January 21, 2013

Christian Bale as Batman

Christian Bale as Batman

All of this said, there is good reason for some “€œtheorizing”€ about what happened at the school.

Robbie Parker has gained notoriety for his press performance (and that is the correct word) only one day after the murder of his daughter. He comes out to give his statement laughing and joking with reporters, then gets into character, followed by a near ten-minute soliloquy where he struts the stage with his grief.

Yet this does not prove him an actor as some have claimed. Perhaps he is just a bad person, a venal one who has used the killing of his own kin as a platform for his politics. No one can say for sure, though there is reason to criticize him. People in mourning do odd things, even smile through their sadness, but they don”€™t do breathing exercises to get into form to show proper emotion for cameras. Not unless they are complete and total bastards.

Another interesting event confluence was a FEMA “€œChildren in Disasters”€ drill nearby. Several “€œterrorist”€ activities of the recent past, including September 11 and the London bombings, all occurred on days that drills were happening. Whether that illustrates rogue government action or terrorist infiltration is uncertain, but it is alarming.

A similar oddity was the appearance of a memorial page to slain teacher Victoria Soto. It was created days prior to the slaughter, implying foreknowledge. An explanation may be someone made an unrelated topic page in days leading up to the shooting then afterward altered the page to make it a memorial site. This explains how it could both be erected earlier to the shootings, yet without any idea of what was to come. However, media and technological experts should be addressing this in an informed way.

Finally, there is helicopter footage that day of authorities chasing someone through the woods, throwing him to the ground, and arresting him. Who was he? He never existed according to the media. Anderson Cooper has spent considerable time “debunking” the claim that he existed. Yet while Cooper states the man was victim’s parent Chris Manfredonia, the evidence indicates more than one suspect in was custody that day.

The media had by turns confirmed the following: Lanza’s mother dead at school, Lanza’s father dead at home, Lanza and his brother both (not misidentification of one) arrested on scene, and Lanza’s brother’s girlfriend missing”€”all of which never happened. So why should anyone believe anything reporters say now? There is confusion during extreme events but it is the job of Anderson, et al., to clear that confusion and not create more of it.

Some will question my own motives. Yet having been involved in government and more than a few actual conspiracies, I know they sometimes exist. That doesn”€™t mean they always exist, and it doesn”€™t mean every incongruous element of a story is sinister.

Sometimes people self-promote, witnesses are greedy, and the media are lazy. Never discount simple error, erroneous impressions, and lies for money (as opposed to power) when questioning a narrative.

There is reason to be dubious of the official Sandy Hook storyline, but one’s suspicions should at least be reasonable. Keep watching the skies, but keep watch on yourself as well.

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