Friday, January 03, 2025

MK Ultra? Imposserus! (graphic)


Re-posted by N.S.

"Pedro L. Gonzalez
"@emeriticus
"the Tesla bomber was apparently an army special forces veteran from colorado springs who had trained at the same base as the nola killer, and both of them had rented the vehicles they used in the attacks through turo"

"look I'm not saying my mind immediately went to mkultra but"





2 comments:

Anonymous said...

From his manifesto,"China is responsible for the drones...they could put them(armed)over the White House--game over."

Or an inauguration. A drive-by drone attack,blows itself up right on the bible that Roberts is holding--it flies away--who would know that China did it?

Or if the "see eye a" and China did it as partners.

At that point,it wouldn't matter.

--GRA




Anonymous said...

BOMBS PUT TOGETHER BY JABBAR WERE CONSTRUCTED WITH MATERIAL NEVER BEFORE SEEN

GRA:That fact guarantees he had "help".

(Zh)The terrorist who killed 14 people and hurt 35 more in New Orleans in the early hours of New Year's Day prepositioned bombs that used an extraordinarily rare explosive compound, senior law enforcement officials have told NBC News. The two devices didn't detonate, but authorities are scrambling to learn how Shamsud-Din Jabbar was able to incorporate a type of explosive that has never before been used in a terror attack in America or Europe.

At around 3 am on Wednesday, Texas-born Houston resident Shamsud-Din Jabbar used a pickup truck to plow a path of carnage through a crowd of New Year's partiers on Bourbon Street, before police killed him in a shootout. The 42-year-old US Army veteran's plan had another dimension of death that he failed to execute: The FBI and ATF say he'd built two bombs that were rigged to be detonated with a transmitter that was found in his rented Ford F-150 truck.

The improvised explosive devices were placed in recreational coolers that Jabbar placed on Bourbon Street; that action was recorded on security cameras. Neither bomb exploded, and investigators are still trying to determine whether that fortunate fact springs from a design flaw, a malfunction or Jabbar's failing to attempt to trigger the devices.

Given the fact Jabbar had a desk job--he was a human resources part of the military--it is highly unlikely he gained expertise about bomb-making through his job.

--GRA