(excerpted from Monumental Myths)
the MONUMENTAL MYTH
(aka the “Official Story”)
It was April 19, 1995 – exactly two years from the date of the Branch Davidian inferno in Waco – and a flawless, sun-drenched Oklahoma morning in springtime. Against a perfect blue-sky background, a yellow Ryder Rental truck carefully made its way through the streets of downtown Oklahoma City (OKC). Just after 9 AM, the truck, driven by disgruntled US Army veteran and “government-hating” wacko, Timothy McVeigh, acting in concert with another “nut job” right-wing extremist, Terry Nichols, pulled into a parking area outside the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building and the two men exited the truck and casually walked away.
Unbeknownst to the innocent folks in downtown OKC, there was an ANFO (ammonium nitrate/fuel oil) bomb in the back of the truck. A few minutes later, at 9:02 AM, the truck’s deadly 4,800-pound cargo exploded with enough force to blow off the front side of the nine-story federal building, collapsing floors and burying victims, both adults and children, under masses of concrete, glass, and steel. The result was 168 dead, including 19 children, and more than 800 injured.
About 90 minutes later, McVeigh was stopped by an Oklahoma state trooper for driving a vehicle without a license plate, who then arrested him on a firearms charge. Two days later he was charged in the bombing. Terry Nichols was arrested in Kansas, and formally charged with the bombing a few weeks later. Timothy McVeigh was executed June 11, 2001. In 2004, after being tried in state court in Oklahoma on 160 charges of first-degree murder, Terry Nichols was found guilty of all charges, but the jury deadlocked on the death penalty, thus sparing his life.
According to the press, the OKC bombing was a result of right-wing politics, “paranoia,” and revenge, as the two wackos did this to avenge the attack on the Branch Davidians. The bombing left the American people fearing a new “terrorist” enemy: the home-grown, militia-loving, anti-government, right-wing “extremist.”
CAN YOU HANDLE THE TRUTH?
The truth about OKC involved not only a terrible human tragedy but also a story of government conspiracy, media complicity, and destruction of evidence, intimidation, and torture. Virtually all Americans would agree with the notion that any government which conspires and carries out unspeakable atrocities, mass murders, and indescribable human rights violations upon its own citizens (in the process violating its own laws and the laws of God) – that government is an outlaw and should be ousted and its leaders brought to justice.
Is the above representative of the old Soviet Union? Red China? Cuba? Iran? Probably all Americans would conclude one or more to be true. But I warn you here and now, with proofs herein that it also applies to the USA. Incredible? Yes, but more to the point, so frightening as to shake one’s entire belief structure. Get ready to have your world rocked as we examine a few aspects of the official narrative that just don’t make sense and, if viewed with an open mind, will most certainly lead the reader to conclude that the US government was complicit in the OKC bombing.
So, please grab a soda and donut …. sorry …. grab a cup of organic green tea and a piece of watermelon, and get ready to have your mind blown. And please … keep an open mind. We’re here to discover the truth and jettison the lies. Sometimes that’s uncomfortable, I know, but please try.
Timothy McVeigh – A Patsy?
Timothy McVeigh was a disenchanted, government-hating, right-wing extremist, militia-loving, nut-job who “did” OKC to get back at the Feds for Waco. At least that’s what we heard (and still hear) from the “repeater” teleprompter reading, controlled mainstream media.
It’s well documented that before McVeigh was released from the Army, he was invited to join “Special Forces” in 1991. The official narrative is that he didn’t pass muster in Special Forces and was released from the Army. But after the bombing, while in prison awaiting execution, McVeigh told a fellow prisoner a different story – a story of being involved with “black ops.”
This story is supported by the testimony of both Terry Nichols and McVeigh’s younger sister. Nichols, in 2006, stated that that in November 1992, McVeigh told him he had been recruited by the Army for a “black op” (i.e. undercover mission). This is also the exact time, according to other defense records which reveal that McVeigh was suddenly able to pay off all of his credit card bills after he had accumulated an enormous debt while gambling on football games.
