———> FIVE (5) ADDITIONAL STORIES
PROVING THAT THE U.S. MILITARY
STAGES FALSE FLAG TERROR EVENTS
1. SIKH SHOOTER A FORMER PSYOP SOLDIER
LINKED TO F.B.I.'S NATIONAL ALLIANCE
2. SIKH TEMPLE SHOOTER WAS IN ARMY
PSYCHOLOGICAL OPERATIONS
3. THE SIKH SHOOTING: D.O.J. AND F.B.I. WARNED
OF PLANNED TERROR ATTACK IN APRIL
4. SOUTHERN POVERTY LAW CENTER SAYS IT HAS BEEN
TRACKING SIKH TEMPLE SHOOTER SINCE 2000
5. SIKH TEMPLE MASSACRE: MULTIPLE SHOOTERS
AND DOMESTIC TERRORISM
SIKH SHOOTER A FORMER PSYOP SOLDER LINKED
TO F.B.I.'S NATIONAL ALLIANCE
http://www.prisonplanet.com/sikh-shooter-a-former-psyop-soldier-linked-to-fbis-national-alliance.html
Kurt Nimmo
prisonplanet.com
6 August, 2012
The alleged shooter in the Wisconsin Sikh shooting is a former soldier who
worked in military psychological operations, according to the corporate
media.
CBS News reports that Page enlisted in the Army in April 1992 and was given
a less-than-honorable discharge in October 1998. He was last stationed in
Fort Bragg, N.C., serving in the psychological operations unit.
Psyops are not confined to the military and usually span a number agencies,
including the CIA, DIA, NSC, NSA, and SAIC.
In 2002, the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the Pentagon defined psychological
operations as “integrated employment of the core capabilities of electronic
warfare, computer network operations, psychological operations, military
deception, and operations security, in concert with specified supporting and
related capabilities, to influence, disrupt, corrupt or usurp adversarial
human and automated decision making while protecting our own. Also called
IO.” (emphasis added) (see Joint Publication 1-02: Department of Defense
Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms).
Since the alleged shooter, Wade Michael Page, is now characterized as a
white supremacist, the Southern Poverty Law Center is leading the
information campaign to portray him as a racist skinhead. In addition to
fronting a “hate rock band,” the Southern Poverty Law Center “has found that
Page also attempted to purchase goods from the neo-Nazi National Alliance,
then America’s most important hate group,” according to SPLC propaganda
minister Mark Potok.
The National Alliance, like most white supremacist groups, is controlled by
the FBI.
In 2007, its supposed leader, Green Beret David Kellerman, said he worked
for the FBI. During a trial on weapons charges, Kellerman “said he went to
work for the FBI with orders to infiltrate the National Alliance, a neo-Nazi
group, in 2000 and relay intelligence. The group’s founder wrote a book that
is widely believed to have inspired the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing,” the
Miami Herald reported.
Is it possible the SPLC is somehow connected to the latest shooting? In
2005, court papers revealed that the supposed anti-racist organization ran
an “informant” (informant and agent provocateur are often interchangeable)
at Elohim City prior to the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building in 1995.
“The potentially explosive contents of the teletype, among other things,
exposed for the first time an informant operation being conducted by
nationally known civil rights lawyer Morris Dees through his organization
the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC),” J. D. Cash wrote for the McCurtain
Daily Gazette in October of 2005.
In some detail the FBI acknowledged the SPLC was engaged in an undercover
role where it monitored subjects for the FBI believed to be linked to
executed bomber Timothy McVeigh, the white supremacist compound at Elohim
City and the mysterious German national Andreas Carl Strassmeir.
Strassmeir was a German intelligence officer and the leader of the Aryan
Republican Army at Elohim City, Robert Millar, worked closely with the FBI.
“Founder Millar repeatedly shared information with law enforcement
officials. During a June 31, 1997 court proceeding, FBI Senior Agent Peter
Rickel testified Millar was in regular contact with the agency in the years
before the bombing,” writes Jim Redden in his book, Snitch Culture.
As we noted in the case of the 1st SS Kavallerie Brigade Motorcycle Division
bust in July, the FBI controls the virtually all white supremacist groups.
It came out during the trail of reputed racist Hal Turner that he was a
“National Security Intelligence” asset working for the FBI’s Joint Terrorism
Task Force. His code name was “Valhalla” and “he received thousands of
dollars from the FBI to report on such groups as the Aryan Nations and the
white supremacist National Alliance, and even a member of the Blue Eyed
Devils skinhead punk band,” according to The Record.
The FBI has run racist and white supremacist groups since the 1960s. Under
COINTELPRO, the FBI “subsidized, armed, directed and protected the Ku Klux
Klan and other right-wing groups,” Brian Glick writes. Racist groups were
used to create a strategy of tension by attacking groups on the so-called
left, including anti-war, Chicano and Puerto Rican activists and
nationalists.
It now appears the government has taken its psyop to the next level. Instead
of merely concentrating on small time busts and demonizing “rightwing
extremists” for propaganda purposes in a complaint corporate media, they
have decided to add the racist “white power” angle to the domestic terrorism
narrative.
