Terrorists take Eagles of Death Metal show in Paris hostage

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Re: Terrorists take Eagles of Death Metal show in Paris host

Postby km artlu » Sun Nov 15, 2015 9:04 pm

A lucid criterion from Chris Knowles:

I'm not saying false flag actions don't exist- I most certainly believe they do. But unless you see some major mobilization or crackdown or some other kind of disproportionate action in response to a terrorist act, it's probably a safe bet it's not one.

At: http://secretsun.blogspot.com/

Wherein he expands upon Mr. Rex's point early in this thread.
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Re: Terrorists take Eagles of Death Metal show in Paris host

Postby tapitsbo » Sun Nov 15, 2015 9:30 pm

Loving the Knowles post.

And let's not forget the long history of esoteric/parapolitical groups that bridge the East/West divide.
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Postby IanEye » Sun Nov 15, 2015 9:31 pm

Image


Indeed, yelling "false flag" before the bodies are even cold is one of the primary reasons alternative research communities have become so universally scorned outside their own little bubbles.

Cui bono?

The point is that we won't know for sure until there are real investigations done. It used to be that parapolitics researchers would actually wait and study an event before they announced to the world it was a false flag or not. But there are clicks to be had and money to be made so forget all that "rigor" baloney.
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Re: Terrorists take Eagles of Death Metal show in Paris host

Postby backtoiam » Sun Nov 15, 2015 9:33 pm

NaturalMystik » Sun Nov 15, 2015 6:57 pm wrote:
divideandconquer » Sun Nov 15, 2015 9:15 am wrote:
Here's some woo, which basically boils it down to the revenge of Pope Francis.

.


Interesting... A little more on the master magical numbers 11 - 13 for anyone who cares:

Number 11
11 is a master number. Ten is the perfect number (god) and 11 represents God being exceeded. 11 should not be broken down as it is a master vibration. However, when broken down (1+1=2) it represents the 2 of duality. 11 can represent sin, transgression and peril. “The number 11 is the essence of all that is sinful, harmful and imperfect” – W. Wyn Wescott, the Occult Power of Numbers.

11 is the combination of the pentagram (5) and the hexagram (6), the male and female, the union of opposites.

Number 13
13 is a sacred number. 13 represents death and rebirth. 13 can also represent rebellion against God’s authority. 13 is a very important number to the Brotherhood and was not intended to be used by the profane- hence the superstitions surrounding 13 they are taught. “It’s OUR number, it’s not for you goyim”.

http://conspiracyresearch.blogspot.ca/2 ... rs-of.html



Even a short attention span can grasp this...just sayin...


http://traveltips.usatoday.com/isnt-the ... 07585.html
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Re: Terrorists take Eagles of Death Metal show in Paris host

Postby Belligerent Savant » Sun Nov 15, 2015 9:37 pm

.
A lucid criterion from Chris Knowles:

I'm not saying false flag actions don't exist- I most certainly believe they do. But unless you see some major mobilization or crackdown or some other kind of disproportionate action in response to a terrorist act, it's probably a safe bet it's not one.

At: http://secretsun.blogspot.com/

Wherein he expands upon Mr. Rex's point early in this thread.


It's certainly possible this most recent event wasn't a 'false flag' in the purest sense of the term.

And yet: who funds "ISIS", again? We can argue and/or speculate as to the level of 'hidden hand' orchestration, but it ultimately benefits many of the same players, no? The same parties 'funding' and/or playing a part in major events.

I think we're considerably beyond the point of taking anything at face value anymore, and I don't think we've ever come close to reaching the point where online armchair sleuthing has offered a solution or resolved any domestic or international intrigue, no?
(of course, there's a benefit to such online activity -- it may be therapeutic for some... though I hesitate to say that such therapy is a privilege millions in other parts of the world do not have the luxury of participating in...and yes, I count myself as one of the privileged, perhaps even more so than some of the folks here. The security blanket is growing smaller however, exposing more areas to harm incrementally..)

Much of this may not be dissimilar to American Football (the quasi-fascist/jingoistic theatrics passing for 'sports entertainment' funded by criminal syndicates and corporate cocksmokers):

There are "owners" that purchase a team and hire a 'general manager', who in turn hires a coaching staff, who in turn collaborate on acquiring the 'talent'. There are clear objectives laid out, and extensive time dedicated towards schemes/strategy/gameplanning to eventually reach their GOAL/OBJECTIVE. Yet, despite all best intentions, there are myriad scenarios that may play out on ANY GIVEN SUNDAY. Unpredictable/unplanned consequences or "lucky/unlucky bounces" of the ball, resulting in unexpected results.
BUT the fact remains that the team continues to be funded by an OWNER with an ultimate objective, an objective which persists in perpetuity.

