Vegas shooter: the "bump stock" revelation contradicts the official scenario---oops By Jon Rappoport
Vegas shooter: the "bump stock" revelation contradicts the official scenario---oops
(To read about Jon's mega-collection, The Matrix Revealed, click here.)
Vegas shooter: the "bump stock" revelation contradicts the official scenario---oops
By Jon Rappoport
There are so many holes in the official story of the Vegas
concert shooting, anyone who buys it should consider laying out cash for
condos on the moon.
File this one under: GUN ENTHUSIAST WITH LARGE KNOWLEDGE OF
WEAPONS USES RIDICULOUS RIFLES THAT ARE NOTORIOUSLY INACCURATE. That's
called a contradiction. Oops.
SMART GUNMAN CHOOSES DUMB WEAPONS.
The latest piece of fraud? The bump stock revelation.
A bump stock is a legal device that turns a semi-auto weapon
into a simulation of full auto: faster fire rate. Legislators are
falling all over themselves to ban it.
According to press outlets, the accused shooter, Stephen
Paddock, brought not one, not two, not five, but 12 rifles to his hotel
suite at the Mandalay that were outfitted with bump stocks.
At the same time we're told Paddock left a note in his suite
that revealed he was calculating distance and gravity and other
factors---he was carefully plotting out his upcoming shooting spree to
obtain the highest degree of accuracy.
There is one problem with that claim.
Bump stocks aren't accurate. And if Paddock had even superficial knowledge of weapons, he would know that.
Reason.com: "No one seems more mystified by the sudden
enthusiasm for bump stocks---from both gun nuts and gun grabbers---than
gun store owners. Because bump stocks sacrifice accuracy for speed
hunters, sportsmen, and most other enthusiasts have little need for
them, some experts say."
"'I've always thought these bump stocks were just a novelty,'
Andrew Wickerham, owner of the 2nd Amendment Gun Shop in Las Vegas,
told The Christian Science Monitor. 'They're not that good, and they're
hard as hell to control'."
"'I will order them if someone wants one, but I highly
discourage them from purchasing. It's not safe, they don't work, and
it's a gimmick,' Tallahassee gun retailer Will Dance told CNN Money."
One of my source on weapons wrote this: "There are some
devices (like AutoGlove and Bump Fire) that can simulate full automatic
fire, but they cannot be used accurately or effectively."
"The [weapon] on the right [in a photo taken in Paddock's
hotel suite] with the Bump Fire device has something like an EOTech or
RedDot optic that is only good for close quarters shooting and out to
maybe 75 yards [far shorter than the distance between Paddock's suite
and the concert grounds]..."
Again, if Paddock was making careful calculations to ensure
accuracy in his shooting spree, the last thing he would do was bring
TWELVE rifles outfitted with bump stocks with him.
Yet another piece of the official scenario crumbles.
Were these twelve rifles planted in the hotel room? Was the room set up by others as a stage prop?
The
author of three explosive collections, THE MATRIX REVEALED, EXIT FROM
THE MATRIX, and POWER OUTSIDE THE MATRIX, Jon was a candidate for a US
Congressional seat in the 29th District of California. He maintains a
consulting practice for private clients, the purpose of which is the
expansion of personal creative power. Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, he
has worked as an investigative reporter for 30 years, writing articles
on politics, medicine, and health for CBS Healthwatch, LA Weekly, Spin
Magazine, Stern, and other newspapers and magazines in the US and
Europe. Jon has delivered lectures and seminars on global politics,
health, logic, and creative power to audiences around the world.
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