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Project Willow » Sat Oct 07, 2017 8:56 pm wrote:Okay, here is a report from Ed Opperman who lives in Las Vegas. He tracked down a lot of these eye witnesses, and he says they don't pan out, that a lot of it was just panic, including the Bellagio incident.
SonicG wrote: Nah, people seem pretty united in their tip-tap-tapping of keyboards and screens. I won't go all Pogo on you, but I am sure you know the quote...
Heaven Swan » Sun Oct 08, 2017 9:07 am wrote:Spoiler:Project Willow » Sat Oct 07, 2017 8:56 pm wrote:Okay, here is a report from Ed Opperman who lives in Las Vegas. He tracked down a lot of these eye witnesses, and he says they don't pan out, that a lot of it was just panic, including the Bellagio incident.
Thanks for posting this PW. I really like this guy's hard-boiled NYPD cop common sense. He lives in Las Vegas and did a real investigation by talking to hotel security people off the record and knows the local terrain. He confirms what I suspected but was open to be proven wrong about i.e. that panicked people, running for their lives with bodies falling around them, out of their minds with fear (who wouldn't be) misinterpreted things like where gunshots were coming from.
Most of the YouTube videos by witnesses no doubt fall into this category. But I also think that there's another phenomena or strategy at work here. Given the incredible success of the Pizzagate disinfo op, lurking in the You Tube mix are those who want to spread conspiracy theory chaos and definitively discredit anyone trying to look into what is behind SOME of these events.
Don't get me wrong, I appreciate stickdog's efforts in gathering info, I don't see him as the problem, but I hope that RI, which has always cast a more sober and critical eye, can continue to not be engulfed in the hysteria, and remains a place that truly questions and looks at things from various angles, without falling into the rah rah stupid, unfounded "any conspiracy goes" thinking.
He was also willing to fight to defend what was his. During the riots in Los Angeles in the 1990s, he went to the roof of an apartment complex he owned in a flak jacket and armed with a gun, waiting for the rioters, Mr. Franks said.
Mr. Paddock cherished his solitude, his brother said. In 2003, he got his pilot’s license after training in the Los Angeles area, eventually taking the extra step to get an instrument rating so that he could legally fly in cloudy conditions with limited visibility. He bought cookie-cutter houses in Texas and Nevada towns with small airports so that he could park his planes. He was utterly unremarkable.
“This guy paid on time every time and did not cause any problems at any time,” said Lt. Brian Parrish, the spokesman for the Police Department in Mesquite, Tex., where he rented a hangar for $285 a month from 2007 through 2009. He also stored planes at the small airport in Henderson, Nev., from 2002 to 2010, an airport spokesman said, though it is not clear he ever lived at the local addresses to which they had been registered.
As early as 2010, he could no longer fly his planes. His medical certificate expired, according to Federal Aviation Administration records, and there are no indications that he renewed it.
Mr. Paddock bought his last house in Mesquite, Nev., a retirement community of 18,000 people about 90 minutes from Las Vegas that attracts golfers and gamblers from around the country. He seems to have paid in cash, according to property records, and, as he did with other houses, spent very little time there.
Heaven Swan » Sun Oct 08, 2017 9:07 am wrote:Thanks for posting this PW. I really like this guy's hard-boiled NYPD cop common sense. He lives in Las Vegas and did a real investigation by talking to hotel security people off the record and knows the local terrain. He confirms what I suspected but was open to be proven wrong about i.e. that panicked people, running for their lives with bodies falling around them, out of their minds with fear (who wouldn't be) misinterpreted things like where gunshots were coming from.
Heaven Swan » Sun Oct 08, 2017 9:07 am wrote:But I also think that there's another phenomena or strategy at work here. Given the incredible success of the Pizzagate disinfo op, lurking in the You Tube mix are those who want to spread conspiracy theory chaos and definitively discredit anyone trying to look into what is behind SOME of these events.
Iamwhomiam wrote:I can identify with Paddock wanting the recipe for enchiladas, though. I'm sure more than a few who enjoy cooking would identify with not wanting to die without knowing the recipe to that one special dish you so loved!
We are swimming in a sea of false, misleading, and or agenda driven information, presented through emotionally manipulative media. It's such a mess.
JackRiddler » 08 Oct 2017 20:03 wrote:I've got a problem at some point with reposts of anonymous reposts of anonymous text posts that purport to be from eyewitnesses or "insiders" but throw together a salad of vague, unlikely, or obviously wrong observations..
Iamwhomiam » 08 Oct 2017 18:46 wrote:stickdog, many websites are notoriously slow in updating their content and often report individuals as holding positions they've moved on from. It is possible that this is the case with LVPD Officer Newton.
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