(of course, I'm just another anonymous carbon blob poking in the dark... I have no more -- in fact, likely less -- insight than many of you)
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Re: Terrorists take Eagles of Death Metal show in Paris host

Postby backtoiam » Sun Nov 15, 2015 9:49 pm

Belligerent Savant » Sun Nov 15, 2015 8:37 pm wrote:.

It's certainly possible this most recent event wasn't a 'false flag' in the purest sense of the term.

And yet: who funds "ISIS", again? We can argue and/or speculate as to the level of 'hidden hand' orchestration, but it ultimately benefits many of the same players, no? The same parties 'funding' and/or playing a part in major events.

I think we're considerably beyond the point of taking anything at face value anymore, and I don't think we've ever come close to reaching the point where online armchair sleuthing has offered a solution or resolved any domestic or international intrigue, no?
(of course, there's a benefit to such online activity -- it may be therapeutic for some... though I hesitate to say that such therapy is a privilege millions in other parts of the world do not have the luxury of participating in...and yes, I count myself as one of the privileged, perhaps even more so than some of the folks here)

Much of this may not be dissimilar to American Football (the quasi-fascist/jingoistic theatrics passing for 'sports entertainment' funded by criminal syndicates and corporate cocksmokers):

There are "owners" that purchase a team, then hire a 'general manager', who in turn hires a coaching staff, who in turn collaborate on acquiring the 'talent'. There are clear objectives laid out, and extensive time dedicated towards schemes/strategy/gameplanning to eventually reach their GOAL/OBJECTIVE. Yet, despite all best intentions, there are myriad scenarios that may play out on ANY GIVEN SUNDAY. Unpredictable/unplanned consequences or "lucky/unlucky bounces" of the ball, resulting in unexpected results.
BUT, the fact remains that the team continues to be funded by an OWNER with an ultimate objective, which persists throughout a given cyclical season.



That was a poetically beautiful analogy. Kudos...There is a coach, a "head", and an extrapolation of it, and upon this edifice, rests the Hydra. It is what it is, and I'm pretty sure your readers will absolutely appreciate the artful way you worded it.
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Re: Terrorists take Eagles of Death Metal show in Paris host

Postby tapitsbo » Sun Nov 15, 2015 9:51 pm

I don't doubt your thesis Belligerent Savant.

But what makes an owner an owner? They have a certain kind of talent if they are supplying the function that it seems they do.

Does most of everyone else lack the talent to pursue a different agenda? I'm not so sure.
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Re: Terrorists take Eagles of Death Metal show in Paris host

Postby backtoiam » Sun Nov 15, 2015 9:58 pm

tapitsbo » Sun Nov 15, 2015 8:51 pm wrote:I don't doubt your thesis Belligerent Savant.

But what makes an owner an owner? They have a certain kind of talent if they are supplying the function that it seems they do.

Does most of everyone else lack the talent to pursue a different agenda? I'm not so sure.


It is very simple. He who provides that which nobody can live without is the King Of The Hill. That is money. The rest is symptoms of the disease. A world hooked on crack is at the mercy of the crack dealer. It is no more complicated than that.
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Re: Terrorists take Eagles of Death Metal show in Paris host

Postby Belligerent Savant » Sun Nov 15, 2015 9:58 pm

.
....that's why there are numerous "owners" (at least in pro sports), each competing towards a similar (or perhaps, on occasion, somewhat distinct) objective.
Yet these owners (at least in American Football) converge each year to discuss overall agenda and reach consensus on the state of THE LEAGUE, agreeing on revisions/modifications to M.O. on any given year.
All in pursuit of increasing market share/profit. Whatever benefit it may bring the consumer is not a factor, other than the "entertainment value", which consumers invest in, benefiting the owners, and let's not forget, those that MARKET the product ("the media" and/or sponsors).

