Wait, Ventura thinks 9/11 was an inside job?
Holy geezersandwiches. And I thought he was moderately normal.
I have cautht a few brief glimpses of the shows (can't stand much more
than that). He is into all the kook dtheories. The series seems to
have started with the kooks 'weather changing' thing in Alaska =
"HARP". God knows what other idiocy he is going to try. Yes, he is
known for his kookish beliefs.
I'll bet somewhere down the line he will be on the "Chemtrails" kick.
Harry K
Harry K
We had a triangular shaped chemtrail here yesterday morning. I'm sure we'll
all get deathly sick before too long.
>
>We had a triangular shaped chemtrail here yesterday morning. I'm sure we'll
>all get deathly sick before too long.
>
>http://www.asheasaid.com
>Luke
Deathly sick from water vapour? How does that happen Luke?
--
Shill #2
"When one person suffers from a delusion, it is called insanity. When
many people suffer from a delusion, it is called Religion."
Robert M. Pirsig
To much washing weakens him...
It's the "fibers" in it. His delicate constitution can't handle it.
The chemtrail kooks seem to be shocked that there are fibers in the air,
floating around, doing all kinds of secret, evil stuff. I wonder if
Lookey thinks that the fibers are remotely controlled by molecular
servos, like a little tiny RC plane?
--
BDK..
Leader of the nonexistent paid shills.
Non Jew Jew Club founding member.
Former number one Kook Magnet, title passed to Iarnrod.
>In article <edc2i5lf4e7cngnl1...@4ax.com>,
>gov....@gmail.com says...
>> On Thu, 10 Dec 2009 12:24:17 -0500, "Luke Nichols" <lu...@frontiernet.net>
>> wrote:
>>
>> >
>> >We had a triangular shaped chemtrail here yesterday morning. I'm sure we'll
>> >all get deathly sick before too long.
>> >
>> >http://www.asheasaid.com
>> >Luke
>>
>>
>> Deathly sick from water vapour? How does that happen Luke?
>>
>> --
>> Shill #2
>>
>> "When one person suffers from a delusion, it is called insanity. When
>> many people suffer from a delusion, it is called Religion."
>> Robert M. Pirsig
>>
>
>
>It's the "fibers" in it. His delicate constitution can't handle it.
>
>The chemtrail kooks seem to be shocked that there are fibers in the air,
>floating around, doing all kinds of secret, evil stuff. I wonder if
>Lookey thinks that the fibers are remotely controlled by molecular
>servos, like a little tiny RC plane?
Using RFID chips?
--
Shill #2
Is God really real, or is there some doubt?
Monty Python (1983)
"Orson Wells as CitizenCain" <noe...@here.invalidd> wrote in message
news:59a21$4b2103ba$a666682c$10...@ALLTEL.NET...
He is.. he as governor of a state has more brains than any neocon
lackey who didn't even notice that Marvin Bush was 'security manager'
of the WTC towers just weeks before they 'were pulled'.
(You should have shut up while you could)
Harry K
***************************
HARP can be kind of tough depending on what team you have. In the early
part of the interior portion there seems to be a lack of health packs.
It's kind of hard to go wrong with Cyclops, Storm, Jean Grey and Wolverine
in just about any situation though...
I always considered Cyc & Jean to be the HHH & Steph of the X-Men. I go with
Gambit & Rogue instead.
LG
--
The Obama administration isn't distracting America from what really matters;
Hollywood is. - inspired by Ahmed Johnson's Beer Belly v2.0
I like to mix it up a little too, but it's kind of hard to ignore the
leadership bonuses of Storm and Cyclops and the radial attacks of Jean since
a lot of enemies don't have mental resistance. I'm partial to Iceman and
Nightcrawler on my team however.
In your case, hopefully
Harry K
Another example of one kook attracting another. Don't you guys _ever_
get tired of embarrassing yourself in public?
Harry K
I think they get off on it. It's amazing what the kooks will swallow, if
it's on a kookpage, but if not, then suddenly, it's a "lie". Funny how
a religious fanatic's mind "works", isn't it?