Following his “release” from the Army, according to McVeigh, his first task was to go home and act “disgruntled” and “unhappy” with the army. He did a nice job at this task. His next task was to get involved in right-wing rhetoric and ideology and then await further instructions. In 1993, McVeigh went to Waco to observe the raid on the Branch Davidians. This is well documented. His photograph was taken in Waco to prove his “interest.” He now had the perfect cover for his future involvements with anti-government militants.
Film producer, Christopher Emery, began researching the OKC bombing back in 2000, even moving to Oklahoma from New Mexico in 2003 so he could be close to witnesses and other sources of information. The result of all these years of work is a remarkable piece of investigative journalism and documentary filmmaking called A Noble Lie. The film does the work that the controlled mainstream media refused, and still refuses, to do. According to Emery, rather than being a radical government-hater, McVeigh was actually a CIA sharpshooter and assassin who had been involved in covert government drug trafficking operations. He had been decorated several times, even receiving one commendation while he was in prison for the bombing. “McVeigh was a very cunning, very talented sharpshooter,” Emery says, “He was a puppet, a showpiece for the official narrative.”
According to McVeigh’s last cell-mate, David Hammer, McVeigh worked directly for the Feds; his role was to infiltrate the burgeoning “patriot movement” and posture himself as an anti-government extremist to build up this false persona. McVeigh himself confided to his first lawyer that he had been recruited by the government and that his job was to “search for neo-Nazis and other problem troops.” In other words, the public persona of convicted bomber, Timothy McVeigh, as an anti-government right-wing radical extremist, was a complete fabrication, a hoax, a myth.
Let’s see if we can dissemble the myth. According to the official OKC narrative, McVeigh attacked the government in response to Waco. But wait! Not a single BATF or FBI agent was killed or injured and every badge carrying federal agent was mysteriously absent from the Murrah Federal Building on the morning of the attack. That’s weird? Almost like they had been tipped off or something … we’ll come back to that …
Rewind to April 17th, two days before the OKC bombing, when Timothy McVeigh allegedly picked up the Ryder truck at Elliot’s Body Shop in Junction City, Kansas. McVeigh had been filmed by a security camera at a nearby McDonald’s 24 minutes before the time stamped on the truck rental agreement, wearing clothes that did not match either of the men seen at Elliott’s. It was pouring rain at the exact time McVeigh supposedly picked up the truck; there is no plausible explanation of how he traveled the 1.25 miles from McDonald’s to Elliot’s, carless and alone as he claimed, without getting soaked in the rain. The three people interviewed (employees of Elliot’s) all agreed that the two men who rented the Ryder truck were wearing dry clothing.
According to Stephen Jones, who has seen the interview transcripts, it took 44 days for the FBI to “convince” the car rental agency owner that “John Doe #1” was Timothy McVeigh. And, no, the owner did not testify in court. I guess the Feds were afraid to put him on the witness stand for fear of what might happen under cross-examination. Also, this might explain why the initial description of John Doe #1 (which was circulated by the FBI) referred to a man with “pock-marked skin, fairly stocky” standing about 5’10”, whereas McVeigh was about 6’3” tall, thin as a rail (160 pounds), and had a smooth complexion.
Were McVeigh and Nichols involved? I think there is no doubt that they were. But they weren’t alone. According to Nichols, McVeigh believed he was being “manipulated” by FBI agent, Larry Potts, who was no stranger to anti-government confrontations, having been the lead FBI agent at Ruby Ridge in 1992, and was also involved in the Branch Davidian siege in 1993.
Speaking of the FBI, they were unable to provide any forensic evidence linking McVeigh to the Ryder truck or the explosives. “An FBI fingerprint expert conceded today that no fingerprints of Oklahoma bombing defendant Timothy J. McVeigh were found on a rental receipt for the Ryder truck used in the blast, inside the Ryder dealership, inside lockers the government believes were used to store explosives used in the bomb, or on the Ryder truck key found in an Oklahoma City alley after the bombing,” the Washington Post reported on May 16, 1997.
While in prison, McVeigh was visited at least 18 times by a psychiatrist named Dr. Jolly West. Dr. West was the chairman of the department of Psychiatry at UCLA, but his real job was as a CIA asset, in charge of the MK Ultra Mind Control program. Dr. West had also paid visits to Sirhan Sirhan, another supposed “lone nut” gunman, accused of killing Robert Kennedy, but in reality a product of the CIA mind control program, set up as the “patsy.” Dr. West was also the psychiatrist employed by the government to evaluate the “mental condition” of Jack Ruby after he shot Lee Harvey Oswald. As I’ve mentioned previously, when Ruby was interrogated, he told the FBI that there was a huge conspiracy surrounding the JFK assassination and he could only expose it if they moved him to a safe place – which they refused to do.
