suspect

ATTACK on the White House

The suspect in the recent incident involving a U-Haul truck which harmlessly plowed into security barricades near the White House has been identified. As soon as his name and photo were released, social media erupted in a frenzy. There are simply way too many inconsistencies to the account which make it seem a whole lot like a “false-flag” event. It apparently even had a real false flag. The FBI is taking serious heat recently. They went out on a limb to claim the biggest threat to the nation is White Supremacy and they appear ready to manufacture the evidence they need to prove it. That wouldn’t be the first time and it’s the whole reason they’re in trouble in the first place.

Suspect no ordinary Nazi

Before we talk about the suspect in whatever happened Monday night, it’s important to note the political background it happened against.

Before John Durham’s earthshaking report came out, the FBI has been on a hunt for White Supremacists. Everyone has been wondering “what’s up with that?” because it came totally out of the blue. Then came the Patriot Front group. Twitter was quick to point out that if the Feds were going to form a hate group for the cameras, they could at least change their uniform.

Other suspicious things are happening, too, and they have the tinfoil hat types exceptionally edgy these days. For instance, 30 tons of ammonium nitrate explosive “fell off” a train in the western deserts somewhere. Tim McVeigh packed one ton of the stuff into a Ryder rental truck and blew the federal building in Oklahoma City down. You can see why any suspect in a rental truck barreling toward any sensitive location would be cause for concern.

The internet is also convinced that the feds are up to something sneaky because 50 senators were given special satellite phones. That wouldn’t normally be worth notice but there’s a little snag that has everyone wondering. The phones were verified to have been offered to all 100 senators, so far half took them. Nobody wants to say which half. That seems odd. If it was mixed evenly between both parties they would point that out. They aren’t.

What we have are nothing but individual breadcrumbs of suspicion. There isn’t anything to connect them together but they’re sitting there in a clump. Now we have 19-year-old Sai Varsith Kandula to add into the mix. For a “White Supremacist” he’s far from being the standard blonde, blue eyed member of the Aryan master race.

Once we get to know him better we’ll probably learn that he’s an unstable radical easily influenced by what he encounters in social media, which is heavily infiltrated by FBI trolls, subversives and provocateurs. The suspect in this case is looking like Christopher Wray, behind the scenes, to a bunch of social media pundits.

He had a Nazi flag

The box truck, which could have been packed with ammonium nitrate but wasn’t, only contained two things. A dolly included with the truck and a Nazi flag. How convenient for the FBI. You don’t get much more of a solid indication of White Supremacy involvement than with one of those.

The suspect didn’t stand a chance of ramming through the barricades, unless the truck had been packed with explosives. After those are two more sets of security fences and barriers.

Kandula has been charged with all sorts of nasty things. The suspect stands accused of “threatening to kill, kidnap or inflict harm on a president, vice president or family member, as well as assault with a dangerous weapon, reckless operation of a motor vehicle, trespassing and destruction of federal property.

He was busted by the U.S. Park Police. A mental health evaluation is next on the agenda.

The way the incident unfolded seems to be a smoothly orchestrated operation that couldn’t have gone any better to make the FBI look good and get some press for doing what they said they would do. Setting it up makes it so much easier.

After barreling the vehicle into the security barriers,” the not-real-White White Supremacist “exited the front seat and starting waving the red, swastika-emblazoned flag before he was taken into custody.” “Did you get good pictures?” The suspect allegedly asked as he was placed in cuffs.

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