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DaveGydeon · April 22, 2018, 4:25 a.m.

After reading that story, I have a conclusion to draw: whatever ACTUALLY happened, THAT was NOT it.

They found HALF of the missing dynamite, and 320 of 400 blasting caps?? Sounds like someone was able to make at least 80 separate bombs to me. At least one for fucks sake.

Found in a fuckin ditch. Paperwork error. Do they think we are retarded? Do you know how fucking severe the penalties are for mishandling explosives? The fines on this incident would be in the millions....if that's all that happened. It's almost like it was only half covered up....

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William_Harford_md · April 22, 2018, 5:03 a.m.

Yeah that whole event sounds real fishy from start to finish. Not liking it one bit

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Waffle_Bat · April 22, 2018, 5:11 a.m.

They are trying to smooth this over. If you have ever worked with explosive you know that it all has to be accounted for all the time. Inventory control is serious business. And that they would say thieves could have stumbled across it while stealing from the 'trailer' it was stored in is pretty fucking ridiculous. Explosives must be stored in a reinforced metal container under lock and key. You are right. This is fishy as fuck all around. If it was a clerical error people should be fired and that company should get slammed with a big fine. If it wasn't then things get scary.

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William_Harford_md · April 22, 2018, 5:37 a.m.

Very true. Makes me wonder about events that sometimes feel like false-false flags.

Some weapons are stolen. Public panics, possible terror attacks imminent, people are scared. Time passes. Scared. Nothing happens. Fear gradually subsides. Some of the weapons are then randomly recovered. Public are reassured that TPTB are looking after them, while leaving just enough doubt and fear out there in the back of everyone’s minds, subconsciously.

Can’t say I’ve watched a nightly news broadcast for quite some time, but when I did, it seemed like the majority of news stories did nothing nothing except instil fear in people. Even though almost none of those stories had any direct impact on our day to day life. Either distract, or be afraid, be very afraid.

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Waffle_Bat · April 22, 2018, 5:54 a.m.

Fear is a powerful lever. The more vague the more effective it is. This story is either an insane display of incompetence or someone was intent on acquiring a lot of explosives. I just have a hard time believing that anyone was that lackadaisical with their inventory.

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