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� June 29, 2006 - The War on Truth
There were many explosions on the London underground during 2003. Many of the witnesses jumped to the assumption that it was a terrorist attack. Is this because we are forever warned of the threat from evil terrorists, a threat which is largely imagined and grossly exagerrated for political purposes?
"We did hope in the first few minutes after hearing about the events on the Underground that it might simply be a maintenance tragedy." said Ken Livingstone.
The bus 'bombing' changed all that. After a series of explosions on the London Underground on 7 July 2005, the bus exploded approximately an hour later. The dramatic bus explosion forced all the explosions to be cast as terrorism.
The shortage of investigative journalists in UK is being filled by formidable independent researchers that find threads through the tightly-woven lies.
The bus 'bombing' was too dramatic, too Hollywood, too directed, too over the top. Things don't really happen like you see on television or at the movies. It is fiction.
Thanks to Ant for the link to these images. Tip: These images are reduced to 80%. Zooming in or out can help clarify features. Notice that blowtorch?
By 9 July, they would know what had happened.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/attackonlondon/story/0,,1524884,00.html
The prime minister said that the government did everything it could to protect Britons, but added: "If people are actually prepared to go on to a tube or a bus and blow up wholly innocent people, people just at random, to do the maximum death and destruction without any thought for their human rights or human life, you can have all the surveillance in the world and you couldn't stop that happening." ... "I think that we will continue with our way of life, I genuinely believe that," he said. "Even as we mourn the lives of those people killed so brutally and unnecessarily the sense, I think, and I hope, within the country, is to pull together and to make sure people can't divide us," .. Sir Ian Blair, the Metropolitan police commissioner, said four bombs, weighing less than 4.5kg (10lbs) each, were probably carried in backpacks and placed on the floor of the three underground carriages and on the seat or floor of the number 30 bus that was blown apart in Tavistock Square. ... "Our total effort today is focused on identifying the perpetrators and bringing them to justice," said Charles Clarke, the home secretary. "That is the number one preoccupation that the police and the security services have at this moment."
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Evil ideology, shoot-to-kill, 90 days, suicide vest, be afraid. Fear, terror and lies.
[There was also a report in the London Evening Standard about a tube driver (from Croydon?) from one of the tubes. He said that two of those he evacuated were wearing gasmasks.]
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