RSS feed – Most Recent Headaches
- When they came for the Sheepdogs at Malheur
- LaVoy Finicum – Clinton – Putin – You know where this is going folks….
- 1400 Pink Slips – You didn’t build that “jobs jobs jobs” promise Hussein…Obama…
- The last hours at Burns/Malheur wildlife refuge
- Deep State – Mastering The Human Terrain
- Malheur Link Dump – 11 FEB
- Breaking: Malheur Open Thread
- Ladies and Gentleman… your BLM
- Consequences of using your 1st Amendment in America today – part 2
- Consequences of using your 1st Amendment in America today – death and solitary confinement!
How the federal government regards American citizens lives and property…
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Ruby Ridge open mike ” I got two for one bullet” a sniper who shot a women and her child, that’s what is out there waiting.
I don’t remember that. I don’t doubt it was said. And that is horrific. Lord help us!
It is true, the sniper shot his wife and the child in her arms, on his talky-walky the sniper said I saved the government 50 cents two for one bullet. That was horrific and the type guys and gals (Four Hundred) for one family government employs to their dirty work. ACLU got him millions, but not his son or wife, how soon some of us forget.
“Crime Library: Criminal Minds and Methods
Randy Weaver: Siege at Ruby Ridge
In August of 1992 Americans tensely watched as events began to unfold on a remote ridge in Northern Idaho, involving a white separatist family and the FBI. Eleven days after it had begun, a 14-year-old boy, a 42-year-old mother, a federal marshal, and one yellow Labrador retriever had all been shot dead.
The incident ultimately led to one of the most intensive and controversial investigations in recent history. The FBI faced widespread resentment and Attorney General Janet Reno established a Justice Department task force to investigate what had happened. National debates on the case were said to have fueled anti-government sentiments, which eventually played a role in the Waco, Oklahoma City, and the Freemen conflict. Timothy McVeigh’s bombing of the government building in Oklahoma City is said to be at least partially motivated by revenge for what happened at Ruby Ridge.
Prior to the incident, the Weaver family had moved to the remote mountaintop to escape what they viewed as a sinful world. Randy Weaver lived with his wife and four children in a cabin he himself built on Ruby Ridge, just 40 miles south of the Canadian border. The cabin had no electricity or running water. According to friends, the Weavers simply wanted to be left alone as they awaited Armageddon. While many may have viewed their intent as unusual, it appeared to be quite harmless to most who knew them.
Almost a decade later many questions remain: What went wrong at Ruby Ridge? Why did over 400 members of the FBI, military and local law enforcement converge on the mountain? Why did so many have to die? These and similar such questions are not easily answered, however; some answers may lay hidden within the details provided.”