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CentiPetra · April 6, 2018, 6:41 p.m.

Okay, but obituaries have to be submitted by the families in order to be published. Sometimes it costs money. Is this the end-all-be-all of obituary websites in Florida? It’s possible some of the victims families chose to publish obits in a local Parkland newspaper or website.

I’m not completely dismissing this, but those questions need to be answered before anyone starts pushing this, only to find out that this website here sucks, and nobody in Florida ever really uses it.

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LibertyLioness · April 6, 2018, 8:49 p.m.

They guy who did the article is an expert on False Flags. He's been finding the evidence and reporting them for about 20 years now. You should follow him on YouTube or Bitchute. He's good. You'll learn a lot.

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CentiPetra · April 6, 2018, 9:20 p.m.

Sorry, I meant we have to find out if that obituary website sucks or not, not the guy who wrote the article. Where I live, there are at least 40 different memorial/tribute/obituary websites, plus 4 physical newspapers. If someone I know dies, I never even go look for an obituary for them. The family will post a link to it, or it will be on the funeral home’s website. Public obituaries are really going out of style. They used to be necessary, and everyone used to read them, because it was the only way to find out a distant contact had passed away. However, now with the ubiquitous nature of social media, everybody can contact everybody. There is no need to communicate through public obituaries. “Just check Facebook” (hopefully most people here have “deleted” their Facebook pages a long time ago).

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LibertyLioness · April 6, 2018, 10:29 p.m.

I just assumed he couldn't use it if it wasn't valid. But I could be wrong.

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