man, we dare not question.
Friday, October 2, 2015
Homeless Man in Anchorage uses Homemade Spear to Kill Bear
The title says it all. He killed a bear with a spear he made and he has no home. The bear was stealing his food so rather than be a pussy and ask the government to help he killed it with a spear he made out of garbage.
David Tandler is a 49 year old man living in the woods. He killed a bear in self defense and the wildlife agency said that was perfectly legal. What is not legal is the fact that he is homeless. Apparently the "war on poverty" was not a stupid slogan, it is a literal war against poor people.
The story says he was at an "illegal campsite". He's fucking homeless, cut him a break. Where do you want him to live, the Ritz hotel? He's living in the woods because he has nowhere else to go. The government already took everything else he had, now they want to take his tent away and charge him money for daring to sleep on their precious dirt:
"Tandler was issued a $310 citation for negligent feeding of wildlife because food and garbage was present at the illegal camp site and that is what attracted the bears. The camp was already under orders to be dismantled when the incident happened. Those living in camps have several days to clear their belongings before officials step in and do it."
Let the man sleep on your fucking dirt. Are you afraid you'll run out of room in the forest that you have to kick a homeless man off the unused wilderness? It's not like he's sleeping in the parking lot of the capitol building, he's in the woods, harming no one. Leave him be.
David Tandler is a 49 year old man living in the woods. He killed a bear in self defense and the wildlife agency said that was perfectly legal. What is not legal is the fact that he is homeless. Apparently the "war on poverty" was not a stupid slogan, it is a literal war against poor people.
The story says he was at an "illegal campsite". He's fucking homeless, cut him a break. Where do you want him to live, the Ritz hotel? He's living in the woods because he has nowhere else to go. The government already took everything else he had, now they want to take his tent away and charge him money for daring to sleep on their precious dirt:
"Tandler was issued a $310 citation for negligent feeding of wildlife because food and garbage was present at the illegal camp site and that is what attracted the bears. The camp was already under orders to be dismantled when the incident happened. Those living in camps have several days to clear their belongings before officials step in and do it."
Let the man sleep on your fucking dirt. Are you afraid you'll run out of room in the forest that you have to kick a homeless man off the unused wilderness? It's not like he's sleeping in the parking lot of the capitol building, he's in the woods, harming no one. Leave him be.
Thursday, August 13, 2015
CIA Busted Trafficking Coke
10 August outside El Paso, Texas, seven minutemen watching the US border made a citizen's arrest of two men who were smuggling over 1000 pounds of cocaine. The two men had valid CIA identification and were driving a vehicle registered to the CIA. The FBI, DEA, and US Customs and Border Protection are working together to get to the bottom of this. The CIA denies any involvement in the incident, though they are known to engage in drug trafficking with the Contras in the 1980s and even to this day in Afghanistan.
Wednesday, August 12, 2015
Book Review: A Time for War
A Time for War is the second book in the fiction trilogy by radio host Dr. Michael Savage.
This book was a good 50 pages shorter than the first one, which is good, because the first one had at least 50 pages of padding. There was only one sex scene in this book, on page 219 (hardcover), as opposed to the fifteen or more in the first book. That's a wonderful improvement. One very odd thing was that there were only a handful of chapters that were all super long. The last chapter was about 60 pages. They could easily have been broken up without losing anything.
A Time for War takes place exactly one month after Abuse of Power, in September 2011. It stretches credulity more than a little that Islamic terrorists working with MI6 would try to set off a backpack nuke in San Francisco and then one month later the Chinese would try to release a deadly plague in the exact same city. I would think SF would still be under complete lock down one month after a failed nuclear attack. I also find it unbelievable that two billionaire industry magnates would be conspiring to take down the US government one month apart.
Then there is Jack Hatfield, the almost super hero of the books. He's a journalist who reported on the first Gulf War and then lost his job in the early 2000s when a media watchdog group got offended by a remark he made regarding Islamic terrorists. I don't know how much money TV journalists make, or how much they can keep 10 years after being downgraded to working freelance, but this guy has properties all over town, a 40 foot yacht, and a fancy car. Money is no object for him, or any of his friends, the near 70 year old mercenary (said to be "older than God") who can beat the crap out of anyone, carries illegal weapons around with impunity, and flies all over the world to help guerrilla fighters take down drug trafficking rings and tin pot dictators, and the straw hippie trust fund baby who keeps getting beat down intellectually (and sadly dies half way through the book). The aging hippie is a hypocrite (he complains about pollution yet his own boat is a gas guzzler) who gives a few strawman arguments that get shot down, then he goes off to sulk about how leftists today have lost their way, having abandoned free love and egalitarianism in favor of identity politics and social justice warriorism. It was difficult to get through the scenes where he was there because they seemed like cheap shots.
