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author
Apr 26, 2023·edited Apr 28, 2023Author

Hi everyone,

Al DuClur says the only ones he's met in the last ten years who were not afraid to talk about Jews were "India Indians."

At my blog, I just received this comment:

Hi Linh.

You're missing the most fascinating part of the Trump 9/11 story. Let me just quote something I wrote to Chris Bollyn two years ago:

I have no doubt that the central fact about him is that he is the son of a fanatic crypto-Jew. He has not been misled from a heritage American agenda by a Zionist son-in-law. They are birds of a feather. He’s pretending, like his father.

You must not be misled by 9/11 as a Jewish op into thinking all important members of the Kehillah knew about it. It was on a need-to-know basis and Trump was out of the loop on day one. So, wise guy that he is, and a hog for the limelight, he shared his insights phoned into that TV channel the same evening. Given the way a light aluminium tube went into a solid steel frame, there had to be bombs involved. That, right there, shot the hijacker theory right out of the water. Trump had to be brought under control, and fast. And he must have been, possibly by his good friends Silverstein or Giuliani.

By the morning of day three he was being interviewed by Deutsche Welle TV (the detailed transcript was available from Deutsche Welle), on site, and he was singing a very different tune, and saying things that no builder would think. This was how kerosene fires had brought down the steel frame buildings (and he would know this would have been a historical first) because of the great quantity of fuel and the weakening by the airplanes. Plus hatred. That’s how he brought in the hijackers, making amends for his boo-boo.

Donald Trump is an accessory after the fact of 9/11.

Best wishes

Syed Zaidi (from India)

*

Some anonymous (of course) then showed up to mock the above comment:

"Given the way a light aluminum tube went into a solid steel frame, there had to be bombs involved."

Look, it depends on the speed (or, more precisely the momentum) of the object. The internet is littered with pictures of fairly light objects passing through tree trunks during tornados (see e.g. link below), yet you immediately conclude that somehow Jewish bombs must be involved. You make me laugh.

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hurricane_winds_drive_a_10-foot_2X4_through_a_palm_tree.jpg

By the way, I'm not jewish, or "crypto" jewish, or have any interest at all in advancing jewish political agendas .. or an "angry white pussy" (lol).

*

A ten foot 2X4 penetrating a palm tree is not the same as a hollow aluminum plane slicing through steel columns. Further, Syed Zaidi's main point is that Trump changed his story just three days after 9/11. If he was grossly wrong initially, why haven't the media dredged this up for ridicule, since they're supposed to be so much against him?

As for speculations that bombs were involved, one only has to look at any video of the towers collapsing, or read my interview with first responder Rudy Dent:

https://linhdinhphotos.blogspot.com/2017/04/obscured-american-rudy-dent-9-11-first.html

It is a complex and confusing topic that requires patient unraveling, but, like I've already said, we don't have to come up with any theory, only point out the impossible or highly improbable claims in the official narrative.

Insolent mockery, such as displayed by anon, gets us nowhere.

Linh

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author

Hi everyone,

At my blog, I posted this video as moulage 101:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NZgIIUyzNC0

A reader's comment, "Very interesting - I was a nurse (long since retired) and never encountered this - during clinical rotations we students were simply put into the space where serious injuries were treated - our instructors kept a close eye on us to catch the fainters - the surgery interns spent a full-time immersion week in the ER and the ones who could handle it went on from there to continue their studies.

"On the job training!"

Linh

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I have never experienced someone so badly injured, nor have I read much about what happens to you when you get hit with a bomb, but from what experience I do have, I wonder why he is being wheeled away in a wheelchair. Don't almost all victims of, say, a car crash get wheeled away on a gurney? Since there are thousands of car crashes every day, how many victims are wheeled away in wheelchairs? Who are the people not in uniform wheeling the guy away? Do paramedics allow untrained people to help them in an emergency? It seems to me they wouldn't. 

I read about this on alternative websites after it happened, and I remember not that much. Something about two different colored backpacks, patsies, and a pressure cooker nail bomb. Was the nail bomb designed to throw its nails low? No upper body hits? I guess it could happen if the thing bursted from the side.

The guy seems to be like, Oh, my leg hurts, not Shit, I am going to die. So yeah, I think there should be blood. When you shoot an animal and they don't die right away, you can follow their blood trail to find them. It seems there was an increase in these types of events under Obama, a decrease under Trump, and a return under Biden. But I am sure a fact checker would find me wrong on that.

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Today's gurneys can be turned into chairs, but they only do that to carry someone down a set of stairs. Generally, they prefer injured people to be flat (like if your legs are blown off, the last thing they want is a position where blood is flowing downwards) so they can be safely strapped in.

