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[Closed] Is airport security tight enough?

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Just had a holiday to Egypt, flew all the way there completely unhindered on an out of date passport, it got noticed on my way home!


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 10:52 am
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Passport control != airport security.

What should have happened is you flew then the Egyptians sent you home then the UK border people tell you off a bit before telling you to bugger off home.

Pretty sure the only time you need to show a passport these days is to prove you're the named person on the ticket and then at the other end when you're entering a country.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 10:54 am
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Dunno, there seemed to be a lot of scanning going on at passport control going out, the Egyptian bloke did even take a triple look at me & the passport when going in... Maybe he just let it slide.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 10:59 am
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Never seen a plane brought down by an expired passport before - so I'm going to say yes.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 11:01 am
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Never seen a plane brought down by an expired passport before

Exactly. The fact that your passport had expired didn't change the fact that you are you and you are still who your passport says you are...


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 11:02 am
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But you're Tinsy. Everybody knows Tinsy - your face is your passport!


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 11:04 am
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I never thought of it like that... Still doesnt seem to get me the same amount of BJ's as I expect! 🙂


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 11:07 am
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You can travel through the eurozone on an out of date passport, not recommended but it is possible, went to the canaries last nov didn't realise until we can't back through Birmingham our passports expired a year ago, was told no issue just get them sorted.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 11:14 am
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I've been skiing with a guy who used his brothers passport.
He was a tall, muscular chap, his brother was a short, very fat man. A bit like twins, and yet no questions asked.

I of course, as usual, got searched in both directions.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 11:53 am
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If a problem had arisen in Egypt you could have just given the immigration bloke ten dollars to overlook it.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 11:55 am
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is being 'searched in both directions' painful 😉


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 11:57 am
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The taking liquids thing off passengers is a joke and I'm fairly sure more about selling drinks while BAA holds you captive in the shopping area than airline safety.

Strangley, the large glass bottles of flammable liquid available in duty free are absolutely fine to take on board.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 12:01 pm
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😉


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 12:03 pm
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Spot on. It's all about making sure you take maximum advantage of the "retail opportunities" so that the airport owners can maximise the yield from all that unused space.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 12:07 pm
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what I don't get is the seemingly randomly applied take off your shoes/ don't take off your shoes policy.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 12:07 pm
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Egypt is one of the countries that require you to have 6 months left on your passport and your airline would have been liable for your repatriation if they had allowed you to board. There was a piece about this on BBC Watchdog the other night. The passenger was refused at check in and not refunded his air fare.
Sounds like you were very lucky.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 12:12 pm
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The taking liquids thing off passengers is a joke and I'm fairly sure more about selling drinks while BAA holds you captive in the shopping area than airline safety.

Its more about stopping this mate http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bojinka_plot.

One of the original "tests" was inside a drinks bottle and final assembly done in the toilet of flight.

A quirk in the seat numbering on that particular flight meant it wasnt left over the main fuel tank and the plane didnt explode into a fireball as planned. Did some major damage to the plane tho.

This came up again in the UK a few years back when the liquid ban came in and that little plot was disrupted http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006_transatlantic_aircraft_plot.

The 7/7 bombers were associated to that group and we all know what the "backup plan" did on the London tube.

Airport security cant be tight enough in my opinion. Sadly these nutters will pull this off one day.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 12:18 pm
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Strangley, the large glass bottles of flammable liquid available in duty free are absolutely fine to take on board.

Before the liquid ban (but after 9/11) I was flying from the US back to the UK and had been given a really nice bottle of whiskey. We'd had a nip or two the night before and I had the bottle in my hand luggage. In the departure lounge I got a bottle of something else to take home as well and went to get on the plane. Cue entry of boarding agent with a lack of grey matter.

She insisted my opened bottle was a security risk as I might use it to start a fire or smash it and use it as a weapon. I asked her if that applied to my other bottle (and those of other passengers) and she said no. What followed was one of the most peculiar conversations I've had with a jobsworth where she ended up sauing point blank said it was not possible to do the same with the bottle I bought at the airport as it was still closed. I said I could open it there and then and she said she'd have to confiscate it but I could open it on the plane if I wanted.

Mind well and truly boggled with her idiocy.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 12:28 pm
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Its reassuring theatrical security spread over three areas to make you hang around different shopping malls.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Security_theater


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 12:29 pm
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The taking liquids thing off passengers is a joke and I'm fairly sure more about selling drinks while BAA holds you captive in the shopping area than airline safety.

Its more about stopping this mate http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bojinka_plot. /p>

One of the original "tests" was inside a drinks bottle and final assembly done in the toilet of flight.

A quirk in the seat numbering on that particular flight meant it wasnt left over the main fuel tank and the plane didnt explode into a fireball as planned. Did some major damage to the plane tho.