In any event, I've wasted a bit too much space with this fanciful (and overly simplified) allegory.
(though it's also worth adding that there is a measure of control/influence at play here as well. The owners rely on 'massaging'/influencing what the consumer believes they want to see..)
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Re: Terrorists take Eagles of Death Metal show in Paris host

Postby Nordic » Sun Nov 15, 2015 10:04 pm

Well call me racist then, because I don't think that an attack of this scope just happens. These are paramilitary operations, organized and under a command hierarchy. They are not crimes of passion.

And considering that it's very likely the folks waving the pay checks for these mercenaries are likely Saudi or Qatari, or from the UAE, does that still make me racist to think that this could only have happened as an organized, financed, and orchestrated attack?

And if there were dark-skinned Israelis involved, does that get us off the "racist" hook? After all, there were Jews stabbing Jews recently in Israel, thinking the victims looked Arabic enough to be Arabic.
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Re: Terrorists take Eagles of Death Metal show in Paris host

Postby tapitsbo » Sun Nov 15, 2015 10:07 pm

backtoiam » Sun Nov 15, 2015 9:58 pm wrote:
tapitsbo » Sun Nov 15, 2015 8:51 pm wrote:I don't doubt your thesis Belligerent Savant.

But what makes an owner an owner? They have a certain kind of talent if they are supplying the function that it seems they do.

Does most of everyone else lack the talent to pursue a different agenda? I'm not so sure.


It is very simple. He who provides that which nobody can live without is the King Of The Hill. That is money. The rest is symptoms of the disease. A world hooked on crack is at the mercy of the crack dealer. It is no more complicated than that.


"Providing" (enforcing) money systems or even crack actually is kinda complicated.

A lot of people live without hard drugs or sports entertainment. Few live off too far removed from the money/violence systems. These are fun analogies though
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Re: Terrorists take Eagles of Death Metal show in Paris host

Postby Nordic » Sun Nov 15, 2015 10:09 pm

One of the most interesting things I saw today:

http://www.thenation.com/article/what-i ... prisoners/

MIDDLE EASTISISIRAQ WAR
What I Discovered From Interviewing Imprisoned ISIS Fighters

They’re drawn to the movement for reasons that have little to do with belief in extremist Islam.
By Lydia WilsonTwitter OCTOBER 21, 2015
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ISIL
A member loyal to the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) waves an ISIS flag in Raqqa. (Reuters / Stringer)
No sooner am I settled in an interviewing room in the police station of Kirkuk, Iraq, than the first prisoner I am there to see is brought in, flanked by two policemen and in handcuffs. I awkwardly rise, unsure of the etiquette involved in interviewing an ISIS fighter who is facing the death penalty. He is small, much smaller than I, on first appearances just a boy in trouble with the police, his eyes fixed on the floor, his face a mask. We all sit on armchairs lined up against facing walls, in a room cloudy with cigarette smoke and lit by fluorescent strip lighting, a room so small that my knees almost touch the prisoner’s—but he still doesn’t look up. I have interviewed plenty of soldiers on the other side of this fight, mostly from the Kurdish forces (known as pesh merga) but also fighters in the Iraqi army (known as the Iraqi Security Forces or ISF), both Arab and Kurdish. ISIS fighters, of course, are far more elusive, unless you are traveling to the Islamic State itself, but I prefer to keep my head on my shoulders.


Rumors abound as to summary executions of ISIS prisoners without due process, but of course no one will go on the record to report such abuses of human rights. Anecdotally, we were told about a prisoner who was interrogated for 30 days but only said “Allahu Akbar” (God is great) for the entire month. “Wouldn’t you shoot him?” they asked. One peshmerga gave an eyewitness report about five prisoners captured, questioned, and shot in the head. We spoke to various military leaders who said they didn’t want to take prisoners, since injured bodies are often booby-trapped and kill approaching soldiers; for this reason the PKK has a take-no-prisoners policy. (The PKK, or Kurdistan Workers’ Party, is the Turkey-based Kurdish separatist group on the international terrorism list; in proving themselves indispensable in the fight against ISIS, they have caused a dilemma for Western governments. They are seemingly not so indispensable that those governments have felt compelled to oppose Turkey’s recent bombing campaign against them.)

“With ISIS, there’s no compromise…they’re not interested in prisoner exchange.”
Another source told us of the futility of holding prisoners for their bargaining power: “With ISIS, there’s no compromise, no negotiation…they’re not interested in prisoner exchange because they believe that they’re better off dead.” Whatever the truth of the behavior of the military and security services, the fact remains: ISIS prisoners are hard to find.