Multiple Bombs?
When the Murrah Federal Building blew up, it was declared that one man was primarily responsible, Timothy McVeigh, and his weapon of choice was declared to be an ANFO bomb. But according to Department of the Army and Air Force Technical Manual No. 9-1910, entitled Military Explosives, an ANFO bomb requires very low humidity, yet McVeigh and Nichols allegedly cooked up their bomb on the muggy banks of Geary Lake in Kansas. In addition, the official narrative is that 4,800 pounds of explosives virtually leveled the building, but retired Air Force Brigadier General Benton Partin (an explosives expert) proved that it was nigh impossible for a 4,800 pound ANFO truck bomb to have done this tremendous amount of damage.
According to Partin, former commander of the Air Force Armament Technology Laboratory, and a 25-year expert in the design and development of bombs, “When I first saw the picture of the truck bomb’s asymmetrical damage to the Federal building in Oklahoma, my immediate reaction was that the pattern of damage would have been technically impossible without supplementary demolition charges at some of the reinforced concrete bases inside the building, a standard demolition technique … Reinforced concrete targets in large buildings are hard targets to blast. I know of no way possible to reproduce the apparent building damage through simply a truck bomb effort.”
General Partin also conducted scientific analysis which revealed that core columns were blown out and the extensive damage to the building was completely inconsistent with the explanation of a single and relatively weak fertilizer truck bomb. However, his request to have the bomb site preserved in order to examine the possibility of a second explosion was ignored by the government. Sam Cohen is an explosives expert who spent 40 years working with nuclear weapons and was one of the designers of the neutron bomb. He thinks the official OKC story stinks to high heavens. According to Cohen, “I believe that demolition charges were placed in the building at certain key concrete columns and this did the primary damage to the Murrah Federal Building. It would have been absolutely impossible and against the laws of nature for a truck full of fertilizer and fuel oil – no matter how much was used – to bring the building down.”
Joe Harp, a man with military explosives experience, stated in an affidavit there “was a strong sulfur smell in the air that was very reminiscent of the gas-enhanced ‘Daisy cutter’ bombs I am familiar with from my tours of duty in Vietnam … It was not an ANFO smell.” In May 1995, former Senior Special Agent in Charge of the FBI in Los Angeles, Ted Gunderson, produced an evaluation of the bombing that revealed two distinct seismograph events. Dr. Raymond Brown, a senior geophysicist, analyzed the seismograph data and concluded there was a bomb inside the Murrah federal building.
Geophysicist Charles Mankin, Director of the University of Oklahoma’s Geological Survey, also said two explosions occurred, the second coming approximately eight seconds after the first. The US Geological Survey decided not released this data. But that’s nothing to be concerned about, because the Feds probably have nothing to hide, and releasing conclusive proof that there were two bombs detonated would “endanger national security.”
The best documentary on OKC is most definitely A Noble Lie. Without a doubt. Watch it online. Do your research. The film conclusively proves that the blast damage at the Murrah Federal Building could not have come from the truck bomb that McVeigh is alleged to have placed there. Debris was blown out from the building, travelling hundreds of feet against the force of the blast. If the truck bomb had done all the damage, the force would have blown debris into the building. The film also provides proof that there was more than one blast, with timed charges, planted in the building, set to go off over a period of several seconds.
What about the initial newscasts? What did they say? Were there multiple bombs? Here are several samples of “live” news broadcasts documenting the OKC bombing.
