Re: Conspiracy Theory
Posted: Tue Sep 19, 2017 6:06 pm
Oh yeah! ... perhaps a part of me loves the idea of aliens.Topper wrote:Didn't Doc have a wood all through Avatar?
Talking Canucks Hockey Since 1996
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Oh yeah! ... perhaps a part of me loves the idea of aliens.Topper wrote:Didn't Doc have a wood all through Avatar?
Linda Carter to Trump would be considered alien and I would be a perma wood if she was real.Strangelove wrote:Oh yeah! ... perhaps a part of me loves the idea of aliens.Topper wrote:Didn't Doc have a wood all through Avatar?
https://truepundit.com/anthony-bourdain ... assed-him/Anthony Bourdain
@Bourdain
I am in no way an HRC fan. I’ve been on the receiving end of her operatives’ wrath. And it ain’t fun
4:37 PM - 2 May 2018
What in the world was Anthony Bourdain referring to when he said — just weeks ago — he had been harassed by Hillary Clinton’s goons “And it ain’t fun”
Bourdain reportedly took his own life on Friday. He was 61.
Haunting. Bourdain was found Friday after reportedly hanging himself.
It’s no secret that people who cross the Clinton’s wind up dead … mostly from suicide. Just this week, famous designer and Clinton Foundation member, Kate Spade reportedly killed herself. Are Spade’s and Bourdain’s deaths both coincidences?
Seems beyond suspicious. The last thing we need are more conspiracy stories but any good detective would question what has transpired this week.
Something here is amiss.
Back in October of 2017, CNN’s Bourdain made statements regarding Harvey Weinstein, suggesting Hillary Clinton had to know of his history of being a sexual predator. Bourdain’s girlfriend, actress Asia Argento, accused Weinstein of raping her.
http://www.neonnettle.com/features/1398 ... found-dead
Two FBI Agents Set to Testify Against Hillary Clinton Murdered
When President Trump took power, the US Justice Department opened another investigation into Operation Fast and Furious as it pertained to the Baltimore Police Department, and impaneled a US Federal Grand Jury.
An FBI Special Agent, who was anticipated to expose the extent of Clinton and Obama malpractice and corruption in the "Operation Fast and Furious" cover-up before a US Federal Grand Jury, has been found dead at his home.
The FBI official's wife was also found dead at the scene with the couple both being murdered using the 52-year-old agent's own gun.
Special Agent David Raynor was “stabbed multiple times” and “shot twice with his own weapon,” according to local media reports.Raynor's tragic death comes just one day before he was due to testify before a US Federal Grand Jury.
He was expected to testify that Hillary Clinton acted illegally to protect Obama administration crimes while covering up the Fast and Furious scandal.
Special Agent Raynor’s murder is the latest in a sequence of disturbing deaths in Baltimore connected to the Clinton/Obama cover-up of Operation Fast and Furious.
Another witness was Detective Sean Suiter, an 18-year veteran of the FBI. However, Detective Suiter was gunned down in November 2017, in eerily similar circumstances to Special Agent Raynor. Also one day before he was scheduled to testify.
These are just the latest.
The first intimations that Trump might harbor a dark secret originated among America’s European allies, which, being situated closer to Russia, have had more experience fending off its nefarious encroachments. In 2015, Western European intelligence agencies began picking up evidence of communications between the Russian government and people in Donald Trump’s orbit. In April 2016, one of the Baltic states shared with then–CIA director John Brennan an audio recording of Russians discussing funneling money to the Trump campaign. In the summer of 2016, Robert Hannigan, head of the U.K. intelligence agency GCHQ, flew to Washington to brief Brennan on intercepted communications between the Trump campaign and Russia.
The contents of these communications have not been disclosed, but what Brennan learned obviously unsettled him profoundly. In congressional testimony on Russian election interference last year, Brennan hinted that some Americans might have betrayed their country. “Individuals who go along a treasonous path,” he warned, “do not even realize they’re along that path until it gets to be a bit too late.” In an interview this year, he put it more bluntly: “I think [Trump] is afraid of the president of Russia. The Russians may have something on him personally that they could always roll out and make his life more difficult.”
While the fact that the former CIA director has espoused this theory hardly proves it, perhaps we should give more credence to the possibility that Brennan is making these extraordinary charges of treason and blackmail at the highest levels of government because he knows something we don’t.
Suppose we are currently making the same mistake we made at the outset of this drama — suppose the dark crevices of the Russia scandal run not just a little deeper but a lot deeper. If that’s true, we are in the midst of a scandal unprecedented in American history, a subversion of the integrity of the presidency. It would mean the Cold War that Americans had long considered won has dissolved into the bizarre spectacle of Reagan’s party’s abetting the hijacking of American government by a former KGB agent. It would mean that when Special Counsel Robert Mueller closes in on the president and his inner circle, possibly beginning this summer, Trump may not merely rail on Twitter but provoke a constitutional crisis.