Pro-God, Pro-Human Life, anti-New World Order, Anti-Nefarious Secret Societies, Pro-Civil Liberties, anti-Torture, anti-National ID Card, Pro-Family, Anti-Neo Conservativism, Pro-Net Neutrality, Pro-Home Schooling, Anti-Voting Fraud, Pro-Good Israelis & Pro-Good Palestinians, Anti-Human Trafficking, Pro-Health Freedom, Anti-Codex Alimentarius, Pro-Action, Anti-Bigotry, Pro-9/11 Justice, Anti-Genocide, and Pro-Gun Control. My name is Timothy and I'm from the state of Virginia.
"I asked about [Tim's] last hours. He had been searching for a movie on television and all he could find was Fargo, for which he was in no mood."
In the end, McVeigh, already condemned to death, decided to take full credit for the bombing. Was he being a good professional soldier, covering up for others? Or did he, perhaps, now see himself in a historic role with his own private Harper's Ferry? We may know - one day.
- "The Meaning of Timothy McVeigh," by Gore Vidal, Vanity Fair, September, 2001
*****
Fargo is a 1996 American crime film that stars Frances McDormand as a pregnant Minnesota police chief who investigates a series of local homicides, and William H. Macy as a struggling car salesman who hires two criminals to kidnap his wife. .. On Fargo's special edition DVD's trivia track, it is revealed that the main case that inspired the movie is the infamous 1986 murder of Helle Crafts from Connecticut at the hands of her husband, Richard, who disposed of her body through a wood chipper.
**
John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry was an attempt by Christian and slavery abolitionist John Brown to start an armed slave revolt in 1859 by seizing a United States arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Virginia. Brown's raid, accompanied by 20 men in his party, was defeated and captured by a detachment of U.S. Marines led by Col. Robert E. Lee. Robert E. Lee made a summary report of the events that took place at Harpers Ferry. According to Lee's notes, Lee believed John Brown was insane, "...the plan [raiding the Harpers Ferry Arsenal] was the attempt of a fanatic or madman." Brown was taken to the court house in nearby Charles Town for trial. Brown was found guilty of treason against the commonwealth of Virginia and was hanged on December 2, after writing his last slavery abolitionist prophecy. The execution was witnessed by the Jesuit actor John Wilkes Booth, who would later assassinate President Abraham Lincoln.
* HAARP: Angels Don't Play This HAARP: Advances in Tesla Technology, is a book detailing the extensive evidence of Military Psychotronics, by Dr. Nick Begich and Jeane Manning. It was named one of the most important books of 1996 by Project Censored : The News that Didn''t Make the News. Dr Begich argues that like any technology, such as a gun, the military can use such psychotronic technology for defensive protection or offensive aggression purposes. Among others the HAARP technology can (a) cause earthquakes and tsunamis; (b) weather modification; (c) vapourize objects - i.e. make them disappear; (d) for communication purposes; (i) such as talk to submarines deep down in the ocean (meaning they don't have to come to the surface to get messages); (ii) talk to people's minds by sending messages into their brains.
** DeJaVu Ferry:
Déjà Vu stars ATF agent Denzel Washington whose investigation into the bombing of the ferry Sen. Alvin T. Stumpf carrying hundreds of U.S. Navy sailors and their families from the Algiers dock to a Mardi Gras celebration; requires him to expose himself to classified military technology to solve the crime.
"I asked about [Tim's] last hours. He had been searching for a movie on television and all he could find was Fargo, for which he was in no mood."
ReplyDeleteIn the end, McVeigh, already condemned to death, decided to take full credit for the bombing. Was he being a good professional soldier, covering up for others? Or did he, perhaps, now see himself in a historic role with his own private Harper's Ferry? We may know - one day.
- "The Meaning of Timothy McVeigh," by Gore Vidal, Vanity Fair, September, 2001
*****
Fargo is a 1996 American crime film that stars Frances McDormand as a pregnant Minnesota police chief who investigates a series of local homicides, and William H. Macy as a struggling car salesman who hires two criminals to kidnap his wife. .. On Fargo's special edition DVD's trivia track, it is revealed that the main case that inspired the movie is the infamous 1986 murder of Helle Crafts from Connecticut at the hands of her husband, Richard, who disposed of her body through a wood chipper.
**
John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry was an attempt by Christian and slavery abolitionist John Brown to start an armed slave revolt in 1859 by seizing a United States arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Virginia. Brown's raid, accompanied by 20 men in his party, was defeated and captured by a detachment of U.S. Marines led by Col. Robert E. Lee. Robert E. Lee made a summary report of the events that took place at Harpers Ferry. According to Lee's notes, Lee believed John Brown was insane, "...the plan [raiding the Harpers Ferry Arsenal] was the attempt of a fanatic or madman." Brown was taken to the court house in nearby Charles Town for trial. Brown was found guilty of treason against the commonwealth of Virginia and was hanged on December 2, after writing his last slavery abolitionist prophecy. The execution was witnessed by the Jesuit actor John Wilkes Booth, who would later assassinate President Abraham Lincoln.
* HAARP: Angels Don't Play This HAARP: Advances in Tesla Technology, is a book detailing the extensive evidence of Military Psychotronics, by Dr. Nick Begich and Jeane Manning. It was named one of the most important books of 1996 by Project Censored : The News that Didn''t Make the News. Dr Begich argues that like any technology, such as a gun, the military can use such psychotronic technology for defensive protection or offensive aggression purposes. Among others the HAARP technology can (a) cause earthquakes and tsunamis; (b) weather modification; (c) vapourize objects - i.e. make them disappear; (d) for communication purposes; (i) such as talk to submarines deep down in the ocean (meaning they don't have to come to the surface to get messages); (ii) talk to people's minds by sending messages into their brains.
** DeJaVu Ferry:
Déjà Vu stars ATF agent Denzel Washington whose investigation into the bombing of the ferry Sen. Alvin T. Stumpf carrying hundreds of U.S. Navy sailors and their families from the Algiers dock to a Mardi Gras celebration; requires him to expose himself to classified military technology to solve the crime.