17 thoughts on “About Yesterday”

  1. The guy in NO wanted to kill his family and friends but decided that his message of jihad would get lost in his domestic dispute. Having more than one motivation shouldn’t mean we ignore the jihad aspect, especially if there really were more people involved.

    The guy in the cybertruck was special forces and maybe had TDS.

    If true, it points to two main influences. One, jihad and the other, Progressive Marxism. Both feed off each other. Progressivism destroys the brain and sense of self is replaced by jihad or postal antifa.

    The larger threat from jihad comes from actual ISIS and AQ types, which is far scarier than random act of jihad.

    https://x.com/ShawnRyan762/status/1874518346332295493

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T50pRCNaQCA

      1. No he definitely had a unhealthy derangement around Trump. To decide you want to have a viking funeral pyre in front of “your lords” castle in the 21st century and perform it.

  2. Maybe I’m being a paranoid conspiracy but,m but…. I’m having a lot of trouble with the Vegas thing.

    The dead guy, they say, shot himself in the head before the detonation. My questions are, how certain are they of the identity of this burned beyond recognition individual? How certain are they on how long before the kaboom the fatal shot was fired, and how certain are they he did it himself? And how certain are they that they know how, exactly, the bomb was rigged to detonate?

    I just wonder if the FBO has blundered, or worse, yet again, and got things wrong, yet again.

    I also wonder if it’s an intentional cover-up, like the Orlando nightclub massacre. Never forget that they denied having any indicator of motive on that one, in spite of having spoken to the terrorist during the attack and hearing him proclaim his support for ISIS.

        1. That fits very well! 🙂

          Wish I’d had the wit to think of it, it’d have saved me from having to admit my typo! 🙂

    1. Well the Vegas one is a strange one. At this point I’ll say named suspect is dead, don’t think it mistaken ID. Now you can go put on your tin foil hat and somehow he was setup have at it. Though this smells more like suicide and performed his own viking funeral. Load up the truck with fireworks and gasoline , pull up in front of his “heroes house” and lit himself up.

      1. I’ll agree the named suspect is almost certainly the dead guy, but I’m convinced of little beyond that. I’m not saying I believe otherwise, just that I’m not convinced.

        I think it’s possible he might have been a victim, either of extortion (such as threats to his family) or even a carjacking once he got to Vegas. *IF* that cybertruck had full self drive and/or summons, it’s theoretically possible (I think) for him to have been dead since shortly before the vehicle arrived where it blew up. Tesla would surely know if that was the case (if FSD or summons was used by that vehicle to emplace itself) but it’s quite concevable that if so, they were asked to keep quiet for a bit (reasonable if there are other possible suspects),

        Occam’s Razor suggests that the dead guy is the terrorist, but that should not shut the door to looking at other possibilities.

  3. You can tell that few journalists and most other Americans have limited knowledge about the military. Yesterday, I saw several articles and comments about how both terrorists were stationed at Ft Bragg (now named Ft Liberty) at the same time. Bragg is freaking huge. Depending on the source, there are some 45,000 to 52,000 soldiers stationed there. To put that into perspective, the total active duty force strength of the Army is ~450,000 soldiers.

      1. Yes. Also, they’ve talked about how the guy who managed to kill himself in the Cybertruck in Las Vegas was in Special Forces. What was his MOS? Was he on an A-Team, meaning he was trained in weapons, combat engineering, communications, medical, etc., or was he one of the many support staff? It makes a difference in his skillset. The support staff do important work to help the A-Teams, but they aren’t the snake-eaters of the Green Berets.

        1. Livelsberger was a highly decorated Green Beret with extensive experience in several war zones. His family was puzzled by the crude “bomb”, given his skill set.

          The gun that produced his “head wound” was a Desert Eagle 50 caliber hand cannon. Seven people were close enough to the car to be injured by the explosion, and none of them heard a shot. That’s one shot no one could possibly miss – and if it occurred before the rest of the explosives went off, it would have been evident in the security camera video.

          I think he was dead before the car even pulled up to the hotel, his hands tied to the steering wheel so that the auto-drive feature would work. It’s possible that the deceased wasn’t Livelsberger at all, but we won’t know until DNA testing is done – it it can be.

          1. I think he was dead before the car even pulled up to the hotel, his hands tied to the steering wheel so that the auto-drive feature would work.

            As I understand it, autodrive barely keeps the car on the road. It doesn’t park nicely in front of a hotel (a glance at the explosion footage shows the vehicle had pulled up right behind another vehicle).

            As to the latter, electric vehicles burn hot. The original explosion wasn’t that impressive – the video I observed came from a camera that was above and to the side of the exploding vehicle. It was still operating several seconds after the initial explosion.

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