————————————————————————————————————————
SIKH TEMPLE SHOOTER WAS IN ARMY
PSYCHOLOGICAL OPERATIONS
http://www.prisonplanet.com/sikh-temple-shooter-was-in-army-psychological-operations.html
‘Batman’ shooter James Holmes also connected to Army psychiatrist
Paul Joseph Watson & Alex Jones
Prison Planet.com
6 August, 2012
Following the pattern of numerous other mass shooters down the years, the
accused gunman behind yesterday’s massacre at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin
worked in psychological operations while he was with the U.S. Army.
“A U.S. Army spokeswoman told Yahoo News that Page served from April 1992
until October 1998 as a member of the psychological operations unit. He was
never deployed, but won numerous medals, including two for good conduct and
one for humanitarian service. Wade received basic training in Fort Sill,
Oklahoma, moved to Fort Bliss in Texas and finished at Fort Bragg, North
Carolina.”
40-year-old Wade Michael Page’s involvement with psychological operations
bears similarities to accused Colorado shooter James Holmes, who was treated
by University of Colorado psychiatrist Dr. Lynne Fenton, a former U.S. Air
Force doctor.
Questions have been asked about what drugs were prescribed to Holmes given
that psychiatric drugs like Ritalin, Paxil, Zoloft, and Prozac have been
proven to induce violent tendencies in a minority of people.
Indeed, virtually all of the most well known mass shooting cases over the
last 20 years were carried out by individuals who had been prescribed SSRI
drugs by psychiatrists, with several of them connected to the U.S.
military-industrial complex.
Other domestic terrorists like Timothy McVeigh were also intricately
involved in clandestine Army operations and visited by psychiatrists
connected to the U.S. Army.
Page’s involvement with Army psychological operations, added to reports of
multiple shooters being responsible for the massacre, suggests that the
incident could have been some kind of drill of which Page’s role only
comprised one part.
Testimony from one eyewitness that four men carried out the attack has been
dismissed, despite the fact that his story is corroborated by other victims
who told family members that there were “multiple shooters” involved.
In addition, the Chairman of the temple stated that there were a “few
suspicious men were seen on Temple premises,” again clearly suggesting the
involvement of more than one person.
————————————————————————————————————————
THE SIKH SHOOTING: D.O.J. AND F.B.I. WARNED
OF PLANNED TERROR ATTACK IN APRIL
http://www.prisonplanet.com/the-sikh-shooting-doj-and-fbi-warned-of-planned-terror-attack-in-april.html
Susanne Posel
Prisonplanet.com
6 August, 2012
Police in Oak Creek, Wisconsin, are calling the shooting at a Sikh temple an
act of domestic terrorism – although no details or other possible motives
have been mentioned by the police chief John Edwards.
The “lone gunman” killed 6 people and critically wounded 3 before he was
killed himself by law enforcement.Hindustan Times reports that the gunman
was a white male, “with a 9/11 tattoo.”
The police department arrived at the scene in tactical gear, armed with
assault weapons in armored vehicles; including the police bomb unit (which
Milwaukee County sheriff’s spokesperson Fran McLaughlin said she was not
clear as to why they were called to the scene).
Eyewitnesses to the shooting say that a team of four men dressed in “dark
clothing” were responsible for the killings. These initial reports
completely contradict the official story by the police that a “lone gunman”
was the suspect they shot and killed.
More initial reports stated that the local hospital was told to expect
anywhere between 8 – 20 people. At the time of this call-in the suspect was
“still at large”.
Edwards relayed that the FBI was handling the investigation because the
shooting was being treated as a domestic terror attack. Tactical units
converged on the temple, preformed a sweep through the interior and
exchanged gunfire with the suspected gunman outside the temple.
US Attorney James Santelle, who is analyzing the case, stated that he cannot
determine if this is a case of domestic terrorism, although reports are
claiming it is, justifying the quick FBI involvement.
Kurt Weins, a resident who lives in an upper flat in a cordoned off area
close to the location of the shooting, was told by law enforcement not to
speak to the press after they conducted their interview of his summation of
the events.
Seven victims died before police arrived on the scene at 10:25 am in Oak
Creek. The mainstream media is pointing to this incident being “the second
mass shooting in the US in less than a month” while also mentioning that
this tragedy could be related to the House of Representatives requesting
that FBI monitor hate crimes directed at Sikhs in April; nearly 2 months
ago, Attorney General Eric Holder and FBI Director Robert Muller were warned
to watch for this exact type of incident.
Naming Sikh-Americans as possible targets for “hate crimes” the letter to
Holder and Muller commented on the Sikh’s “distinct identity and common
misperceptions with respect to their attire and appearance” saying that this
group is often erroneously believed to be “affiliated with extremists and
were somehow responsible for the September 11 terrorist attacks.”
It was arbitrarily mentioned in an MSM article that the gunman had a “9/11
tattoo” possibly making the tie between the attack and 9/11 retaliation.
