Comment: Very extensive research and well worth reading. It leads you to the inevitable conclusion that Intel had their sticky hands all over the event. The lies and disinformation is so prevalent that one can only conclude that this is indeed yet another false flag operation.
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Joe Quinn.net
Were the 'Boston Bombers' mind controlled?
If it were possible to ask the elder of the two Tsarnaev brothers, Tamerlan, this question, it seems he would answer in the affirmative.
One of the stories that disappeared down the media memory hole late last year was a report about a five month-long Boston Globe investigation into the April 2013 Boston Marathon bombings and their alleged perpetrators.
A December 16th 2013 story on the investigation nonchalantly stated:
The Boston Globe investigation, entitled 'The Fall of the House of Tsarnaev', is a rambling piece of investigative journalism by several Boston Globe journalists, at least one of whom traveled to Dagestan to dig up details on the Tsarnaev family history and on Tamerlan's 6-month trip there in 2012.
The Globe report reveals a pretty dysfunctional family, with an erratic abusive father and a controlling, sometimes hysterical mother, both of whom had delusional hopes that their children would 'make it big' in the USA and struggled to simultaneously embrace American culture and maintain some semblance of their complex Russian/Muslim heritage.
The effect that such a family dynamic had on their four children (2 boys and 2 girls) is hardly surprising and can be seen in 'normal' households across the USA. The two Tsarnaev girls married and divorced early and ended up sharing an apartment together as unmarried mothers. The younger of the alleged bombers, Dzokhar (Jahar), initially showed academic and athletic promise but, by the time he started his first year in college, he tended to prefer partying and smoking pot to attending classes, and even dabbled in small-time marijuana dealing. Apart from the fact that Jahar consistently complained on his Twitter postings about chronic problems sleeping, including some nightmares, he appears to have been a pretty normal (for modern-day America) 19-year-old kid.
The older Tamerlan was a promising boxer, winning the Massachusetts Golden Gloves tournament two years running, but was blocked from moving to national championships because he was not yet a U.S. citizen. With his boxing career cut short, Tamerlan drifted, and in early 2012 took at 6-month trip to his home country of Dagestan. While the Boston Globe report claims that he did little of any significance there, According to a Yahoo News report in Romanian:
Perhaps Tamerlan's attendance at the Jamestown/CIA-sponsored 'seminars' were the reason that, on his return to the USA, his friends reported that he seemed more serious about his Muslim faith.
Overall, the Boston Globe's write up of the protracted investigation strains to parlay this all-too-common example of dysfunctional family life in modern-day USA into the 'fertile ground' that sprouted two 'self-radicalized terrorists' who "spontaneously" decided to bomb the Boston Marathon. Something doesn't add up. In fact, lots of things don't add up. And there's no point in expecting the mainstream media to ask the really pertinent questions.
So, once again, we must do it ourselves:
As already mentioned, the younger brother Jahar wasn't doing well, academically, in his first year at college. He was 19 and, strangely enough, preferred trips to NYC with friends than studying. While he wasn't short on bravado and claimed that he was doing fine and had everything under control, the truth was that he had failed three courses - chemistry and the environment, introduction to American politics, and general psychology - and got a B in his writing class. [Given the title of this article, those three courses that he failed appear rather ironic.] Despite the fact that his average after the first semester of the 2012-13 year hovered around a D-minus, college officials "authorized him to sign up for the spring term of 2013. It is unclear who did so or why, but under normal college procedures someone would have had to lift the "hold" that is placed on files of failing students like Jahar and only after being convinced the student had "special" circumstances that argued for leniency."
I don't know about you, but this makes me think that those "special circumstances" were very special indeed, and perhaps had something to do with someone needing Jahar to stay in the Boston area through 2013.
Read more
----------------
Joe Quinn.net
Were the 'Boston Bombers' mind controlled?
If it were possible to ask the elder of the two Tsarnaev brothers, Tamerlan, this question, it seems he would answer in the affirmative.
One of the stories that disappeared down the media memory hole late last year was a report about a five month-long Boston Globe investigation into the April 2013 Boston Marathon bombings and their alleged perpetrators.