This came up again in the UK a few years back when the liquid ban came in and that little plot was disrupted http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006_transatlantic_aircraft_plot. /p>

The 7/7 bombers were associated to that group and we all know what the "backup plan" did on the London tube.

Airport security cant be tight enough in my opinion. Sadly these nutters will pull this off one day.

Flamable liquids aren't an issue - aircraft interiors are flame retardant to such a startling degree you'd think it was witchcraft. But I've been present at the detonation of a bottle of improvised liquid explosive. Jesus tittyfricking Christ!


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 12:29 pm
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Its reassuring theatrical security spread over three areas to make you hang around different shopping malls.

Protesting at minor inconvenience is no less theatrical though


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 12:33 pm
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Jesus tittyfricking Christ!

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 12:42 pm
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That's a funny looking plane.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 12:44 pm
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Its not a plane

[img] [/img]

Is that better?


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 12:46 pm
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Im always amazed that terrorist dont commit some action before you check in, before you go through security. The checking in hall is full of people, bags, etc.

Why risk security ?


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 12:51 pm
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There should be separate planes with no security for people easily irritated by security checks who don't mind the risk of being blown up.

They could just self-destruct the plane at any sign of trouble.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 12:57 pm
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Thats quite a good idea.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 1:10 pm
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aircraft interiors are flame retardant to such a startling degree you'd think it was witchcraft.

I worked with someone whose job had been in the past to test things for planes to ensure they didn't burn and if they did they were (relatively) non-toxic. He seemed to like the old day job where he got to set fire to stuff


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 1:19 pm
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Glad to see the circus makes some of you feel safe.

Flying Adelaide to Sydney (big city, lots of landmarks to fly a plane into and make a splash), only restrictions are the usual no sharp things etc, and laptops and aerosols must be scanned out of your carry on. Unless you check in with a person at the desk, you don't even need ID, just your frequent flyer card, or the credit card to do the booking. Oh, and non-flying people can go to the gate to say hello, wave good bye.

Flying Adelaide to Christchurch (small city with sadly even fewer landmarks than it used to have since the quake), shoes off, no liquids, passports, 2x scans, the works.

Why is it inherently more dangerous to fly internationally? If it's not, why the huge difference in security?

The best is flying regional into Melbourne - they xray your stuff and scan you once you've got there 🙄

So really, really, it has little to do with security. Just the perception of security.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 1:22 pm
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according to Lt Col Wylde the plausibility of a liquid bomb is just not possible, and he is perhaps the most senior bomb expert in the UK, he claims the whole idea is a myth and one not created by any terrorist organisation.

Lieutenant-Colonel (ret.) Nigel Wylde, a former senior British Army Intelligence Officer, has suggested that the police and government story about the "terror plot" revealed on 10th August was part of a "pattern of lies and deceit."

British and American government officials have described the operation which resulting in the arrest of 24 mostly British Muslim suspects, as a resounding success. Thirteen of the suspects have been charged, and two released without charges.

According to security sources, the terror suspects were planning to board up to ten civilian airliners and detonate highly volatile liquid explosives on the planes in a spectacular terrorist operation. The liquid explosives -- either TATP (Triacetone Triperoxide), DADP (diacetone diperoxide) or the less sensitive HMTD (hexamethylene triperoxide diamine) -- were reportedly to be made on board the planes by mixing sports drinks with a peroxide-based household gel and then be detonated using an MP3 player or mobile phone.

But Lt. Col. Wylde, who was awarded the Queen's Gallantry Medal for his command of the Belfast Explosive Ordnance Disposal Unit in 1974, described this scenario as a "fiction." Creating liquid explosives is a "highly dangerous and sophisticated task," he states, one that requires not only significant chemical expertise but also appropriate equipment.

Terror plot scenario "untenable"

"The idea that these people could sit in the plane toilet and simply mix together these normal household fluids to create a high explosive capable of blowing up the entire aircraft is untenable," said Lt. Col. Wylde, who was trained as an ammunition technical officer responsible for terrorist bomb disposal at the Royal Army Ordnance Corps in Sandhurst.

After working as a bomb defuser in Northern Ireland, Lt. Col. Wylde became a senior officer in British Army Intelligence in 1977. During the Cold War, he collected intelligence as part of an undercover East German "liaison unit," then went on to work in the Ministry of Defense to review its communications systems.

"So who came up with the idea that a bomb could be made on board? Not Al Qaeda for sure. It would not work. Bin Laden is interested in success not deterrence by failure," Wylde stated.

"This story has been blown out of all proportion. The liquids would need to be carefully distilled at freezing temperatures to extract the required chemicals, which are very difficult to obtain in the purities needed."