“The first bomb that was in the federal building did go off … the second explosive was found and defused. The third explosive that was found and they are working on it right now…” ~ CNN transcript
“… both the second and third explosives, if you can imagine this, were larger than the first. … It is just incredible to think that there was that much heavy artillery that was somehow moved into the downtown Oklahoma City federal building.” ~ CNN transcript
“A second bomb has been found inside the federal building, it was an explosion at 9 o’clock this morning that did that damage you are looking at now blowing off the entire North Face of that building. A second bomb was found in the east side of the building. A second bomb has not exploded.” ~ KWTV live coverage (listen below)
“The Justice Department has reported that a second explosive device has been found in the Oklahoma Federal Building. I’d like to tell you in addition to that, two different explosive devices were found in addition to what went off, a total of three.” ~ CNN transcript
A Department of Defense Atlantic Command Memo issued 36 hours after the OKC event reported that a “second bomb was disarmed [and] a third bomb was evacuated.” This was confirmed by a US Forces Command Daily Log that stated at least two additional bombs “were located [in the] vicinity [of the] explosion site. Evidently intended for the rescuers.” Oklahoma Highway Patrol radio logs also reported secondary bombs at the site.
There were others. Like Jane Graham, who worked on the 9th floor and survived the blasts. In an affidavit, she indicated that she saw two men who were caught on camera walking away from the building with walkie-talkies after the bombing. She had noticed these men in the building prior to the bombing wearing maintenance uniforms, but she didn’t recognize them as employees. She also said that there were definitely two distinct events that occurred, and that the second blast was very loud and powerful. She also talked with the FBI about these incidents, but they showed little interest, only asking if she could positively identify either McVeigh or Nichols.
Oh yes, there were several other witnesses who saw a bomb squad at the scene prior to the bombing. Heck, it was even on TV! During a live-feed video interview, an Assistant Fire Chief on the scene stated that the bomb squad was at the Murrah building at seven o’clock that morning, two hours before the bombing took place. What were they doing there two hours before the bombing?
Were there multiple bombs? Of course there were. So why does the official myth contradict this known fact?
Where were the Feds? Where are the Tapes?
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (ATF) had offices in the Murrah Federal Building. On the day of the bombing, none of the ATF agents came to work that morning. The ATF agents, who had children in the day-care center, did not drop their children off that day. There were no ATF agents or their children on the casualty list of the OKC bombing.
How did they know? ATF employees who worked in the Murrah Federal Building received messages on their pagers prior to the bombing telling them not to go to work! That’s how. Somebody knew ahead of time and tipped off the Feds. No doubt. Several individuals received prior warning that the bombing was about to take place. Bruce Shaw, who rushed to the Murrah building to find his wife who was employed there with the Federal Credit Union, testified that an ATF agent told him that ATF staff had been warned on their pagers not to come to work that day.
Did you know that there were almost two dozen surveillance tapes which captured the explosion? The only problem is that on all of the tapes, the video mysteriously fails to show the moments just before the truck bomb exploded. It’s almost as if they have been edited. Sort of like the FBI doesn’t want us to see what happened right before the blast. According to Salt Lake City attorney Jesse Trentadue, who obtained the tapes through a FOIA request as part of his investigation of the bombing, all of the tapes feature blanks just before the bomb went off at 9:02 AM, but “the interesting thing is they spring back on after 9:02 … The absence of footage from these crucial time intervals is evidence that there is something there that the FBI doesn’t want anybody to see.” According to the FBI, the tapes were not edited. The fact that over 20 different videotapes all have a mysterious “black out” just prior to the blast is just a peculiar coincidence, a quirk, a fluke, pure happenstance. Really?
Mysterious Deaths of Eyewitnesses
Within minutes of the blast, all available on-duty and off-duty police, fire, and medical personnel from throughout the OKC metropolitan area responded to the scene. Citizens and rescue crews teamed up to ensure the injured were treated and transported as quickly as possible. Among the very first to arrive on the scene were OKC police officers, Terrance Yeakey, Gordon Martin and Ken Griffin, a number of Oklahoma City firefighters, Dr. Donald Chumley, and General Services Administration planner Michael Lee Loudenslager.
Coincidentally, these men all died mysterious deaths. In this section of the book, I’m going to focus on the deaths of Terrance Yeakey, Dr. Donald Chumley, and Michael Lee Loudenslager.
Terrance Yeakey
Well-liked, and well-respected, Terry Yeakey was an upbeat, devoted, articulate and thoughtful young OKC police officer whose goal was to join the FBI. In 1986, Yeakey had enlisted in the Army and became a military policeman. He joined the OKC police in 1990 and served in the Persian Gulf. In 1991, Yeakey married Tonia Rivera, his college sweetheart, and although the marriage didn’t last, reconciliation was in the works. They had two girls and two boys.
