Europeans provide more evidence the Charlie Hebdo attack was a false flag.
"One video compares the car in which the killers escaped with the car in which the ID ofone of the accused brothers was allegedly found and makes the point that the two cars differ. The car in which the ID was found apparently is not the escape car.I wonder about the resolution of those videos and the biases of the viewers.
Another video, which seems to be part of a news report, shows a large force of police waiting as the metal screen over the deli storefront rises. This is the deli in which Amedy Coulibaly is reported to be holding hostages.
As the metal screen rises, police fire into the deli. There seems to be no return fire, andit is unclear who the police are shooting at. Perhaps it was the heavy firing by the police that killed the hostages.
Police enter and turn to the right. Then Coulibaly appears from the same direction as the police entered.He is in a running stumble as if he has been pushed into the line of fire. There is no weapon in his hands, which appear to be tied together. He falls or is shot down at the door in front of the police, who then fire more bullets into the downed man.
It looks like an execution. It most certainly is not a gun fight. Coulibaly was down and could easily have been captured and questioned. Instead, we have reports of pre-recorded confessions to take the place of capture and questioning."
"Once you look at this independently of the official news presentation, there are problems everywhere."But that's not enough to make the leap to false flag. The dropped ID and the driver alibi are the big things so far that point to false flag.
At least 50 police departments employ radars that can see through walls to monitor activities inside homes and buildings without warrants. Anybody who thinks the Constitution limits these people is naive.
GCHQ, the British version of NSA, captured and saved emails of journalists, putting journalists on the list of threats.
"Emails from the BBC, Reuters, the Guardian, the New York Times, Le Monde, the Sun, NBC and the Washington Post were saved by GCHQ and shared on the agency’s intranet as part of a test exercise by the signals intelligence agency."Nothing they do surprises me.
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