Once the fluids have been extracted, the process of mixing them produces significant amounts of heat and vile fumes. "The resulting liquid then needs some hours at room temperature for the white crystals that are the explosive to develop." The whole process, which can take between 12 and 36 hours, is "very dangerous, even in a lab, and can lead to premature detonation," said Lt. Col. Wylde.

If there was a conspiracy, he added, "it did not involve manufacturing the explosives in the loo," as this simply "could not have worked." The process would be quickly and easily detected. The fumes of the chemicals in the toilet "would be smelt by anybody in the area." They would also inevitably "cause the alarms in the toilet and in the air change system in the aircraft to be triggered. The pilot has the ability to dump all the air from an aircraft as a fire-fighting measure, leaving people to use oxygen masks. All this means the planned attack would be detected long before the queues outside the loo had grown to enormous lengths."

Government silent on detonators

Even if it was possible for the explosive to have been made on the aircraft, a detonator, probably made from TATP, would be needed to set it off. "It is very dangerous and risky to the individual," Wylde said. "As the quantity involved would be small this would injure the would-be suicide bomber but not endanger the aircraft, thus defeating the object of bringing down an aircraft."

Despite the implausibility of this scenario, it has been used to justify wide-ranging new security measures that threaten to permanently curtail civil liberties and to suspend sections of the United Kingdom's Human Rights Act of 1998. "Why were the public delicately informed of an alleged conspiracy which the authorities knew, or should have known, could not have worked?" asked Lt. Col. Wylde.

"This is not a new problem," he added, noting that 'shoe-bomber' Richard Reid had attempted to use this type of explosive on a plane in December 2001. "If this threat is real, what has been done to develop explosive test kits capable of detecting peroxide based explosives?" asked Wylde. "These are the real issues about protecting the public that have not been publicised. Instead we are going to get demands for more internment without trial."

Lt. Col. Wylde also raised questions about the criminal investigation into the 7th July terrorist attacks in London last year. He noted that police and government sources have maintained "total silence" about the detonation devices used in the bombs on the London Underground and the bus at Tavistock Square. "Whatever the nature of the primary explosive materials, even if it was home-made TATP, the detonator that must be used to trigger an explosion is an extremely dangerous device to make, requiring a high level of expertise that cannot be simply self-taught or picked-up over the internet," Wylde stated.

The government's silence on the detonation device used in the attacks is "disturbing," he said, as the creation of the devices requires the involvement of trained explosives experts. Wylde speculated that such individuals would have to be present either inside the country or outside, perhaps in Eastern Europe, where they would be active participants in an international supply-chain to UK operatives. "In either case, we are talking about something far more dangerous than home-grown radicals here."


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 1:33 pm
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But Lt. Col. Wylde, who was awarded the Queen's Gallantry Medal for his command of the Belfast Explosive Ordnance Disposal Unit in 1974, described this scenario as a "fiction."[b] Creating liquid explosives is a "highly dangerous and sophisticated task," he states, one that requires not only significant chemical expertise but also appropriate equipment.[/b]

The ones I saw used (which may not be the ones the Colonel is referring to) required pouring one liquid into another with a jug.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 1:55 pm
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Lt Col Wylde; doesnt have an axe to grind... does he?

Maybe he does

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 1:55 pm
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Dunno, but he seems to know a lot about what he is talking about.
"This story has been blown out of all proportion. The liquids would need to be carefully distilled at freezing temperatures to extract the required chemicals, which are very difficult to obtain in the purities needed."

Once the fluids have been extracted, the process of mixing them produces significant amounts of heat and vile fumes. "The resulting liquid then needs some hours at room temperature for the white crystals that are the explosive to develop." The whole process, which can take between 12 and 36 hours, is "very dangerous, even in a lab, and can lead to premature detonation," said Lt. Col. Wylde.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 2:04 pm
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one point in all this is the detonators required


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 2:09 pm
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He was prosecuted for breach of the official secrets act. Some thing to do with NI I seem to remember, charges dropped tho.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 2:13 pm
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not talking about that, but his comments seem to be very detailed and knowledgable, and do tie in with a number of analyses I have read on the subject, one is that no one has come forward with an explanation of what a colourless odourless liquid is that could be turned in to a bomb.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 2:29 pm
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They may not be going for high explosives. All you need to do is punch a hole in the skin of the plane to cause major mayhem.

I'm sure I watched them do this on telly. It didn't destroy the aircraft but it did make a hole.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 2:32 pm
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yeah but how much of that is actually possible and how much was it the high explosive detonator causing a lot of the damage, in these tv "tests" they have used industrial detonators so they can create a blast that wouldnt happen with a home made detonator.

