One great part of the neoliberal consensus generator that is Wikipedia is watching the draft on Official Reality get sculpted in real-time.
Currently, the explanation goes a little something like
"He walked in through the front door and was immediately engaged by an officer on the scene, who did not fare well."On June 11, 2016, Pulse, a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida, was hosting Latin Night, a weekly Saturday night event that is primarily patronized by Hispanic clientele. About 320 people were inside the club, which was serving last call drinks at the time.
Arriving at the club by van, Mateen got out and approached the building, armed with a SIG Sauer MCX semi-automatic rifle and a 9mm Glock 17 handgun. An armed security guard, who was an Orlando Police Department (OPD) officer working extra duty in full uniform, engaged Mateen, returning fire at 2:02 a.m. EDT. Mateen was able to enter the building, however, and began shooting patrons. The officer was soon joined by two additional officers who also began engaging Mateen. Mateen then retreated further into the nightclub and began to take patrons hostage.
I feel compelled to point out that two other high-profile mass-murder events that left vividly bloody crime scenes
and featured dozens of survivors exiting, not crying in a Shakespearean fashion that true grief connoisseurs would expect, and not Jackson Pollack spackled in blood are
Columbine,
Bataclan and
Mumbai.
Aside from Kliebold's Kampf there, I definitely recall a lot of False Flag rhetoric after Bataclan and Mumbai, which was neither silenced, nor even affected very much, by the subsequent release of fairly horrifying crime scene photos online.
Do I share this link too much?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_dissonanceWhat about this one?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/When_Prophecy_Fails