Was the Vegas shooter a patsy? How did he get all those weapons into his hotel suite? By Jon Rappoport
Was Stephen Paddock a patsy?
(To read about Jon's mega-collection, The Matrix Revealed, click here.)
Was the Vegas shooter a patsy?
How did he get all those weapons into his hotel suite?
By Jon Rappoport
Daily Mail: "...Jill Sneider of the ATF said that no less than 12 of the rifles found in the room had bump-stock modifications."
"In total, there were 23 firearms in the hotel room, including an AK-47, an AR-15-type gun, and a handgun."
That's a lot of weight. That's a lot of steel. How did
Stephen Paddock, the purported Vegas shooter, get all those weapons into
his Mandalay Hotel suite?
Are we supposed to believe no red flags went up? No alarms were triggered?
He had no help? No help from the inside?
On top of that, why did he take all those weapons into the suite? He certainly wasn't going to use all of them.
It's easy to say, "He did all that because he was crazy, and
there is no way to analyze crazy." If investigations proceeded on that
premise, they wouldn't be investigations.
Confronted with this pile of weaponry in a suite, after a
mass shooting, it would be reasonable to ask, "Did the accused shooter
actually bring all these guns in himself?" And further: "Was this some
kind of set-up, carried out to forward a "take the guns away from
everybody" agenda?
Yes, that would open the door to a very murky
area---constructing an alternative time line of events leading up to the
shooting. Nevertheless, a true investigation would explore this area.
Although police and FBI aren't talking about it, you can bet a few
officers are at least looking into the possibility that Paddock had help
bringing all that weaponry into his suite.
Are we to assume the Mandalay Hotel security system is a
sieve? They just wave everyone through without a flicker of doubt, with
millions of dollars on the premises and millions more being bet in real
time in the casino? It's just a party?
Pit bosses on the floor and eyes in the sky can spot a
cheater who is counting cards at a blackjack table, but no one is able
to notice a well-known high stakes gambler (Paddock) dragging many
suitcases through the premises up into his suite? Really?
The aftermath of the concert shooting has turned into an
ideal opportunity for gun control and a stepped up Surveillance State.
The presence of so many guns in Paddock's suite makes a perfect photo op
for these agendas.
As more background emerges on Stephen Paddock, we discover he
isn't just a burrito-eating retiree living outside Vegas. According to
the press, he's a millionaire real estate investor. He has many options
in life. But he makes a plan to end that life. He surely knows that's
what is going to happen. He wants it to happen. He launches an operation
over the course of months to bring about his death.
Yes, it's possible. And the Valium he's taking could push him
over the edge, because it can cause aggression in some people.
Nevertheless, we're supposed to believe, without explanation, that his
impulse for destruction and self-destruction was far more than just a
moment's snap decision. It was embedded in a carefully wrought design.
Paddock laid out a sequence of events that would culminate in his
"suicide by cop." We're supposed to take that as an article of faith.
Or...was this operation something else entirely? Was, for
example Paddock, as a gun enthusiast, profiled and targeted and used by a
team intent on carrying out the concert shooting?
Was he a patsy?
Was he a Lee Oswald, a Sirhan Sirhan, a James Earl Ray?
The use of patsies varies. The set-ups can be complex. There
is more than just one possible pattern. For example, in the case of the
1995 Oklahoma City Bombing, Tim McVeigh, to the degree he may have been
involved, was only used to get a Ryder Truck to the curb outside the
Murrah Federal Building on the morning of April 19th.
We are assured there was an ANFO bomb in the truck (ammonium
nitrate plus fuel oil). Seven or eight barrels were linked up to go off
at once. Of course, making that happen would take a considerable degree
of expertise---beyond McVeigh's skill. The explosions in the barrels
must be simultaneous; otherwise, you're left with no force and
fertilizer all over the street.
Still further, it turns out that, even with a simultaneous
ignition, the force and direction of the blast were insufficient to
cause the degree and profile of the damage sustained by the Murrah
Building. That bomb was a diversion and a distraction.
One alternative explanation: as the bomb in the Ryder truck
went off, pillars of the building---which had previously been wired with
explosives---were triggered. Those explosives caused the actual damage.
But McVeigh, the "Ryder truck man," became the face of the crime. He was the "lone bomber."
The patsy.
The public is taught to believe sophistication in the use of patsies is impossible.
The public is wrong.
The role of Stephen Paddock in the concert shooting cannot be accepted blindly as the press details it.
The
author of three explosive collections, THE MATRIX REVEALED, EXIT FROM
THE MATRIX, and POWER OUTSIDE THE MATRIX, Jon was a candidate for a US
Congressional seat in the 29th District of California. He maintains a
consulting practice for private clients, the purpose of which is the
expansion of personal creative power. Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, he
has worked as an investigative reporter for 30 years, writing articles
on politics, medicine, and health for CBS Healthwatch, LA Weekly, Spin
Magazine, Stern, and other newspapers and magazines in the US and
Europe. Jon has delivered lectures and seminars on global politics,
health, logic, and creative power to audiences around the world.
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