The murder of enemies is never to be celebrated. Appropriate human behavior for a family is also appropriate behavior for a nation. Could we ever image assassinating a family member and then celebrating the murder? Celebrating the death of anyone, especially when murder is celebrated by a society, is a powerful sign values are upside down.
I conducted first-hand interviews in the Middle East to learn the truth about al-Qaida. The conclusion of my work is al-Qaida was created by the U.S. government with help from Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Britain.
Al-Qaida has never existed as an international organization with sleeper cells in the United States. People wishing to know more about this are encouraged to watch the brief video at http://www.brasschecktv.com/page/59.html.
Voice creation technology and photos of doubles fooled a lot of people about Osama bin Laden. Most people in the U.S. still have never figured out pictures of him wearing a gold ring must be fabricated because for religious reasons he did not wear gold jewelry.
The White House has intentionally issued multiple versions of the assassination because it knows the marketing power of first impressions. First, Osama bin Laden had a machine gun and was firing at the U.S. Navy SEALs. The next day we learn he was resisting capture and wearing a suicide vest.
Then four days later, men who did the killing report he was unarmed and wearing only pajamas. Then Osama bin Laden’s 12-year-old daughter reveals she watched as her father was held captive for several minutes and then shot dead.
NBC’s Jim Miklaszewski reported the special forces team had orders to kill and specifically not to capture Osama bin Laden.
A serious question people should ask is why did President Obama not want Osama bin Laden captured? The answer is much bigger than the fact that during Ronald Reagan’s presidency the CIA created freedom fighters and called this group al-Qaida. You may be surprised to know Osama bin Laden never used the term al-Qaida to refer to his handful of supporters before Oct. 21, 2001, which is when he used the name in response to a question by al-Jazeera’s Taysir Alluni.
David Dionisi
Davis