A December 16th 2013 story on the investigation nonchalantly stated:
"Suspected Boston Marathon bomber Tamerlan Tsarnaev heard voices inside his head and had an alter-ego."Alrighty then. Not much of interest there.
As part of a five-month investigation, the Globe spoke to a number of sources close to the elder Tsarnaev. One of them was Donald Larking. Larking said that Tamerlan believed the voices were part of a "majestic mind control", which was "a way of breaking down a person and creating an alternative personality with which they must coexist."
The Boston Globe investigation, entitled 'The Fall of the House of Tsarnaev', is a rambling piece of investigative journalism by several Boston Globe journalists, at least one of whom traveled to Dagestan to dig up details on the Tsarnaev family history and on Tamerlan's 6-month trip there in 2012.
The Globe report reveals a pretty dysfunctional family, with an erratic abusive father and a controlling, sometimes hysterical mother, both of whom had delusional hopes that their children would 'make it big' in the USA and struggled to simultaneously embrace American culture and maintain some semblance of their complex Russian/Muslim heritage.
The effect that such a family dynamic had on their four children (2 boys and 2 girls) is hardly surprising and can be seen in 'normal' households across the USA. The two Tsarnaev girls married and divorced early and ended up sharing an apartment together as unmarried mothers. The younger of the alleged bombers, Dzokhar (Jahar), initially showed academic and athletic promise but, by the time he started his first year in college, he tended to prefer partying and smoking pot to attending classes, and even dabbled in small-time marijuana dealing. Apart from the fact that Jahar consistently complained on his Twitter postings about chronic problems sleeping, including some nightmares, he appears to have been a pretty normal (for modern-day America) 19-year-old kid.
The older Tamerlan was a promising boxer, winning the Massachusetts Golden Gloves tournament two years running, but was blocked from moving to national championships because he was not yet a U.S. citizen. With his boxing career cut short, Tamerlan drifted, and in early 2012 took at 6-month trip to his home country of Dagestan. While the Boston Globe report claims that he did little of any significance there, According to a Yahoo News report in Romanian:
Documents obtained by the Russian media show that Tamerlane Ţarnaev, the terrorist involved in explosions in Boston, was present at several of the trainings organized by the "Caucasus Foundation " in the period January to July 2012. The Caucus Foundation is funded with the support of the Jamestown Foundation (U.S.) whose board of directors included the Zbigniew Brzezinski , former national security adviser to President Jimmy Carter.The Jamestown Foundation does seem to fit the profile of one of those ubiquitous CIA front operations, with the board of directors even including former CIA Director (2006-2009) Michael V. Hayden, among other shady characters from the intelligence and business community. So it seems the Boston Globe's trek to, and research in, Dagestan may not have been as thorough as it could have been.
Perhaps Tamerlan's attendance at the Jamestown/CIA-sponsored 'seminars' were the reason that, on his return to the USA, his friends reported that he seemed more serious about his Muslim faith.
Overall, the Boston Globe's write up of the protracted investigation strains to parlay this all-too-common example of dysfunctional family life in modern-day USA into the 'fertile ground' that sprouted two 'self-radicalized terrorists' who "spontaneously" decided to bomb the Boston Marathon. Something doesn't add up. In fact, lots of things don't add up. And there's no point in expecting the mainstream media to ask the really pertinent questions.
So, once again, we must do it ourselves:
As already mentioned, the younger brother Jahar wasn't doing well, academically, in his first year at college. He was 19 and, strangely enough, preferred trips to NYC with friends than studying. While he wasn't short on bravado and claimed that he was doing fine and had everything under control, the truth was that he had failed three courses - chemistry and the environment, introduction to American politics, and general psychology - and got a B in his writing class. [Given the title of this article, those three courses that he failed appear rather ironic.] Despite the fact that his average after the first semester of the 2012-13 year hovered around a D-minus, college officials "authorized him to sign up for the spring term of 2013. It is unclear who did so or why, but under normal college procedures someone would have had to lift the "hold" that is placed on files of failing students like Jahar and only after being convinced the student had "special" circumstances that argued for leniency."
I don't know about you, but this makes me think that those "special circumstances" were very special indeed, and perhaps had something to do with someone needing Jahar to stay in the Boston area through 2013.
Read more
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