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10-31-2010, 08:11 PM | #1 |
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Initial reports stated that the package found in the East Midlands, a toner cartridge, had tested negative for explosives. Apparently that was the wrong conclusion for bomb disposal experts in the UK to arrive at however, because Obama later declared that the printer cartridge(s) constituted a "credible terrorist threat to our country" and that "initial examination of those packages has determined that they do apparently contain explosive material."
Run for your lives, and take your shoes off, it's a copy machine toner covered in oven cleaner!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! |
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10-31-2010, 08:21 PM | #2 |
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10-31-2010, 08:37 PM | #3 |
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What a line of bullshit for more travel control, and dimocrap votes.
When the Saudis warned British law enforcement that there were explosives inside the cartridge at East Midlands, the British -- using human and canines -- could not detect the material, according to a U.S. law enforcement official familiar with investigation. The British authorities contacted the Saudis to verify the tip, the official said. The Saudis told them to inspect the cartridge again, and that is when the British authorities discovered the material, the official said. http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/10/31/sec...ern/index.html |
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10-31-2010, 09:24 PM | #5 |
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11-01-2010, 04:46 PM | #6 |
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The Yemen printer cartridge hoax Despite the efforts of the Jew-controlled media to mislead us into thinking that 'al Qaeda' in Yemen attempted to send bombs to Chicago synagogues disguised as printer cartridges - everybody buys their printer cartridges from Yemen - a close reading of the stories makes it clear that there were in fact no bombs at all. From the National Post:
"British police said an item found on the UPS plane was sent for further testing. CNN said it was an ink toner cartridge converted into a bomb. Before Obama spoke, an FBI source had told Reuters that initial tests in Britain revealed no explosives."and: By 5pm U.K. time, news of a possible terrorist plot had broken on American news channels, and East Midlands airport became the focus of world attention. Confident that the suspicious package contained no explosives, police at East Midlands loaded the cartridge, shrink-wrapped in cellophane, on to a helicopter to be taken to the Metropolitan Police's counter-terrorism command, which had now been asked to take over the investigation. By 5.30pm the police had left the airport and removed the cordon, and attention switched to the U.S., which had now become the centre of frenzied speculation and activity. Ray Kelly, the commissioner of the New York Police Department, took to the airwaves to reassure the city that one package that had originated in Yemen had been intercepted on a UPS truck in Brooklyn and had contained nothing more than bank receipts." To summarize: 1.The British found a regular toner cartridge with traces of harmless white powder; 2.After urgent demands from the Americans, the British opened the cartridge and discovered its usual electronics, now rebranded as a detonator mechanism to be set off by a cellphone; 3.The Americans found some bank receipts, but by then the Jew-controlled media had labelled them a terrorist bomb to mimic the British non-bomb bomb; 4.They needed to pick a synagogue as the target, so they picked the synagogues of Chicago, probably as a homage to Rahm. You might note the very odd 'it is understood' language in a lot of the stories on this matter, indicating that the source for the details is lying. Of course, the headlines and the opening paragraphs reveal none of this doubt. http://xymphora.blogspot.com/2010/10...idge-hoax.html |
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