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author
Apr 27, 2023·edited Apr 27, 2023Author

Hi uddr and Susan,

Here's some info about the guy in the cowboy hat, from an American resident of Costa Rica, as emailed to me:

"The guy with the cowboy hat in the Boston marathon photo is a real guy, a Costa Rican whose son was in the U.S.military and was killed in Iraq. When the Marines came to his door to tell him, he flipped out, got a gallon can of gas and poured it on their vehicle and set it on fire.

"I have seen him at at least two anti-war demonstrations. He came with a pickup with a memorial display to his son in the bed of the truck. A large photo, his son'ś boots, other stuff. He is a member of the Gold Star Families. At a demo in DC once he was threatened and maybe hit by members of A gathering of Eagles, a pro-war group (that hassled a demo I was at when Cheney spoke at west Point). The Costa Rican guy was at the marathon to cheer on a fellow member of Veterans Against the War, or some such anti war group. He is also famous in Costa Rica for his participation in the annual bullfight where anyone can go into thering with the bulls. I have watched it on Costa Rican TV at a neighborś."

Bauman's account:

"I saw a man in a yellow cowboy hat lift the barrier off Michele, then turn toward me, and the next thing I knew he was grabbing my shirt and twisting it around his fist. He lifted me off the ground with one hand, spun around, and threw me into a wheelchair that had been intended for runners too tired to walk after finishing the race.

"When I hit the chair, it was an electric shock. It was like that scene in Pulp Fiction, when John Travolta plunged the adrenaline into Uma Thurman’s heart. My body came alive, and I thought, No way, Jeff. No way that fucker is taking you down.

“'I’m going to make it,' I said.

“'Yeah, buddy,' the man in the cowboy hat said, running beside me. 'That’s right. You’re going to make it.'

"We passed through a medical tent. People were yelling for us to stop.

"'No!' the man yelled without slowing down. 'We’re going to the hospital.'

"The tourniquet on my right leg pulled loose. It got stuck in the wheel and tore off, and suddenly there was a second man there, and the two of them were holding my right leg and squeezing to stop the bleeding. I reached down and grabbed my left leg, trying to do the same. A photographer appeared out of the chaos, kneeling in the road as we rushed past, snapping pictures.

"I thought, What is he doing here?

"We crossed the finish line of the Boston Marathon. I saw the banner as I was lifted out of the wheelchair and into an ambulance."

So vividly remembered and Hollywood. Bauman crossed the finish line of the Boston Marathon!

Bauman was moulaged in the only barricaded section of the marathon, then, dripping not even fake blood, he was seated upright for the cool photos. Bauman is Boston strong!

Linh

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Bullshit is hated by most people but tolerated and preferred to accepting reality. What people don't like is to acknowledge how every narrative out of the West, which mainly means Jewish narratives, is a lie. That makes people uncomfortable.

I find people, whether in Eastern Asia or the West, are comfortable acknowledging one or a few narratives are lies but they want to limit it. They really want to believe most narratives are true and their media aren't sociopathic liars.

The narrative spinners are lucky in that few people are really curious about things outside of their daily lives, celebrities & sports. They just want to know the correct opinions.

Interestingly enough, the only men I have met in the last 10 years who are comfortable talking about Jews are India Indians. Why, I don't know. Even Westerners who get the role of Jews in the craziness, get very uncomfortable even in private conversations about Jews and race realism. But these people also refuse to immediately assume the current thing is likely a lie.

The combo of acknowledging Jewish power and that all main narratives are Bullshit requires people be comfortable with being considered stupid, bad people who are safe to ridicule. Very few want that even if they are retired.

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Linh, you might not miss anywhere but could you settle in a small town like Pakse?

When I was a young whippersnapper your age, I desired large cities. I felt that was where the action was at.

In my early 60s that started changing. Now turning 70 this year, I prefer smaller, boring towns with easy access to nature as long as I can get the groceries we want and have a few cafes I enjoy.

With all the craziness I don't think I would want to be in a city of over 100,000 anymore at least in the US. Between 50,000 and 100,000 seems best in any country to me now

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author
Apr 26, 2023·edited Apr 26, 2023Author

Hi Al,

I can easily live in Pakse (pop. 120,000) or even Don Det (pop. 400) long term, but I'd be just as happy in Siem Reap (pop. 250,000), Phnom Penh (2.3 million) or even Bangkok (11 million). Oriental cities are safe, and there's a sense of community in each neighborhood, especially in the alleys. The congestion of Saigon, my hometown, is too much, however, and that's why I was in Vung Tau (pop. 360,000).

