>>9843022 Multiple dead man setups, at least one set up in a way unknown to her, so she can't spill it. She would have had help with this from very powerful & wealthy people, who saw that if they offed her they would be blown up by the dead man. On the other hand, they had to keep her happy, and at least peripherally living the comfy life she had always had. Some of those people are crapping jagged titanium bricks. Their comms were compromised-they were already hosed, and now they have found the special hell that lies beyond hosed.
>>9843311 Outstanding. A guy like this is toxic venom in the guts of our enemies. Because what he says is clearly true, and they can't shut him up with the race card. They can only squirm and moan. Life is good.
>>9843402 Reasonably argued. My view is that riding the razor was the best the bad boys could come up with. Risk the arrest because you get dead manned if you off her, and the better chance is calculated to be that you can successfully hide her. An option nevertheless heavily laden with risk, risk that actuated. Anyway, going to be fascinating to watch it unfold.
>>9843575 Culloden=one of the saddest things one will ever read about. Most of those guys had no choice, having been mustered by the nobles. Inferior weaponry in every aspect, some even carrying things like shovels, facing a fully modern army (for the day). Don't know how many, but a significant number of wounded Scots were bayoneted on the field, by the victors. Then the cavalry unleashed to ride madly down the road, sabering civilians. Read of one young woman who was cruelly slashed across the face, disfiguring her for life, by some bastard. In his memoirs, the cavalry commander called this "sweets for the troops," or something quite close. As in, their reward for victory was to commit any vile act they wished, upon people who had nothing to do with politics, just going about their business.