Joseph Crowley, House Representative wrote in a letter to Holder and Muller
that:
Numerous reports have documented how those practicing the Sikh religion are
often targeted for hate violence because of their religiously-mandated
turbans — i.e. because of their Sikh identity, regardless of whether the
attacker understands the victim to be Sikh or not.
In June, Michele Bachmann wrote a letter to various federal agencies
including the US State Department, the Department of Justice and the
Department of Homeland Security, warning them of the dangers of the Muslim
Brotherhood and their ties to key members of the Obama administration;
including Huma Abedin, top aide to Hillary Clinton, Secretary of State. In
that letter, Bachmann mentioned the possibility of Sikh “hate crimes” being
carried out under false pretense of ignorance for the religious ideals of
the Sikhs.
According to the Indian Embassy, the US National Security Council and the
Indian Consulate are watching the progress of this case. An embassy official
was sent to Oak Creek.
Muller and President Obama have spoken about the shooting, as well as White
House chief Jack Lew and Homeland Security adviser John Brennan.
The latest gun grab seems to be centered on the use of guns in “hate crimes”
as anti-government activists are being tied to this incident with the letter
to Holder and Muller. While the Batman shooting began the national debate
over whether or not to have stricter laws concerning gun procurement, this
latest incident is specifically being billed as a “lone wolf” with a
directed motive to commit domestic terrorism against a religious group who
may be somehow tied to the 9/11 truth movement.
Is the FBI seeking to target 9/11 truthers in their latest addition to the
ever-growing list of terrorists to watch on the FBI “Communities Against
Terrorism”.
————————————————————————————————————————
SOUTHERN POVERTY LAW CENTER SAYS IT HAS BEEN
TRACKING SIKH TEMPLE SHOOTER SINCE 2000
http://www.prisonplanet.com/southern-poverty-law-center-says-it-has-been-tracking-temple-shooter-since-2000.html
Michael Kelley
Business Insider
6 August, 2012
A nonprofit that tracks white supremist groups has been watching Sikh Temple
shooting suspect Wade Michael Page since 2000.
Heidi Beirich of the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) said they started
tracking Page when he tried to purchase goods from the neo-Nazi group
National Alliance, according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
This morning the SPLC resurfaced an April 2010 interview Page gave to
alleged white supremacist website Label56 to discuss his band End Apathy.
Here are some of the more revealing parts:
Can you give the readers a quick background to End Apathy?
Page: End Apathy began in 2005 and the concept was based on trying to figure
out what it would take to actually accomplish positive results in society
and what is holding us back. A lot of what I realized at the time was that
if we could figure out how to end peoples apathetic ways it would be the
start towards moving forward.
As you said End Apathy was entirely your own creation. What was your
inspiration for wanting to do the band?
Page: Yes, it was entirely my own idea. The inspiration was based on
frustration that we have the potential to accomplish so much more as
individuals and a society in whole.
What kind of topics do you write about in your lyrics?
Page: The topics vary from sociological issues, religion, and how the value
of human life has been degraded by being submissive to tyranny and hypocrisy
that we are subjugated to.
Are you originally from out in California? How did you wind up moving from
one side of the country to the complete other?
Page: I am originally from Colorado and had always been independent, but
back in 2000 I set out to get involved and wanted to basically start over.
So, I sold everything I owned except for my motorcycle and what I could fit
into a backpack and went on cross country trip visiting friends and
attending festivals and shows.
————————————————————————————————————————
SIKH TEMPLE MASSACRE: MULTIPLE SHOOTERS
AND DOMESTIC TERRORISM
http://www.prisonplanet.com/sikh-temple-massacre-multiple-shooters-and-domestic-terrorism.html
Kurt Nimmo
Prisonplanet.com
6 August, 2012
Get ready for the corporate media to spin the FBI’s characterization of the
shooting in Milwaukee as white supremacist domestic terrorism.
“Unnamed officials told NBC News that the suspect had served in the U.S.
army, had many tattoos, and held ‘some kind of radical or white supremacist
views’ but was not known to be affiliated with any radical group. The
suspect had only traffic tickets on his criminal records, the officials told
NBC News,” the Daily Beast reported late Sunday.
“Tattoos on the body of the slain Sikh temple gunman and certain
biographical details led the FBI to treat the attack at a Milwaukee-area
temple as an act of domestic terrorism, officials said Sunday,” the Los
Angeles Times said on Sunday afternoon.
“A federal official who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was
not authorized to speak to the media refused to say whether the gunman was
thought to belong to a hate group or some other violent group because the
investigation was still unfolding.”
The shooting appears to be the work of an organized team. Despite the police
and FBI stating there was only one shooter who was shot dead by police,
people at the scene insist there was multiple shooters:
This inconvenient fact will be assigned to the memory hole as the
establishment media follows the official narrative now being formulated –
the shooter was a white supremacist with telltale racist tattoos who a)
belonged to a political group that will be scapegoated and held up as an
example of violent rightwing extremism, or b) was a “lone wolf” who followed
racist political philosophy (more than likely sharing attributes outlined in
the Department of Homeland Security’s “rightwing extremism” document,
including the supposed threat by returning veterans).