Of course. When they enter the unfortunate victims body, the Nano-RFID
chip broadcasts a signal to the "Mothership", a plane orbiting nearby,
usually disguised as an USAF tanker. When the fibers tell the controller
that they have entered a host, the fun begins as the fibers begin to do
their dastardly deeds...
Cue evil plot laughter...
Just for you, sparky (from wikipedia for your educational purposes):
"Stratesec (formerly known as Securacom and Burns and Roe Securacom)
was a security company founded in 1987 and based out of Woodcliff
Lake, New Jersey.[1] The company went public on October 2, 1997 on the
American Stock Exchange[2] but was delisted in 2002.
Securacom listed among its clients Washington Dulles International
Airport, Hewlett-Packard, EDS, United Airlines, Gillette, MCI, the
World Trade Center, and other facilities including hospitals, prisons,
corporations, utilities, universities.[3]
Securacom received a contract to provide (electronic) security
services for the World Trade Center in 1996.
The company, then known as Stratesec, was delisted from the American
Stock Exchange in July 2002 due to inability to make financing
payments to ES Bankest, its primary shareholder, and other financial
problems.[8]
The head of the company was Wirt Walker.[9] Marvin P. Bush, a younger
brother of George W. Bush, was on the board of directors of the
company from 1993 to June 2000.[10]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Securacom > > >news:hfpugo$msk
$1...@news.eternal-spentagoneptember.org...
...
"George W. Bush's brother was on the board of directors of a company
providing electronic security for the World Trade Center, Dulles
International Airport and United Airlines, according to public
records. The company was backed by an investment firm, the Kuwait-
American Corp., also linked for years to the Bush family.
The security company, formerly named Securacom and now named
Stratesec, is in Sterling, Va.. Its CEO, Barry McDaniel, said the
company had a ``completion contract" to handle some of the security at
the World Trade Center ``up to the day the buildings fell down."
It also had a three-year contract to maintain electronic security
systems at Dulles Airport, according to a Dulles contracting official.
Securacom/Stratesec also handled some security for United Airlines in
the 1990s, according to McDaniel, but it had been completed before his
arriving on the board in 1998.
McDaniel confirmed that the company has security contracts with the
Department of Defense, including the U.S. Army, but did not detail the
nature of the work, citing security concerns. It has an ongoing line
with the General Services Administration - meaning that its bids for
contracts are noncompetitive - and also did security work for the Los
Alamos laboratory before 1998.
Marvin P. Bush, the president's youngest brother, was a director at
Stratesec from 1993 to fiscal year 2000. But the White House has not
publicly disclosed Bush connections in any of its responses to 9/11,
nor has it mentioned that another Bush-linked business had done
security work for the facilities attacked.
Marvin Bush joined Securacom when it was capitalized by the Kuwait-
American Corporation, a private investment firm in D.C. that was the
security company's major investor, sometimes holding a controlling
interest. Marvin Bush has not responded to telephone calls and e-mails
for comment.
KuwAm has been linked to the Bush family financially since the Gulf
War. One of its principals and a member of the Kuwaiti royal family,
Mishal Yousef Saud al Sabah, served on the board of Stratesec. "
"Marvin Bush's last year on the board at Stratesec coincided with his
first year on the board of HCC Insurance, formerly Houston Casualty
Co., one of the insurance carriers for the WTC. He left the HCC board
in November 2002. "
"The suite in which Marvin Bush was annually re-elected, according to
public records, is located in the Watergate in space leased to the
Saudi government. The company now holds shareholder meetings in space
leased by the Kuwaiti government there. The White House has not
responded to various requests for comment. "
www.commondreams.org
You can google all this and more yourself, sparky.
Have fun.
Fascinating...not. And has nothing to do with the thread..or even the
towers.
Harry K
>
> Fascinating...not. And has nothing to do with the thread..or even the
> towers.
>
> Harry K
And you are either stupid or a liar, sparky.
Were you trying to prove this statement:
> > > > lackey who didn't even notice that Marvin Bush was 'security manager'
> > > > of the WTC towers just weeks before they 'were pulled'.
with this one:
>> > The head of the company was Wirt Walker.[9] Marvin P. Bush, a younger
>> > brother of George W. Bush, was on the board of directors of the
>> > company from 1993 to June 2000.[10]
Guess what. June 2000 is not "just weeks" and "on the board of directors"
is not ""security manager".