Yeakey, a giant of a man with a heart as big as his 6’3”, 275 pound frame, was on duty the morning of April 19, 1995. Within two minutes of the explosion, he was at the Murrah Federal Building. By all accounts he was among the first uniformed police officers to arrive. Disregarding his own safety from falling debris, Yeakey began to rescue the injured and carry them to safety, running back and forth into that concrete mess of bricks and mortar all day long continuing beyond exhaustion, far into the night. In a cadre of heroes that day, Yeakey’s performance was outstanding. He worked for 48 hours without sleep.
It had immediately become obvious to Terry Yeakey that a number of things about the bombing just didn’t add up. If this were really a terrorist bombing, then why were police lines already up behind the building when he first arrived, within a mere two minutes after the fact? And where had all of those the ATF and FBI agents come from so quickly, arriving from outside of the building (most relatively unharmed) when he had only just gotten there himself? And most importantly, if this were the result of a sting operation gone bad, then why hadn’t the building been evacuated beforehand?
The last person he carried out of the Murrah Federal Building was a man that weighed 300 pounds, and Yeakey fell two stories through a hole in the floor and injured himself. They wanted to admit him to the hospital, but Yeakey declined, because he (and a number of others at the bomb site) had already been threatened with death by federal agents to “keep their mouth shut” about everything they’d seen and heard there that morning.
He called his ex-wife, Tonia, and asked her to come and pick him up at the hospital. After she arrived, Yeakey got in the car and in tears he told her, “It’s not what they’re saying it is, Tonia. It’s not what they’re saying it is. It’s all a lie. It’s all a lie. It’s not true. It’s not what they are saying. It didn’t happen that way.”
Yeakey was subjected to daily harassment and intimidation from his fellow officers because he refused to go along with the official story. He spent weeks and months investigating and attempting to discover the truth about what really happened that day. On numerous occasions, he was told to “drop it or you’ll wind up dead.” He was afraid of what he had stumbled upon as a result of his eyewitness account. He was plagued by chronic back pain from the fall during the rescue. He suffered from insomnia and nightmares.
In a letter that he wrote to Ramona McDonald, a victim of the bombing who was questioning the federal government’s official story, Yeakey told her, “I think my days as a police officer are numbered … Knowing what I know now, and understanding fully just what went down that morning, makes me ashamed to wear a badge from Oklahoma City’s Police Department … You and your family could be harmed if you get any closer to the truth.”
Terry Yeakey was scheduled to receive the Medal of Valor from the OKC Police Department on May 11, 1996. He never got it. He was murdered on May 8, 1996. Early that morning, Yeakey told a friend that the FBI was following him. At approximately 6 PM that evening, Yeakey’s abandoned car was found. According to the Sheriff, there was so much blood inside it ran out the door. There was also a razor blade lying on the dash. The seats had been completely unbolted, the floorboards ripped up, and the side panels removed. Witnesses said it looked like someone had butchered a hog on the front seat, but Yeakey was nowhere to be found.
His body was eventually found over a mile from the blood-soaked car, but there was hardly any blood. He had been handcuffed, hog-tied, dragged and brutally beaten. Rope marks extended to the back side of his neck. His wrists, arms and throat were slashed, and he was shot in the head – execution style. Blood, which was not his, was also found on his shirt. Yeakey’s car was never dusted for prints and no autopsy was ever conducted.
Without performing an autopsy, OKC’s Chief Medical Examiner, Dr. Larry Balding, quickly ruled the death a “suicide.” No, I’m not kidding.
Seriously, according to the official story, while still inside his Ford Probe that he had parked on a lonely country road, Yeakey slashed himself 11 times on both forearms before cutting his throat twice near the jugular vein. But that’s not all. Then, after losing somewhere between two to three pints of blood, Yeakey supposedly got out of his car, and, apparently seeking an even more private place to die, he crawled 8,000 feet through rough terrain, crept under a barbed wire fence, waded through a culvert, then lay down in a ditch before shooting himself in the head with a small caliber revolver, which over 40 law enforcement officers couldn’t find.
