Where did an 18 year old unemployed high school drop-out get the thousands of dollars that he PAID for his
weapons, ammo, magazines, and body armor? Someone else was behind this attack, I want to know WHO!
BTW: You can no more keep illegal guns out of the hands of criminals,
than you can keep illegal drugs out of the arms of addicts.
Gatsby wrote:
Where did an 18 year old unemployed high school drop-out get the thousands of dollars that he PAID for his
weapons, ammo, magazines, and body armor? Someone else was behind this attack, I want to know WHO!
BTW: You can no more keep illegal guns out of the hands of criminals,
than you can keep illegal drugs out of the arms of addicts.
All good questions. While we don't have answers to your questions, consider the following:
In January 2019, the U.S. Department of Justice issued a report titled “Source and Use of Firearms Involved in Crimes: Survey of Prison Inmates, 2016.” It provides a statistical analysis of where and how state and federal prison inmates obtained firearms that they either possessed or used in the commission of their crimes.
Of the prisoners who used firearms in committing crimes such as murder, robbery, and burglary,
only 1.3 percent obtained their guns from a retail source. Among those who possessed a firearm during their offense, 0.8 percent obtained it at a gun show. Instead, the most common source of firearms for these prisoners had been the “off the street/underground market.”
https://bjs.ojp.gov/content/pub/pdf/suficspi16.pdfRecall the gunrunning scandal codenamed
"Fast and Furious," a program
run secretly by the U.S. government that sent thousands of firearms over an international border and directly into the hands of criminals.
How about all the military weapons we left in Afganistan, or supplied to the mujahedeen or other rebel groups all around the world that work their way via the black market here in the US.
It should be obvious to anyone with a functioning brain, that the narrative being pursued by this administration and the complicit media is that guns are the problem, and "GUN CONTROL" is necessary to stop these mass shootings. Yet the US Government is the biggest offender in providing those same weapons to those who would use them for nefarious purposes. It is not the law abiding citizen who purchases and owns a firearm that is the problem. What people should be worried about is the effort to demonize the "gun" as the problem, and efforts to disarm the American Public just like Australia and New Zealand.
ACP45 wrote:
All good questions. While we don't have answers to your questions, consider the following:
In January 2019, the U.S. Department of Justice issued a report titled “Source and Use of Firearms Involved in Crimes: Survey of Prison Inmates, 2016.” It provides a statistical analysis of where and how state and federal prison inmates obtained firearms that they either possessed or used in the commission of their crimes.
Of the prisoners who used firearms in committing crimes such as murder, robbery, and burglary,
only 1.3 percent obtained their guns from a retail source. Among those who possessed a firearm during their offense, 0.8 percent obtained it at a gun show. Instead, the most common source of firearms for these prisoners had been the “off the street/underground market.”
https://bjs.ojp.gov/content/pub/pdf/suficspi16.pdfRecall the gunrunning scandal codenamed
"Fast and Furious," a program
run secretly by the U.S. government that sent thousands of firearms over an international border and directly into the hands of criminals.
How about all the military weapons we left in Afganistan, or supplied to the mujahedeen or other rebel groups all around the world that work their way via the black market here in the US.
It should be obvious to anyone with a functioning brain, that the narrative being pursued by this administration and the complicit media is that guns are the problem, and "GUN CONTROL" is necessary to stop these mass shootings. Yet the US Government is the biggest offender in providing those same weapons to those who would use them for nefarious purposes. It is not the law-abiding citizen who purchases and owns a firearm that is the problem. What people should be worried about is the effort to demonize the "gun" as the problem, and efforts to disarm the American Public just like in Australia and New Zealand.
All good questions. While we don't have answers to... (
show quote)
That sounds like the CIA to me. They've been in the gun-running and drug cartel business for a very long time.
And they are joined at the hip with other five-eyes Intel groups. H. W. Bush did that all that included k*****g JFK Just more good little N**is just following orders. For slowpoke, sometimes referred to as mission creep, that includes control over N. Korea, China, and other nations for decades. But it's even more than that it's a also bloodline feud between Good vs Evil.
I'm hearing more and more weird things. Now some are saying Jesus has been reincarnated and is now a young boy living in New Zealand and under the tutelage of the original tribes located there called the Maori. And they have Shamen spread out over the world and doing their rituals to cleanse the evil from the world. I've listened to some of them talk on Tarot by Janine and Sending Ravens and their not crazy and seem sincere. I'll listen to anyone with sincere religious beliefs.
But our world is changing and it looks like for the better to me. I had a good friend in the Air Force who was a Hawaiian with the last name of Thompson and they owned the largest cattle ranch in Hawaii we had a few discussions about how Hawaii lost its sovereignty. It was very interesting and I liked him from the moment I met him. I soaked up as much history as I could from him. A really classy guy, He gave me an open invitation to visit if I ever got to go there.
I wonder if the Big Kahuna knows him or his family. I think they also have a pineapple plantation. I forget how many brothers and sisters he had, but it was a huge family, like 15 or so. And as the eldest, he decided to learn more about the world by joining the Air Force and making as many contacts around the world as he could to help the family's business. In all my travels and of all the people I met, he was one of the best. A pure pleasure just to know him for a short time. We were both stationed at Blytheville, AR. now closed and turned into a Fed Ex shipping center I believe or regional airport, about 80 miles NE of Memphis, TN. I think he retired from there. We just hit it off from day one. We both just enjoyed each other's stories. And we both had plenty of them. That's the thing about good memories, you get to enjoy them again, and then you can share them with new friends too.
Gatsby wrote:
Where did an 18 year old unemployed high school drop-out get the thousands of dollars that he PAID for his
weapons, ammo, magazines, and body armor? Someone else was behind this attack, I want to know WHO!
BTW: You can no more keep illegal guns out of the hands of criminals,
than you can keep illegal drugs out of the arms of addicts.
Someone got him a debit card loaded with money.
That is my question as well. 2 Daniel defense ar 15s depending on model 4k to 5k multiple clips at 20 bucks+ each, several hundred rounds of 223 or 5.56 ammo 175 to 200 bucks, a halfway decent bp vest 4-500 with good armor. Was said to be wearing full tactical armor which is over a grand. How and where does an unemployed 18 yr old get 6-7k to pull this off. There is a finance in the woodpile hiding somewhere.
fastforwardr1 wrote:
That is my question as well. 2 Daniel defense ar 15s depending on model 4k to 5k multiple clips at 20 bucks+ each, several hundred rounds of 223 or 5.56 ammo 175 to 200 bucks, a halfway decent bp vest 4-500 with good armor. Was said to be wearing full tactical armor which is over a grand. How and where does an unemployed 18 yr old get 6-7k to pull this off. There is a finance in the woodpile hiding somewhere.
Expanding on your post:
"
https://canncon.substack.com/p/what-really-happened-in-uvalde?s=rBut before we start the timeline, we must first ask an extremely important question: How did an 18 year old man, with no known employment, whom was living with his grandmother because of an addict mother, afford:
-Two expensive firearms made by Daniel Defense ($2,000 each)
-an EOTech optic ($400-$700)
-1,657 rounds of .223 ammo ($800-1000 depending on how they were purchased)
-body armor ($500-1000)
-and over 60 magazines ($10-20 each)
for a total of approximately $6300 to $8,000? Most established adult Americans, especially after the last two years and the current economy, can’t afford a fraction of that. But this young 18 year old was able to do so with no known job and all on a debit (not credit!) card? In a border town reportedly overrun by the worst of the worst from the US Border…I’ll let you make your own assumptions."
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