So which is it? Stupid or liar?
--
Shill #2
Liar, liar, pants on fire.
Me
Well golleee sarge, ya'll must have the whooole platoon goin today.
You overlooked this little gem (and believe me - there's a whooole lot
more..):
"The security company, formerly named Securacom and now named
Stratesec, is in Sterling, Va.. Its CEO, Barry McDaniel, said the
company had a ``completion contract" to handle some of the security
at
the World Trade Center ``up to the day the buildings fell down." "
Like I said, Governor Ventura knew what he was talking about.
>Well golleee sarge, ya'll must have the whooole platoon goin today.
>
>You overlooked this little gem (and believe me - there's a whooole lot
>more..):
>
>"The security company, formerly named Securacom and now named
>Stratesec, is in Sterling, Va.. Its CEO, Barry McDaniel, said the
>company had a ``completion contract" to handle some of the security
>at
>the World Trade Center ``up to the day the buildings fell down." "
So what?
Marvin Bush had nothing to do with that company since June 2000. He left 15
months prior to the day the buildings fell down.
Judging by your inability to pick up on this rather simple fact, I'm
starting to lean toward you being stupid, rather that a liar.
--
Shill #2
With stupidity the gods themselves contend in vain.
Friedrich von Schiller (1759 - 1805)
<text and groups trimmed>
> Judging by your inability to pick up on this rather simple fact, I'm
> starting to lean toward you being stupid, rather that a liar.
>
> --
> Shill #2
>
> With stupidity the gods themselves contend in vain.
> Friedrich von Schiller (1759 - 1805)
Amazing. The loons are still flogging that stuff. Still crazy after
all these years.
Retread of an old joke:
The Loona Kahuna of conspiracy loons issues the following statement on
his website -
"Fellow conspiracy hunters, I have good news and I have great news.
"The good news is that I have met with a great and wise Mayan guru.
He tells me that he does not disagree with the observation that
governments can do bad things and lie and cover up.
"But the great news is that come the week before Christmas 2012, the
Mayans will bequeath us a wonderful Christmas gift. They will have
fixed it so that government and their shills will NEVER, EVER be able
to lie to us again!"
Shill #3.14159265358979323846264338327950288
"The search for wisdom is asymptotic."
-- mazorj
"Except for Internet newsgroups, where it is divergent..."
-- R J Carpenter
>
>"Government Shill #2" <gov....@gmail.com> wrote in message
>news:un65i59g5fbn869i5...@4ax.com...
>
><text and groups trimmed>
>> Judging by your inability to pick up on this rather simple fact, I'm
>> starting to lean toward you being stupid, rather that a liar.
>>
>
>Amazing. The loons are still flogging that stuff. Still crazy after
>all these years.
Mr Mazor! Wow, there's a name I haven't seen in a while. And I see Lady
Pilot in another thread today. Have I just been missing out on a lot of ada
posts, or have you guys been absent?
--
Shill #2
Great Tarverisms #2
What is the best selling beer in Oz?
Budweiser.
Another illusion shattered.
John
alt.disasters.aviation
18 August 2002
Nah, I stopped reading here years ago when a.d.a devolved into spam, kook
cross-posting, and the occasional unaware newbie who wandered in with a
question. Just for S&G's I check it once in a while because occasionally
some of the regulars will pop back in.
Where did you see LP posting? She was pretty active here for awhile.
> --
> Shill #2
>
> Great Tarverisms #2
>
> What is the best selling beer in Oz?
>
> Budweiser.
>
> Another illusion shattered.
>
> John
>
> alt.disasters.aviation
> 18 August 2002
Ah, the Compendium of Tarverisms. He and Ralphie just dropped out - IIRC
Ralphie went unannounced, but Tarver posted his swan song, said he was
joining some group that appreciated and "coddled" him, and then totally
disappeared, at least as Tarver, from Usenet. Years later I got an e-mail
purportedly from Tarver urging me to look into some product but who knows
whether that was legit or, more likely, just a case of his e-mail list being
hijacked. Enough time has passed for rancor to be replaced by nostalgia, so
I occasionally wonder what happened to them and the other regulars.