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(回答先: サタニストとアカってくっついてるんですかねえ、 投稿者 サラ 日時 2005 年 5 月 05 日 21:20:36)
ここまできたので、私の妄想も暴走させましょう。
何しろ、数字ばかり見てるんだから、ありとあらゆる理論で。
これは、愉快犯じゃないな。カラスのせいでもない!
組織をあげての犯行である、という仮説をたてますが、
では何故、2005年5月5日か?
200555、すなわち、2×55.5=111 ∴ 666
本当に、大量殺人狙ってたと思いますが。
幸い、テロにはならなかった。しかし、こういうことを繰り返しながら、
国内を混乱させ、人心不安を煽っておいて、着々と軍備を進める。
北朝鮮からのミサイルだって、テストということになってるけど、誰がみたんでしょうか?レーダーの監視データ全部だせ、って、米軍はいってるらしいけど、どうなったんでしょうねえ。ジャパンタイムズに出てるから、世界中の人間が読んでる記事だけど、
プロパガンダで一挙に戦争口実つくるんじゃないかと、疑いの目で見てる人、多いですね。パターンはナチと911首謀者(すなわちネオコン)と同じ。
日米両国のマスコミ監視しておかないと。
置石はからすのせいではない!
You Can See The Propaganda Coming (or can you?)
by Bill Sardi
http://www.lewrockwell.com/sardi/sardi36.html
Hyperspace to North Korea
Hyperspace now to current events. It’s Sunday, May 1, 2005, the day before world leaders would meet at the United Nations building over the nuclear ambitions of countries like North Korea. White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card walks onto the set for "NBC News Meet The Press." NBC host Tim Russert shows a film clip, an exchange between Hilary Clinton and Vice-admiral Lowell Jacoby:
(Videotape, April 28, 2005):
SEN. HILLARY CLINTON, (D-NY): Do you assess that North Korea has the ability to arm a missile with a nuclear device?
VICE ADMIRAL LOWELL JACOBY (Director, Defense Intelligence Agency): The assessment is that they have the capability to do that, yes, ma'am.
SEN. CLINTON: And do you assess that North Korea has the ability to deploy a two-stage intercontinental nuclear missile that could successfully hit U.S. territory?
VICE ADM. JACOBY: Yes. The assessment on a two-stage missile would give capability to reach portions of U.S. territory, and the projection on a three-stage missile, would be that it would be able to reach most of the continental United States.
(End videotape)
The Pentagon later argued that Jacoby was not stating new information but only reiterating his previous statements that North Korea has a "theoretical capability to produce a warhead and mate it with a missile."
"We have no information to suggest they have done so," Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said in a statement Saturday. It was pre-planned plausible denial.
Senator Jim Walsh said North Korea has never successfully tested a long-range missile or a nuclear device – much less a combination of the two. "We are very, very far from that point," he told CNN.
Then later, on CNNs Late Edition, Andrew Card said: ""It appears that there was a test of a short-range missile on Sunday by the North Koreans and it landed in the Sea of Japan."
Said Andrew Card: "They've tested missiles before. This is not the first time of alleged testing of a missile, so we know what they're intent is and we're trying to keep a good close eye on 'em."
What timing. The week prior, U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency Director Lowell Jacoby testified on Capitol Hill that, according to a U.S. assessment, North Korea has the capacity to arm a missile with a nuclear device and hit U.S. territory.
Did the missile test actually occur? U.S. State Department spokesman Curtis Cooper issued a statement saying the missile test apparently took place Sunday.
BBC News cited Japanese news agency Kyodo as saying Tokyo had been informed by the US military of the North Korean test, believed to have been carried out at 05:00 AM PDT on Sunday (2300 GMT on Saturday).
By 6:11 AM on Sunday the Los Angeles Times reported that North Korea may have fired a missile, citing the Kyodo News service and national broadcaster NHK.
LA Times: "The reports quoted unidentified government sources as saying that the U.S. military informed Japan's Defense Agency of the possible missile launch. The government was attempting to confirm the information, the reports said. The U.S. Embassy in Tokyo and the U.S. military both refused to comment, and an official at the Japanese Defense Agency said he could not confirm the report. The South Korean defense ministry also said it could not confirm the account."
By 8:26 AM PDT the Associated Press had changed the headline into a fact: "North Korea test fires missile into Sea of Japan."
BBC News reported on Monday that Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Hiroyuki Hosoda said that the test had still not been confirmed. But he said that if it were, it nevertheless did not appear to have been targeting Japan. "It appears similar tests are conducted occasionally," he said. The timing of the reported launch "would not have anything to do with Japan," Hosoda was quoted as saying in The Japan Times. "We believe it would have been something like an ordinary domestic military drill."
On Sunday, Andrew Card had said North Koreans "are living in poverty – many in concentration camps. They do not have any exercise of democracy or freedom. They are not allowed to contact the outside world. [Kim] is not the kind of leader that is comfortable with the rest of the world." It was beginning to sound like the Taliban propaganda story all over again.
Then, by Monday night, propagandist Paula Zahn of CNN had already prepared a thorough film documentary about Kim Jong II of North Korea and how he mistreats young girls in Korea. Again, sounds like the Taliban propaganda film.