One evening we watch a documentary on BBC Arabic profiling Brig. Gen. Sarhad Qadir, the head of police in the Iraqi governorate of Kirkuk. He is shown policing the town of Kirkuk, personally patrolling the streets and houses, arresting people suspected of fighting for ISIS. Kirkuk, then, seems like a good place to start: At least there are prisoners there, shown by the BBC, no less.

And so my colleagues and I drive to Kirkuk from the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan, Erbil, to meet Qadir. Despite the workload of maintaining security in this uneasy, half-Arab, half-Kurdish area, rife with ISIS sleeper cells, he is welcoming, sending armed guards to bring us in from the highway to the city. We are served tea in his office, and he sits with us for half an hour before we are taken to the interview room with two colonels. (The week after I left the country he and other officers would be caught in a huge car bomb; Qadir was wounded for the fourteenth time in the service of Kurdistan.)

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Once the first prisoner is there, and with no possibility of small talk, we launch straight into the research questions I am there to ask, the same questions asked of fighters and non-fighters all over the country, questions I’ve asked in Lebanon too, and which have been replicated in other parts of the world by my colleagues at Artis International, a consortium for the scientific study in the service of conflict resolution. The research is based on cognitive and moral psychology, exploring when and why humans commit the most extreme sacrifices—including their lives and the lives of their families—for abstract causes, for so-called “sacred values.” Our research tries to determine why people will change their minds about these sacred values, and whether and how they will change their behavior in defending them. We hope to find out how to persuade people to abandon violent pathways, though I am fast losing faith in that possibility in this part of the world.

For this trip I am accompanied by senior colleagues; by Scott Atran, an academic based in France; and by Doug Stone, a retired American general who spent over two years in Iraq during the US occupation, interviewing prisoners on a daily basis. This, of course, changes the interview experience fundamentally, crowding the room and giving the event more importance, more formality, but also bringing entirely different questions, emphases, and expertise to bear and so drawing out many different angles on the interviewees. In any case, informality is never going to be achieved with prisoners on death row.

First are questions probing perceptions of the strength of various groups—some of which the interviewee might have sympathy with (although he might not express this). Other groups he would quite clearly consider to be the Other, the Enemy. I bring out a flashcard with pictures of half-naked men on it, ranging from the fairly puny to the biggest bodybuilder—each head replaced by a flag of the Islamic State. Whatever this youngster was expecting, whatever he’s been asked before—this was neither. He looks up, startled, at my colleague Hoshang Waziri—his first human reaction—who begins to explain.

“This is the Islamic State—look, this is the flag here,” Hoshang says, pointing at the bodybuilder and flexing his biceps. “This picture shows the Islamic State as the strongest it could be. Here, they are very, very weak; and here are all the things in the middle. How strong do you think they are?” The boy timidly points at the weakest—to be expected, as he doesn’t want to seem to be a fan—and we move to a similar picture, but with the Kurdish flag rather than the Islamic State flag superimposed on the bodies. “Now the peshmerga: How strong are they?”

The prisoner got the hang of the question, and points to the second-strongest picture. In other pictures, he decides that the Iraqi army is in the middle, Iran a little weaker than that, and America the strongest. (He hasn’t heard of the PKK, despite their repeated victories over ISIS.) We ask him to rank all the forces, using the cards, and then I realize that he is still handcuffed and I ask for them to be taken off. In the ensuing hiatus, with policemen fetching keys and walking to and fro, I try to chat more informally, and finally he looks at me, answering questions in one-word answers as to his age, background, education, family. Slowly, with snippets emerging from the rest of the interview, I piece together a picture that is to be repeated, with only minor differences, with other prisoners we talk to that day, stories familiar to General Stone from during the allied occupation, and to journalists and researchers I’ve spoken to since.

This man is 26, the eldest of 17 children from two mothers (that is, his father had two wives at the same time), from Kirkuk. He completed sixth grade, meaning that at least he was literate, unlike others we were to interview. He is married, with two children, a boy named “Rasuul,” meaning Prophet, and a girl named “Rusil,” the plural of Prophet—indicating the centrality of Islam to his life. He was working as a laborer to support his huge family when he hurt his back and lost his job. It was then, his story goes, that a friend, from the same tribe but only distantly related, approached him with the offer to work for ISIS. The story has been honed through repeated interrogation and the trial, and comes out pat. Life under the Islamic State was just terror, he says; he only fought because he was terrorized. Others may have done it from belief, but he did not. His family needed the money, and this was the only opportunity to provide for them.