Jack Hatfield is also unbelievably lucky. He has luck that does not exist, saving the day with one or two seconds to spare every time. He also has unbelievable charm, able to bed any woman half his age on the planet with a few words except his ex-wife who left with a bald 300 pound lawyer Jack walked in on one day. She pays Jack to park her even more expensive car in his private parking garage to gloat. One is left to wonder how Jack is so lucky, how he is basically the biggest hero in the world, having saved tens of millions of lives twice, and yet his career is still ruined because of what some political action group said about him a decade ago. The man saved not only SF twice, he saved the entire global economy, he's friends with big shots in the FBI, and he still can't get a show on TV. I don't buy that.
One final note, in regard to the nature of the plague germs that were going to be released. I don't care if you swallow a million lethal doses of plague, it won't kill you a million times faster. Your blood will not boil and cause your eyes to pop out of your skull. The bacteria still need to attack your cells, which still takes about an hour per cell. The more bacteria there are the more cells they can attack, but they can only kill cells so fast.
A Time for War never raised itself to the level of excitement of Abuse of Power. It seemed like more of the same.
77/100
This book was a good 50 pages shorter than the first one, which is good, because the first one had at least 50 pages of padding. There was only one sex scene in this book, on page 219 (hardcover), as opposed to the fifteen or more in the first book. That's a wonderful improvement. One very odd thing was that there were only a handful of chapters that were all super long. The last chapter was about 60 pages. They could easily have been broken up without losing anything.
A Time for War takes place exactly one month after Abuse of Power, in September 2011. It stretches credulity more than a little that Islamic terrorists working with MI6 would try to set off a backpack nuke in San Francisco and then one month later the Chinese would try to release a deadly plague in the exact same city. I would think SF would still be under complete lock down one month after a failed nuclear attack. I also find it unbelievable that two billionaire industry magnates would be conspiring to take down the US government one month apart.
Then there is Jack Hatfield, the almost super hero of the books. He's a journalist who reported on the first Gulf War and then lost his job in the early 2000s when a media watchdog group got offended by a remark he made regarding Islamic terrorists. I don't know how much money TV journalists make, or how much they can keep 10 years after being downgraded to working freelance, but this guy has properties all over town, a 40 foot yacht, and a fancy car. Money is no object for him, or any of his friends, the near 70 year old mercenary (said to be "older than God") who can beat the crap out of anyone, carries illegal weapons around with impunity, and flies all over the world to help guerrilla fighters take down drug trafficking rings and tin pot dictators, and the straw hippie trust fund baby who keeps getting beat down intellectually (and sadly dies half way through the book). The aging hippie is a hypocrite (he complains about pollution yet his own boat is a gas guzzler) who gives a few strawman arguments that get shot down, then he goes off to sulk about how leftists today have lost their way, having abandoned free love and egalitarianism in favor of identity politics and social justice warriorism. It was difficult to get through the scenes where he was there because they seemed like cheap shots.
Jack Hatfield is also unbelievably lucky. He has luck that does not exist, saving the day with one or two seconds to spare every time. He also has unbelievable charm, able to bed any woman half his age on the planet with a few words except his ex-wife who left with a bald 300 pound lawyer Jack walked in on one day. She pays Jack to park her even more expensive car in his private parking garage to gloat. One is left to wonder how Jack is so lucky, how he is basically the biggest hero in the world, having saved tens of millions of lives twice, and yet his career is still ruined because of what some political action group said about him a decade ago. The man saved not only SF twice, he saved the entire global economy, he's friends with big shots in the FBI, and he still can't get a show on TV. I don't buy that.
One final note, in regard to the nature of the plague germs that were going to be released. I don't care if you swallow a million lethal doses of plague, it won't kill you a million times faster. Your blood will not boil and cause your eyes to pop out of your skull. The bacteria still need to attack your cells, which still takes about an hour per cell. The more bacteria there are the more cells they can attack, but they can only kill cells so fast.
A Time for War never raised itself to the level of excitement of Abuse of Power. It seemed like more of the same.
77/100
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