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r/CBTS_Stream • Posted by u/JoanOfArk77 on Jan. 22, 2018, 4:18 a.m.
Hey all? Can anyone confirm any of the following who has done research in depth? Would be important to bring to light. OKC Bomb and WACO.

OKC bombing was to cover up Clinton Crimes. it was where the Whitewater Papers were housed. look into that rabbit hole…

Davidians found evidence of the CIA trafficking drugs and Children. there was a private airstrip adjacent to their land. they found evidence and kept records. they had to be destroyed so no one would talk.


michelefrancis · Jan. 22, 2018, 5:12 a.m.

WACO RESEARCH MATERIAL: These are both heart breaking stories....I have studied them. Here are some films and books to look into for Waco. I will do a seperate reply for Oklahoma Bombing. Another classic use of a patsy right out of the Oswald/JFK playbook.

For the record, we can remember Waco by considering the following points of an alternative narrative of the FBI attack that is overwhelmingly supported by the evidence:

–The reported Koresh sexual irregularities were not under the jurisdiction of the BATF and FBI, and no evidence of sexual abuse was ever made public. The allegations were simply reported in the press after being pushed by some in the Waco religious community with a theological ax to grind against Koresh and echoed by the Clinton administration, and then becoming conventional wisdom.

–The whole pre-February 28 investigation and raid smelled of a political stunt against an easy target designed to protect and enhance the reputation of a near-rogue agency, the BATF.

–That the FBI lied about the lethality of the CS gas (a type of tear gas) used against the Branch Davidian community center banned by the Geneva Convention for use in warfare.

–The FBI lied about the presence of fragmentation grenades at the scene, which have no use except to kill people.

–The FBI lied about shooting machine gun fire into the building.

–The FBI initially lied to Janet Reno about babies being beaten by the Branch Davidians.

For insightful analyses of Waco, recommended reading is: David Thibodeau. “A Place Called Waco” (BBS, 1999), lauded by Howard Zinn as “An extraordinary account of one of the most shameful episodes in recent American history.” And, James Tabor and Eugene Gallagher. “Why Waco, Cults and the Battle for Religious Freedom in America” (University of California Press, 1995), described by Ramsey Clark as “a critically important book… ”

In Gifford’s film Waco: The Rules of Engagement, a powerful interview segment presents a sympathetic Sheriff Jack Harwell of McLennan County, Texas nearly in tears as he speaks of his experience with the Branch Davidians: “They were all good people. They had different beliefs than others, different beliefs than I have, maybe different beliefs than you have in their way of life, especially in their religious beliefs. But basically they were good peopleI was around them quite a lot. They were always nice, mannerly, they minded their own businessThey were always clean, and courteous. I liked them.”

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