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“We need the war to be over, we need security…all I want is to be with my family, my children.”
Later in the interview we find out just how committed he is to his family, first with flashcards that we use to test the degree of fusion of the individual with various groups. We ask about Iraq, Islam, family, friends, and the Islamic State. The choices are again made pictorially: We use a set of two increasingly overlapping circles (at one end of the spectrum the circles are not even touching, at the other they are fully overlapping, with four circles of varying degrees of overlap in between), and again, they are unexpected and confusing to the prisoner—there is not an obvious “right” answer for most of them. The man is drawn out of his shell in spite of himself, losing his self-consciousness in his concentration and his questions to Hoshang. Eventually he decides that he is almost, but not entirely, fused with Iraq and with Islam, completely separate from the Islamic State (again, to be expected), barely connected to friends (“I have no friends”), and fully fused with his family. In fact, his family is the only group he was fully fused with, a decision that took no time at all. During more informal questioning about his family and tribe comes this telling statement: “We need the war to be over, we need security, we are tired of so much war…. all I want is to be with my family, my children.”

When he has been taken away we have the chance to find out just what he was found guilty of, how they found him, and what the evidence was. He was a master of the car bomb, detonating at least four of them in Kirkuk itself and also one scooter bomb, which exploded in a crowded souq selling weapons, killing many scores of people and also weakening the ability of local residents to fight ISIS. He was found through the capture of one of the financers of the sleeper cells in Kirkuk, who had on him a list of pseudonyms along with phone numbers and amounts of money. The police had this man call each person on the list, a cell of six, and set up meetings, where the police captured them—all of them swept up in one day. This man saw that they were there and “he collapsed; he gave us 5 pages of confession.” He stuck to his confession in court, where he was tried under Article 40, the Iraqi law on terrorism, which carries the death penalty.

Why did he do all these things? Many assume that these fighters are motivated by a belief in the Islamic State, a caliphate ruled by a caliph with the traditional title Emir al-Muminiin, “Commander of the faithful,” a role currently held by Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi; that fighters all over the world are flocking to the area for a chance to fight for this dream. But this just doesn’t hold for the prisoners we are interviewing. They are woefully ignorant about Islam and have difficulty answering questions about Sharia law, militant jihad, and the caliphate. But a detailed, or even superficial, knowledge of Islam isn’t necessarily relevant to the ideal of fighting for an Islamic State, as we have seen from the Amazon order of Islam for Dummies by one British fighter bound for ISIS.


“I didn’t like Saddam, but at least we didn’t have war. When you came here, the civil war started.”
In fact, Erin Saltman, senior counter-extremism researcher at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, says that there is now less emphasis on knowledge of Islam in the recruitment phase. “We are seeing a movement away from strict religious ideological training as a requirement for recruitment,” she told me. “If we were looking at foreign fighter recruits to Afghanistan 10 or 20 years ago, there was intensive religious and theological training attached to recruitment. Nowadays, we see that recruitment strategy has branched out to a much broader audience with many different pull factors.”

There is no question that these prisoners I am interviewing are committed to Islam; it is just their own brand of Islam, only distantly related to that of the Islamic State. Similarly, Western fighters traveling to the Islamic State are also deeply committed, but it’s to their own idea of jihad rather than one based on sound theological arguments or even evidence from the Qur’an. As Saltman said, “Recruitment [of ISIS] plays upon desires of adventure, activism, romance, power, belonging, along with spiritual fulfillment.” That is, Islam plays a part, but not necessarily in the rigid, Salafi form demanded by the leadership of the Islamic State.

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More pertinent than Islamic theology is that there are other, much more convincing, explanations as to why they’ve fought for the side they did. At the end of the interview with the first prisoner we ask, “Do you have any questions for us?” For the first time since he came into the room he smiles—in surprise—and finally tells us what really motivated him, without any prompting. He knows there is an American in the room, and can perhaps guess, from his demeanor and his questions, that this American is ex-military, and directs his “question,” in the form of an enraged statement, straight at him. “The Americans came,” he said. “They took away Saddam, but they also took away our security. I didn’t like Saddam, we were starving then, but at least we didn’t have war. When you came here, the civil war started.”