But miraculously, after an FBI helicopter landed at the scene carrying FBI Agent Bob Ricks, Yeakey’s weapon was suddenly and unbelievably (literally) discovered within five minutes. Oh yes, I almost forgot, there were no powder burns on his body, which indicates that a silencer was used. I guess he wanted to make sure that he didn’t disturb anyone when he committed “suicide.”
C’mon. Give me a break. They actually expect us to believe this enormous load of excrement which they call the official story?
Suicide? Right! If you believe that Yeakey committed suicide, then let me tell you a “whopper” of a tale about a man (dying of renal failure and on dialysis in a cave half way across the world) who coordinated the hijacking of airlines in the USA where hijackers used box cutters … (you get my point) …
Yes, there was a giant government cover-up at OKC. Terry Yeakey became aware of that fact long before the rest of us. He discovered it during the first hours of rescue. And he paid for that discovery with his life.
Make no mistake about it, Terry Yeakey died in the line of duty – a “line of duty” which began when he got out of his patrol car at the Murrah Federal Building just minutes after the bombing, and began to selflessly help others. Terry Yeakey was an American hero.
Dr. Donald Chumley
One of the first doctors at the scene of the bombing was Dr. Don Chumley who operated the Broadway Medical Clinic located about half a mile from the Murrah Federal Building. Shaun Jones, Dr. Chumley’s stepson, was assisting him.
Jones recalled the scene: “Chumley, who was working with Dr. Ross Harris, was one of the few doctors who actually went into the Federal Building while the others waited outside. He had helped (get) many people (out), including seven babies, whom he later pronounced dead.”
According to Michelle Moore, who has investigated the bombing, Dr. Chumley was asked to bandage two federal agents who falsely claimed to have been trapped in the building. Since they were clearly not injured, Chumley was offended and refused to participate in their charade. When the agents asked another doctor at the scene, Dr. Chumley intervened, threatened to report them. Chumley was a man of integrity and character and, when asked to participate in a dubious and outright deceptive act, he steadfastly refused.
Chumley worked side by side with Officer Terry Yeakey during those first hours and days of rescue. Like Yeakey, he also had defied the federal officers at the scene who reportedly attempted to have him falsify reports. Something was terribly wrong. Both men realized it, and over the next months, both began to assemble evidence.
Dr. Chumley was an experienced private pilot with an instrument rating and over 600 hours flying time. His skills were never in question. Yet he died in a plane crash only five months after the OKC bombing. Chumley was flying his Cessna 210 when it suddenly, and without explanation, went into a nosedive from an altitude of 6,900 feet, plunging into a field near Amarillo, under “mysterious circumstances.”
Chumley was killed instantly. Interestingly, the FAA investigators found nothing mechanically wrong to cause such a bizarre accident and the accident remains unsolved.
Besides being at the Murrah Building on the morning of the OKC bombing, Dr. Chumley and Terry Yeakey had one other thing in common: Each of them, at the time of his premature death, was attempting to compile and deliver evidence concerning the bombing itself, along with proof that Michael Loudenslager had been alive and well after the bombing.
Speaking of Loudenslager…
Michael Lee Loudenslager
In the aftermath of the bombing, the name Michael Loudenslager holds particular significance in the hearts of many folks in and around OKC. Why? Because of the forewarning he gave to a number of those families who had children in the Murrah Federal Building’s day-care center.
In the weeks preceding the bombing, Michael Loudenslager had become increasingly aware that large amounts of explosives and missiles were being stored in the Murrah Federal Building and as a result he strongly urged a number of parents to take their children out of the Murrah Building. Other employees became concerned with an increased amount of missiles being brought into the building (by the DEA and ATF) and, as a result, a grievance was filed by the building’s security director, whose wife ran the day-care center. As a result of his concern for the children and dedication to protect the occupants of the federal building, the security director received “praise and a raise.”
Oops … sorry … rewind …
As a result of his concern for the children and dedication to protect the occupants of the Murrah federal building, the security director was fired. “Thanks for the ‘heads up’ … now get your stuff and get out!”
Then, after some remodeling work had been done to the day-care center, the security director’s wife notified Fire Marshals that the work had been completed (as was required by her license). However, Fire Marshals were denied access by federal agents and were instructed to leave. And then, the day-care operator was fired. Second verse, same as the first: “Thanks for the ‘heads up’ … now get your stuff and get out!”
