- Joined
- Dec 17, 2019
Glows so bright I gotta wear shades!
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Glows so bright I gotta wear shades!
Honestly, the Manifesto is probably clear as day as to what the motives and intended goals of this massacre was, and it must be very bad for certain elements in the US government. Nothing to see here... move along.If the Nashville shooter had been a straight constitutional conservative would the FBI be blocking the killer's manifesto, or would it be scrutinized for months on every mainstream media platform from day one?
The question is important because it illustrates the discomforting double standards in play whenever a mass murder is committed by a person on the political left (and there have been many lately). If the manifesto outlines ideologically motivated intent then the actions of Audrey Hale, a biological woman identifying as male, could be labeled a terrorist act. However, if the manifesto stays locked away from the public then there will always be suspicions but never any confirmation. Certain political groups and activist groups benefit greatly from the suppression of Hale's motives.
Shit or get off the pot, Jack.Jack claiming Tranifesto is being leaked.
The fact he just links to his podcast without any further explanation of what he means says a lot.Posobiec is one of the least reliable and glowiest righty pundits out there. Wouldn't be surprised if he's just making shit up.
Also used to be _TMix / RealThomasMix and a bunch of other accounts
View attachment 4915564
scar (or whatever it is) under his eye matches.
View attachment 4915594
Most likely is him but I need to double-check. That's why I removed his address, associated people and phone nbr.
View attachment 4915602
Inb4 she was being groomed as a shooter by mutiple competing three letter agencies and they each gave her a phone to communicateI wish they were more specific about the phones. I have box of all my old and obsolete cell phones under my desk. I would bet that's what they found and confiscated.
I don't find that surprising. I have like 6 older phones in the drawer, I even kept a super old Alcatel from like 20 yrs ago lmao. Fairly sure it's customary to seize all electronics found.View attachment 5090597
On the seized items list were seven cellphones? Training courses? lol, this shit glows bright as fuck. They need to fire the FBI dude who keeps on being like, "Ok, we got your guns to you - and ready to shoot? Sweet. OK, we have to do it on, like, this date at this time. Please don't jump the gun (ha ha) or anything on me. Let's pick this time and this location?" and is flabbergasted when the shooter being a lunatic guns niggas down and doesn't respect your faggy timetables and shit.
Like, I get it, setting up psychos so they can go to jail forever, but it kinda defeats the whole point if you let them pop off shots later.
I wish they were more specific about the phones. I have box of all my old and obsolete cell phones under my desk. I would bet that's what they found and confiscated.
I think it's equally likely that she just pines after some girl from school who never even knew her name. Her mental illness was severe and multifaceted.Alright place ya bets now- she blames transphobia and not getting her HRT free and her no no square was touched by Twitter…….I mean Christian groomers who then ghosted her and she had the sad. Also this thing is a blueprint for total apocalypse but they are still releasing it? Oki doki.
Calls for Covenant shooter’s ‘manifesto’ may be answered soon
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) – The Metro Nashville Police Department is preparing to release written material from The Covenant School shooter.
While the word “manifesto” was used in the days after the shooting, Metro police spokesperson Don Aaron told News 2 on Wednesday, April 26 that the writings are essentially dated journals, saying, “While the word manifesto was used on the first day, we have since referred to these as writings or journals.”
Aaron also said they are beginning the “close review/preparation process for the public release of written material.”
Key Tennessee Republicans have been calling for investigators to release the documents, saying it’s critical to know the motive behind the murders before a special session is held on gun law reform.
A retired FBI agent said relevance and potential privacy issues are among concerns investigators consider before releasing a shooter’s writings.
“We all want a sentence that says ‘I did this because of this,’ but very rarely do you get somebody that writes that,” Katherine Schweit explained.
It’s a topic Schweit knows all too well; the author and former FBI special agent created the agency’s active shooter program following the tragedy at Sandy Hook Elementary School.
“I’ve worked in this space a long time and we want the lessons learned out of this,” she said.
Over the last month, the FBI and Metro police investigators have been analyzing what The Covenant School shooter left behind.
“It’s my understanding that there’s a large volume of material that needs to be gone through,” said Schweit.
As of Wednesday, the front door is still boarded up at the home where the shooter lived with their parents on Brightwood Avenue. Search warrants detailed what investigators seized inside, including 30 journals, some with references to school shootings and firearms courses, a suicide note, and five Covenant School yearbooks. Investigators also seized what they described as a psych medical folder.
While Schweit said it’s a large volume of content, it may provide limited value as investigators consider relevance and potential privacy issues of others.
“That shooter is gone but the family is not, so you have to include all of that in your consideration of what to release. I know people are anxious to see and hear what might have been written, but I think that is more curiosity than it is forensic value,” Schweit said. “As much as we want a motive and we want an explanation of why it’s kind of an equal disservice to kind of just randomly release everything and we’ve learned from past mistakes that when we release everything it doesn’t necessarily move the motive forward, but it gives the shooter exactly what they want; they get permanent fame and glory out of it.”
Schweit pointed to the release of Columbine material as being a lesson learned.
“Those have become blue prints for other shooters. We don’t want to make that mistake again. So I think it’s important to take the time to decide what, if anything can be released.”
Schweit added that there isn’t a timeline for releasing information in an investigation of a mass shooting.
“Investigations take as long as they do. Law enforcement and behavioral experts are looking as long as they need to and they will be analyzing whatever they obtain over a long period of time. It’s not something that’s released and then it goes away. We are still reading documents that were released from shooters and other offenders from 20 and 30 years ago. There’s always value from an investigative standpoint, but I think the public is looking for it from a curiosity standpoint,” said Schweit.
While some information may not be released to the public, Schweit said that doesn’t mean it can’t be shared with victims and family members, as well as other behavioral experts and law enforcement as they look to find the next shooter before they strike.
Holy shit, a retired agent with some common sense. Maybe they give your brain back when you leave federal service.“That shooter is gone but the family is not, so you have to include all of that in your consideration of what to release. I know people are anxious to see and hear what might have been written, but I think that is more curiosity than it is forensic value,” Schweit said. “As much as we want a motive and we want an explanation of why it’s kind of an equal disservice to kind of just randomly release everything and we’ve learned from past mistakes that when we release everything it doesn’t necessarily move the motive forward, but it gives the shooter exactly what they want; they get permanent fame and glory out of it.”