ISIS is the first group since Al Qaeda to offer these young men a way to defend their dignity, family, and tribe.
This whole experience has been very familiar indeed to Doug Stone, the American general on the receiving end of this diatribe. “He fits the absolutely typical profile,” Stone said afterward. “The average age of all the prisoners in Iraq when I was here was 27; they were married; they had two children; had got to sixth to eighth grade. He has exactly the same profile as 80 percent of the prisoners then…and his number-one complaint about the security and against all American forces was the exact same complaint from every single detainee.”

These boys came of age under the disastrous American occupation after 2003, in the chaotic and violent Arab part of Iraq, ruled by the viciously sectarian Shia government of Nouri al-Maliki. Growing up Sunni Arab was no fun. A later interviewee described his life growing up under American occupation: He couldn’t go out, he didn’t have a life, and he specifically mentioned that he didn’t have girlfriends. An Islamic State fighter’s biggest resentment was the lack of an adolescence. Another of the interviewees was displaced at the critical age of 13, when his family fled to Kirkuk from Diyala province at the height of Iraq’s sectarian civil war. They are children of the occupation, many with missing fathers at crucial periods (through jail, death from execution, or fighting in the insurgency), filled with rage against America and their own government. They are not fueled by the idea of an Islamic caliphate without borders; rather, ISIS is the first group since the crushed Al Qaeda to offer these humiliated and enraged young men a way to defend their dignity, family, and tribe. This is not radicalization to the ISIS way of life, but the promise of a way out of their insecure and undignified lives; the promise of living in pride as Iraqi Sunni Arabs, which is not just a religious identity but cultural, tribal, and land-based, too.

An illustration of the less-than-total commitment to the cause of the Islamic State by Iraqis came from the Kurdish peshmerga Gen. Aziz Waysi, commander of the elite Zerevani (“Golden”) forces. He relates an overheard conversation between an ISIS fighter on the battleground and his leader, via a walkie-talkie previously confiscated from an ISIS corpse. “My brother is with me, but he is dead, and we are surrounded, we need help at least to take away my brother’s body,” General Waysi heard, and then the reply: “What else could you want? Your brother is in heaven and you are about to be.” This answer wasn’t what the poor surrounded young man was hoping for. “Please come and rescue me,” he said, “That heaven, I don’t want it.” But they didn’t, leaving him to whatever paradise awaited.
"He who wounds the ecosphere literally wounds God" -- Philip K. Dick
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Re: Terrorists take Eagles of Death Metal show in Paris host

Postby justdrew » Sun Nov 15, 2015 11:12 pm

you know, that bit form their magazine re 'eliminating the grey zone' - it reads like michael aqino
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Re: Terrorists take Eagles of Death Metal show in Paris host

Postby elfismiles » Mon Nov 16, 2015 12:57 am

Paris Attacks: Release of French Film About Terror Cell Called Off
by Rhonda Richford, Georg Szalai
11/14/2015 5:08am PST
Image

The movie from director Nicolas Boukhrief was scheduled to open on Wednesday.

The planned Wednesday theatrical release of Made in France, a French movie about a terror attack plot, has been canceled following the Friday night attacks in Paris.

Distributor Pretty Pictures and production firm Radar Films are behind the film from director Nicolas Boukhrief. It is about a French Muslim journalist, who infiltrates a jihadi cell in Paris to find out about a terror plot in the French capital.

Read More Paris Attacks: French Premiere of Natalie Portman's 'Jane Got a Gun' Canceled

The movie was scheduled to open in France on Wednesday on approximately 100 screens. Press events that were set to surround the release have also been canceled.

“Following the tragic events of last night, the distributor Pretty Pictures and producer Radar Films have immediately decided to postpone the release of the film to a later date," said the filmmakers.

Paris transport authority RATP was removing the film's provocative posters, which depict the Eiffel Tower as an assault rifle, for the film from metro stations early Saturday morning.

The movie was originally set for release early in the year. Distributor SND Films dropped the project after the Charlie Hebdo attack.

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/p ... ase-840282

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Re: Terrorists take Eagles of Death Metal show in Paris host

Postby elfismiles » Mon Nov 16, 2015 1:05 am

Iraqi Intelligence Warned France of ISIS Attack Day Before Paris Assault
Iraqi intelligence sent dispatch saying Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi had ordered an attack on coalition countries fighting against them in Iraq and Syria, as well as on Iran and Russia.
The Associated Press Nov 15, 2015 8:39 PM
read more: http://www.haaretz.com/world-news/1.686257
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