Title: Norway Attacks: Kitbashed From Earlier Deeds and Plans Post by: Bad Penny on July 24, 2011, 05:57:50 pm Just had this idea: The Norway attacks seem to have been kitbashed from two earlier incidents: the Fort Hood shootings and an aspect of 9/11 that, for whatever reason, didn't occur: the detonation of a car bomb outside the State Department. (See live coverage videos between 10:15 AM and 10:30 AM.) Also note the second incident as evidence of pre-scripted media coverage.
Title: Re: Norway Attacks: Kitbashed From Earlier Deeds and Plans Post by: Jonnie Goodboy on July 25, 2011, 06:33:06 am Just had this idea: The Norway attacks seem to have been kitbashed from two earlier incidents: the Fort Hood shootings and an aspect of 9/11 that, for whatever reason, didn't occur: the detonation of a car bomb outside the State Department. (See live coverage videos between 10:15 AM and 10:30 AM.) Also note the second incident as evidence of pre-scripted media coverage. Thanks for the Opportunity to reply. But we can draw many comparisons from Zeitgeist even; Martial Law was effectively declared in Oslo on the following day after the attack. Soldiers were on the streets in Khaki, Green. 'Because, we're a small country with small police force' a Minister commented. Take this: Trailor to 'PARADISE LOST' Martial Law Declared in S.F following Terrorist infiltration: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YDt4vZdR2w8 You see, it's ubiquitous in this day and age and on this planet, you're up to your ankles in it, whereas 6-10 years ago we were up to our knees, remember! Title: Re: Norway Attacks: Kitbashed From Earlier Deeds and Plans Post by: Bad Penny on July 25, 2011, 04:36:46 pm I'm aware of the martial law aspect of this: read my last shout. The American aspect of me may be up to my ankles in it, but don't forget my time in a city where those little German amphibious jeeps (I forget what they were called) with soldiers in field dress running through the streets (they seemed to be on their way to and from CFB St. Hubert (which is HQ, Mobile Command (Mobile Command being, in essence, those Canadian ground forces not committed to NATO)), and riding the metro with young cadets from the Black Watch of Canada, once again, in field dress. Also don't forget my visit to my old neighborhood in NYC, where my old bank branch (now a drug store) seemed to have at least four (apparently) armed soldiers (I'm still not convinced they weren't carrying rubber guns, as the outline shape of what they were carrying seemed, to me, to be a highly antiquated version of the M-16) standing at the subway entrance in front. When my father saw that setup, he laughed and called it "the best-guarded drug store on earth". |