Northwest Flight 253

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Lumi

LOKI
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In the shadows
Infowars Nightly News: Kurt Haskell Breaks Down Underwear Bomber Trial False Flag Ku

Infowars Nightly News: Kurt Haskell Breaks Down Underwear Bomber Trial False Flag Ku

Infowars Nightly News: Kurt Haskell Breaks Down Underwear Bomber Trial False Flag
Kurt Nimmo
Infowars.com
February 16, 2012
haskell2.jpg
Underwear non-bombing witness Kurt Haskell talks with Infowars Nightly News host Darren McBreen about the sentencing of convicted patsy and fall guy Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab. Earlier today, Abdulmutallab was sentenced to life imprisonment for igniting his underwear on Christmas Day, 2009, during a flight from Amsterdam to Detroit.


Read Mr. Haskell?s article BREAKING: Kurt Haskell Exposes Government False Flag Operation During Underwear Bomber Sentencing on Infowars.com.


Darren also talks with environmentalist, bestselling author, and MIT trained engineer Matt Stein who recently penned an article entitled 400 Chernobyls: Solar Flares, EMP, and Nuclear Armageddon. Stein?s latest book is When Technology Fails.


News items covered on tonight?s show:
An alarming trend of doctors ?firing? their patients for refusing to be injected with dangerous and often deadly vaccines pushed by big pharma and the government.


DHS boss Janet Napolitano?s admission that there is no threat to America from Iranian and Hezbollah terrorists. Despite her statements before the House Homeland Security Committee, the establishment media continues to report the non-existent threat and scare the ill-informed.
 

pug

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Jun 11, 2004
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Jaco, Costa Rica
Hey guys, I haven't been on in a few days and I'm just noticing the bump of this story. With the developments of the past few days, it would be hard for anyone to doubt my story about the 2009 Christmas Day underwear bombing. It's nice to have more proof of my account to shut up those that like to throw out the "conspiracy theorist" label. It had gone away for awhile, but was beginning to be used quite a bit since I started my political campaign. People need to realize what is going on in this country. Part of the reason that I'm running for office is to clean up some of this corruption. It really is getting out of hand.
 
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The Sponge

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Aug 24, 2006
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Hey guys, I haven't been on in a few days and I'm just noticing the bump of this story. With the developments of the past few days, it would be hard for anyone to doubt my story about the 2009 Christmas Day underwear bombing. It's nice to have more proof of my account to shut up those that like to throw out the "conspiracy theorist" label. It had gone away for awhile, but was beginning to be used quite a bit since I started my political campaign. People need to realize what is going on in this country. Part of the reason that I'm running for office is to clean up some of this corruption. It really is getting out of hand.

"conspiracy theorist" is a word that was created so gullible nitwits could run with it. Good luck Pug im rooting for ya.
 
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pug

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Jun 11, 2004
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Jaco, Costa Rica
I believe Pug is in CR living the life now...

Yep, and the Underwear Bomber event is a big part of the reason why. Pura Vida! The above link by Snafu is complete nonsense. The evidence is overwhelming that Umar was supplied by a bomb by U.S. Intelligence agents that lacked a detonator. According to the two explosives experts hired by the PROSECUTION, the bomb was "impossibly defective". I believe them over a nonsense propaganda article.
 

pug

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Jun 11, 2004
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Jaco, Costa Rica
A lot of people. Allied me crazy when I said this 5 years ago. Not anymore.

FBI pushed Muslims to plot terrorist attacks: rights report
By Chantal Valery
Jul 21, 2014 2:53 PM

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Washington (AFP) - The FBI encouraged and sometimes even paid Muslims to commit terrorist acts during numerous sting operations after the 9/11 attacks, a human rights group said in a report published Monday.

"Far from protecting Americans, including American Muslims, from the threat of terrorism, the policies documented in this report have diverted law enforcement from pursuing real threats," said the report by Human Rights Watch.

Aided by Columbia University Law School's Human Rights Institute, Human Rights Watch examined 27 cases from investigation through trial, interviewing 215 people, including those charged or convicted in terrorism cases, their relatives, defense lawyers, prosecutors and judges.

"In some cases the FBI may have created terrorists out of law-abiding individuals by suggesting the idea of taking terrorist action or encouraging the target to act," the report said.

In the cases reviewed, half the convictions resulted from a sting operation, and in 30 percent of those cases the undercover agent played an active role in the plot.


US attorney general Eric Holder speaks at the US ambassador's residence in Oslo on July 8, 2014 ?
"Americans have been told that their government is keeping them safe by preventing and prosecuting terrorism inside the US," said Andrea Prasow, the rights group's deputy Washington director.

"But take a closer look and you realize that many of these people would never have committed a crime if not for law enforcement encouraging, pressuring and sometimes paying them to commit terrorist acts."

US Attorney General Eric Holder has strongly defended the FBI undercover operations as "essential in fighting terrorism."

"These operations are conducted with extraordinary care and precision, ensuring that law enforcement officials are accountable for the steps they take -? and that suspects are neither entrapped nor denied legal protections," Holder said July 8 during a visit to Norway.

The HRW report, however, cites the case of four Muslim converts from Newburgh, New York who were accused of planning to blow up synagogues and attack a US military base.


This booking photo courtesy of the US Department of Justice shows suspect Rezwan Ferdaus on October ?
A judge in that case "said the government 'came up with the crime, provided the means, and removed all relevant obstacles,' and had, in the process, made a terrorist out of a man 'whose buffoonery is positively Shakespearean in scope,'" the report said.

The rights group charged that the FBI often targets vulnerable people, with mental problems or low intelligence.

It pointed to the case of Rezwan Ferdaus, who was sentenced to 17 years in prison at age 27 for wanting to attack the Pentagon and Congress with mini-drones loaded with explosives.

An FBI agent told Ferdaus' father that his son "obviously" had mental health problems, the report said. But that didn't stop an undercover agent from conceiving the plot in its entirety, it said.

"The US government should stop treating American Muslims as terrorists-in-waiting," the report concluded.

Mike German, a former FBI agent now with the Brennan Center, said FBI counterterrorism excesses were a source of concern -- "concerns that they both violate privacy and civil liberties, and aren't effective in addressing real threats."

But JM Berger, a national security expert, said law enforcement faces a dilemma: it can't just ignore tips or reports about people talking about wanting to commit a terrorist action or seeking support for one.

"The question is how to sort out which cases merit investigation and which do not," he said.
 
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