I was pretty happy in Tirana (pop. 920,000), where I spent six months, and Belgrade (1.4 million), where I was for two months.

I'd love to live in Osaka (pop. 2.7 million).

With their crimes, American cities are becoming increasingly unlivable. Here's a new video about that:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yBC7jKksfXM

Linh

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Is Osaka a more appealing city than when I passed through in 1968? It was a cooky-cutter city of high rises then whereas Kyoto was beautiful. But I was informed by young people in 1997 that Kyoto no longer looked like it had, just another cooky-cutter city of high rises. That was sad because it truly was special since it hadn't been severely bombed.

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Apr 27, 2023·edited Apr 27, 2023Author

Hi Susan,

My friend Mieko Kawakami turned me on to Osaka. Its tackiness is sneered at by those in Tokyo. Consider the Osaka Obachan, for example, with their tiger and leopard print clothing.

On 12/7/18, I wrote, "In Osaka, there’s a supermarket chain, Super Tamade, that features bombastic, multi-colored displays of lights outside, while over the merchandises, there are neon and crayon-colored cartoon whales, dolphins, octopuses, blow fish, submarines, airplanes and helicopters, etc. Pointing out a Super Tamade, my Japanese friends expected me to laughingly sneer, but I only swooned, 'That is very beautiful.' Who needs Jeff Koons or acid when you can just shop at Super Tamade?"

https://linhdinhphotos.blogspot.com/2018/12/kawaii-somber-japan.html

Osaka is much more blue collar and grittier than Tokyo. Capitals have an excess of politicians, diplomats, lawyers and military officers. Though I spent three high school years just outside DC and spent 9 more months there after college, I didn't much care for that entire metro area. In South Korea, too, I prefer Busan to Seoul.

Linh

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Thank you for the interesting info about Osaka. Yes, Tokyo was another cooky-cutter high-rise city in 1968, but I went to the Kabuki there where the old ladies stuffed hankies up their kimono sleeves -- lots of tears! -- and tea / snack trays were passed during the performance.

Kyoto was the old capital and the streets were tiny and narrow, and we stayed at a Buddhist inn. I hate to think what it looks like now it was so beautiful then.

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Bauman's book was almost certainly ghostwritten by a professional ghostwriter, so of course it doesn't sound like anything that happened in real life, but that's expected. What's more odd is the way he keeps holding all the time the base of the (fake?) leg as if he was afraid it might fall off. Also, as someone (maybe Miles Mathis) observed, they barricaded the whole part where the explosion took place -- but other parts of the route were not barricaded. It seems it might have been done to hide whatever was going on behind there. What's also odd is that while that there were supposedly two bombings, all the images of people hurt appear to be of the first one. The second explosion is shown only from a distance. But I haven't looked much into it.

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author

Hi Tom,

They had to barricade only that section to stage their comedy.

Linh

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“Actually, I don’t miss anywhere.”

You know, that’s a pretty astute comment. Really we’re all just passing thru life no matter where we are. You just learned the truth sooner than almost everyone else.

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I wish more people were attached to where they live though the nomads / creators among us such as Linh are necessary. Everywhere I look people have no attachment to other people, their own children, their pets, their houses, their land. They're willing to throw everything away for the latest piece of garbage junk. I love where I live (44 acres in an old farmhouse) and miss it even when I just go away for a few hours.

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author

Hi Susan,

I only became a nomad during Covid, when I was locked out of Vietnam, and I'm a nomad again because I was kicked out of Vietnam last November. For roughly three decades, I lived in Philadelphia.

That said, I've always had a wanderlust. My last published book in the US, Postcards from the End of America, was a result of many train and bus trips.

My name, Linh Dinh, sounds like lênh đênh in Vietnamese, meaning "adrift." Canceled from the US, I'm adrift, but, like I said, it's a great blessing.

Linh

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Adrift, very poetical. How difficult it must have been to be a nomad during the pandemic, though even I would have preferred nomadism over what they were doing in Tranada.

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The jews were onto this 'who you gonna believe - me or your own eyes?' shell game a long time ago. Here are the Marx brothers https://youtu.be/cHxGUe1cjzM

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Really enjoyed the Bullshit trilogy, Linh!

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I thought of that too, I just didn't write it down. Gravity would make his loss of blood situation worse. Funny how the 'emergency response guy' is ok with it. It weirds me out how many people will be dishonest if someone above them compels them to be so. Thnx

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Tombstones in their eyes. Unforgettable.

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