According to the New York Post, the visible passage was Verse 9:111, which discusses Muslims’ responsibility to murder Allah’s enemies while willing to die in exchange for eternity in paradise.
The Post’s “Killer House” tour —a first as far as I can remember— began with the camera focusing on the FBI’s search warrant, conveniently decorating the kitchen counter, as though left behind in case Jabbar returns from the dead and comes home.
Oddly, there were no signs of an FBI search. Apart from the front door having been forced open, nothing in the tour appeared tossed or even out of place.
The cops who searched Peanut the Squirrel’s house searching for contraband wildlife even took the toilet off its base. What exactly in Jabbar’s house did the FBI search? Why’d they leave so much evidence —like a motive-defining Quran or a bomb assembly station— behind? Why was the scene immediately cleared and opened to LuluLemon fanatic and New York Post reporter Jennie Taer?
The FBI’s handling of the Bourbon Street attack has been radically different from the Waukesha Terror Attack. On November 21, 2021, rap artist and domestic terrorist Darrell Brooks Jr. drove his SUV at high speed through the annual Christmas Parade in Waukesha, Wisconsin. Darrell murdered six people and injured 62 others. He was captured and in November, 2022, was sentenced to six consecutive life sentences without parole plus an additional 762.5 years.
I found no evidence the FBI ever held a single press conference about the Waukesha attack. The agency did not take over the investigation from local police. It never released any information about Brooks. And, it’s not just the FBI. Social media was filled with folks complaining about media ignoring the Waukesha terror attack and the killer’s colorful antics at trial.
If anything, the media invented a fake cover story that the killings were accidental, because Brooks was being pursued by police for a different crime. The police later testified that never happened; it was a complete media invention.
(Waukesha, by the way, is a solid example of a simplifying narrative.)
The coverage between the two stories could not be more different. On the day after the Waukesha attack, the New York Times ran its story on page A22:
Compare that treatment to the multiple, daily, front-page feature headlines for the very similar New Orleans attack. How can we innocently explain the media’s preoccupation with the Jabbar attack, when Waukesha was so uninteresting? And how to explain the media’s downright Islamophobic sprint to accept the FBI’s “certainty” it was an ISIS-inspired religious terrorism attack?
But wait, there’s more. A lot more.
The twin Las Vegas incident got even weirder yesterday, to the point of involving antigravity UFO technology, Hollywood, government surveillance, and more. I am not making any of that up.
First, the deceased Cybertruck driver, allegedly Green Beret Matt Livelsberger, had acting experience. The New York Post (and only the Post, oddly) covered the story under the headline, “MMA star Tim Kennedy who competed with Cybertruck bomber Matthew Livelsberger on ‘History Channel’ reality show speaks out over explosion.”
True, it was “only” the History Channel, and it was “only” a reality show, but still. I’d bet a camo-colored golf cart it was scripted. Matt and his partner won the competition.
The Post reported that Matt was “known to be a staunch supporter of President-elect Donald Trump,” a fact already rumored on social media. Matt’s partner from the 2013 competition, Tim Kennedy, posted yesterday the same thing everyone else who knew Matt said: he literally couldn’t believe it:
NBC’s story, and the rest of corporate media covering the letter, omitted how the letter started, with Matt ominously warning about Chinese antigravity (“gravitic propulsion”) drones, apparently referencing last month’s bizarre mystery-drone infestation in New Jersey.
“Only we and China have this technology,” Matt allegedly wrote, without explaining how he knew that. It hardly needs to be said, but conventional physics does not recognize gravitic propulsion, a subject more likely to be discussed at a UFO conference.
The FBI also claimed at a press conference yesterday, without evidence, that Matt was suffering from anxiety and stress, which describes about 70% of the U.S. population, especially the so-called AWFLs. But that “anxiety” led to various articles like in the BBC, headlined “Cybertruck explosion suspect suffered from PTSD, police say.”
As far as I can tell, the PTSD “diagnosis” is traced to a comment by a Las Vegas police spokesman who said Matt “likely suffered from PTSD,” which is a good guess, but it’s still just guessing.
The whole thing feels off, not just to me. There is so much official and unofficial confusion, all the officials are so unusually helpful and forthcoming, and the media is so peculiarly attentive, that it has made a lot of folks suspicious.
For example, Intellectual Dark Web influencer Bret Weinstein dismissively called it “Conspiracy Catnip:”
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