lozac boris wrote:I had a "" reaction when i saw this cop-car pictures at first, but it's more likely scenario that when they moved it/cleared the rubble, they damaged the door with whatever they were moving it. Pictures 3 and 4 are most likely the same location. And picture 5 is when they got it out of the way, probably where they stacked all damaged cars.
reel.deal wrote:1. get your cop-prop 2723 psyop-car centre-stage... 2. turn steering wheel, remove trash from underneath,
...................................................................... place in shopping trolley, then fuck driver door up...![]()
3. relocate to nu location #2... ........................... 4. take more pics at nu location, confuse the shit out of judy wood...![]()
5. take cop-car 2723 & hide under bridge, til required for further psyop-prop photo-op...![]()
reel.deal wrote:* * * * *
"HEY COP, GET THIS SMOKE OUT MY MOUTH, WOULD YA? I GOT MY HANDS FULL LUGGING THESE 2 HEAVY SUITCASES
FULL OF OLD SHOES TO SCATTER, THEN THEY GOTTA PHOTOSHOP THEM OUT LATER. THANKS !"
9/11 widows shun spotlight as 10th anniversary of attacks approaches
The 'Jersey Girls', who fought for a credible inquiry into the attacks of 11 September, have moved on with their lives
Van Auken, too, has now developed interests that perhaps one might not expect. She, too, concentrates on her children, but also makes jewellery and has seized on a new campaigning cause: the plight of bees. After taking a course at a local university in New Jersey, Van Auken began keeping her own hives, harvesting honey and then exploring the problems that are causing bees to die out across the world. That has led her right back into campaigning, as many experts believe the bee's problems could be linked to pollution and other human activities. A leaked internal report from the Environmental Protection Agency recently cited the risks of one chemical pesticide to bees and caused outrage.
Now Van Auken is trying to organise beekeepers to campaign for a ban on the product. "I am back in another 'fight the government' thing," Van Auken laughed. But as well as giving her a cause, the bees have also given her peace of mind. "I enjoy the bees. You get to watch the colony and see what they're doing. It fits in with my garden. It is a natural system and it makes me happy," she said.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/ju ... sary-nears
fbenario wrote:I guess they either got tired of acting, aka lying, or they just aren't being paid enough.9/11 widows shun spotlight as 10th anniversary of attacks approaches
The 'Jersey Girls', who fought for a credible inquiry into the attacks of 11 September, have moved on with their lives
Van Auken, too, has now developed interests that perhaps one might not expect. She, too, concentrates on her children, but also makes jewellery and has seized on a new campaigning cause: the plight of bees. After taking a course at a local university in New Jersey, Van Auken began keeping her own hives, harvesting honey and then exploring the problems that are causing bees to die out across the world. That has led her right back into campaigning, as many experts believe the bee's problems could be linked to pollution and other human activities. A leaked internal report from the Environmental Protection Agency recently cited the risks of one chemical pesticide to bees and caused outrage.
Now Van Auken is trying to organise beekeepers to campaign for a ban on the product. "I am back in another 'fight the government' thing," Van Auken laughed. But as well as giving her a cause, the bees have also given her peace of mind. "I enjoy the bees. You get to watch the colony and see what they're doing. It fits in with my garden. It is a natural system and it makes me happy," she said.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/ju ... sary-nears
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