After hearing rumors about an imminent bombing, Michael Loudenslager and the day-care center operator began speaking with parents, many of whom chose to remove their children. Due to their warnings, there were far fewer children were in the day-care center on that horrible Wednesday morning than there otherwise would have been.
On the morning of the bombing, Loudenslager was in court. Shortly after the bombs exploded, he was among those who were actively helping in the rescue and recovery effort, where he was seen by many folks. During the course of the early rescue efforts, however, Loudenslager was seen and heard engaging in a loud, livid exchange with someone there. This argument was seen by dozens of people, including police officers.
Therefore, when it was reported that Loudenslager’s body had been found inside the Murrah Building at his desk on the first floor, supposedly a victim of the 9:02 AM bombing, those police and rescue workers were a bit bewildered, to say the least. The problem with the official story is that Loudenslager already been seen alive and well by numerous rescue workers at the bomb-site after the bombing, where he was actively engaged in the urgent task of rescuing critically injured victims.
Yes, he is officially listed as one of the 168 bombing fatalities. But Michael Loudenslager was murdered at the site, sometime after the bombing. Was he murdered and placed at his desk? Or, was he simply murdered and said to have been found at his desk? We may never know. The murder of Michael Loudenslager is unquestionably one of the most important sidelights of the OKC bombing.
What about the witnesses that saw Loudenslager alive and well after the bombing? Like Jack Colvert, Jackie Majors, and Buddy Youngblood? Sorry. They’re all dead. Just like Dr. Don Chumley and Officer Terry Yeakey. As are about thirty other folks who either knew too much or asked too many questions.
“Move along now … nothing to see here.”
Who and Why?
Remember the Latin phrase, “cui bono?” which simply means “who benefits?” This is the very first question to be asked in any investigation.
So, “who benefited from the OKC bombing?” Well, since you asked …
President William Jefferson “Bill” Clinton attributed the revival of his popularity after the 1994 election debacle to the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building in OKC. Relaxing on Air Force One after the election, he told reporters it was the Oklahoma bombing that proved the turning point in his “political fortunes.” After the bombing, Clinton made great “political hay” of the tragedy by drawing parallels between the anti-government extremists behind the plot and the anti-big-government Republican revolution that had swept Congress. After the bombing, Clinton prodded Congress to move swiftly on his anti-terrorism legislation (Omnibus Counterterrorism Act) and avoid political “endless quibbling” over details.
The purpose of the OKC bombing was to get Congress to pass the anti-terrorism bill without debate, because if a debate had taken place, the issues of constitutional liberties and the creation of a domestic “police state” would have been raised. But the criminals in D.C. prefer that the police state be implemented without the public noticing by creating a climate of national hysteria using a staged terrorist attack, aka “false flag.” Guess what? The Omnibus Counterterrorism Act sailed through with no debate or discussion.
In addition to the to the passage of the anti-terrorism bill, the aftermath of the bombing led to the demonization of the “patriot movement” which was spreading like wildfire as opposition to federal government abuse grew following the events at Ruby Ridge and Waco.
The bottom line is that millions of Americans realize that Timothy McVeigh did not act alone, nor did his truck bomb wreak the destruction and take all the lives in the Murrah Federal Building. When the Feds tore that building down and buried the evidence of internal explosions, and began to interfere with the grand jury, the fix was apparent to all who cared to see.
The OKC bombing was yet another “false flag” attack perpetuated by the government “to gain a political end” … and that end was to demonize political opposition, especially “patriots” and “extremists.”
Timothy McVeigh was another Oswald, another James Earl Ray, another … patsy.
RESOURCES
Websites
http://whatreallyhappened.com/RANCHO/POLITICS/OK/ok.php
http://www.the-office.com/okc-witnesses.htm
http://www.rense.com/political/bombing1.htm
Movies
“A Noble Lie” http://www.anoblelie.com/
“The Government Cover Up of the Oklahoma City Bombing” (YouTube removed the video)
“OKC Bombing: Forerunner to 9-11” (YouTube removed the video)
Book
The Final Report on the Bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Building (Charles Key)
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