I am just very sceptical on this, and would be happier if the security was tightened up, but tightened up properly not just some lame excuse to get yo to buy more stuff in the airport.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 2:43 pm
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If I was determined to blow myself and as many infidels as possible to pieces I wouldn't waste my time trying to board an aircraft, I would simply stroll into a nice big shopping mall like Manchester's Trashy Park or the Arndale, shout "Allahu Akhbar" and pull the string. I can't understand why this hasn't happened yet.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 2:45 pm
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I think that the point Wylde makes is that the terrorists [u]were[/u]
trying to blow up the plane, and had plausible a method for doing so, but that the official explanation was bunkum, and does not stand up to scrutiny.

And now we all pay the price for this, because of the 100ml limit on liquids.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 2:56 pm
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Not paying a particularly big price though. A couple of quid extra on drinks at the airport isn't that much compared to the rest of the holiday. Or if it is, then you've got a cheap holiday so stop complaining 🙂


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 2:57 pm
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The best is flying regional into Melbourne - they xray your stuff and scan you once you've got there

To stop you bringing unwanted goods in unless I'm mistaken, don't think anyone's ever pretended it was s security thing


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 2:59 pm
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Im always amazed that terrorist dont commit some action before you check in, before you go through security. The checking in hall is full of people, bags, etc.

Like, driving a Jeep Cherokee full of gas cans into the departure lounge?

I think aircraft are seen as some sort of totem... It'd be incredibly easy for one person to cause chaos on an everyday street, the glasgow attack was particularly brilliant because the average number of people killed by 4x4s being driven normally is higher than they achieved with their "bomb"- statistically, you're safer from that than you are from school-running mums.

But knocking planes out of the sky is dramatic and shows sophistication and skill, whereas just driving a jeep through a pedestrian precinct at speed on a saturday is effective but crude.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 3:28 pm
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Its reassuring theatrical security spread over three areas to make you hang around different shopping malls.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Security_theater

This guys on the money... helps stir the tribalist us and them sentiment (much like [url= http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hate_week ]hate week[/url]) and fuels the [url= http://fair.org/extra-online-articles/the-military-industrial-media-complex/ ]military industrial media complex[/url] which perpetuates the need for wars, weapons and the industries that profit from them.

If terrorists really wanted to bring a country to its knees, they'd focus on the power distribution network; bombing a major electricity substation, gas or oil pipeline wouldn't really be that hard, but wouldn't easily translate into directly involving the populace in the security theater that airports allow.

Manufactured fear methinks.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 3:58 pm
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Making airport security into a big deal may actually draw terrorists towards it. They probably end up thinking that air travel is the target they should be aiming for just like we do.

I don't think they want to bring a country to its knees though. More effective to just hurt people and make them afraid. Random civillian slaughter does this more effectively than a strategic military campaign.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 4:16 pm
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Aviation is a multi trillion dollar industry. A big cog in the evil western empire.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 5:18 pm
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It's no good targeting infrastructure, that's resilient and is just about money.

Terrorism is about striking terror into the hearts of the population.
Killing an individual soldier on the streets of London is a complete waste of time from a bringing a country to its knees perspective but its been a great advertisement for them and the effect on our nation has been immense. Job done as far as they're concerned.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 5:37 pm
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They may not be going for high explosives. All you need to do is punch a hole in the skin of the plane to cause major mayhem.

Indeed - one of the the pivotal issues in the Lockerbie investigation was that the how small the blast was. Planes can withstand pretty big holes being made in them and still hold together, and possibly even land

[img] [/img]

[img] [/img]
but a small hole is like a balloon being pricked with a pin. The lockerbie flight wasn't blown to pieces by a bomb small enough to hide in a radio, it was punctured and popped.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 6:20 pm
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I daresay if they blew the gas or electric supply mid winter, there would be a fair bit of terror~ going by the panic buying when there is whispers of a fuel shortage, oil would doubtless cause a stir too.

As for killing a soldier (who was not easily identifiable as a soldier, being in plain clothes) by apparently beheading him, with no blood near the body, or on their clothes, job done as far as who's concerned?

http://www.****/news/article-2334476/Woolwich-murder-MI6-connection-Younger-brother-Michael-Adebolajo-paid-thousands-spy-Middle-East.html

http://www.nafeezahmed.com/2013/05/is-mi5-foiling-terror-plots-of-its-own.html


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 6:24 pm
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I'm not sure of the relevance of those two links but it's job done from the terrorist organisations perspective for creating terror, disharmony and conflict within the British Isles. That's the whole purpose of their being.

You're not....you're not actually suggesting it was a government plot are you?


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 8:13 pm
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apparently beheading him, with no blood near the body, or on their clothes

Umm the pictures I saw (which I don't really want to repost here) shown the main suspect ranting and raving with his hands quite literally soaked in blood, carrying two very bloody large knives.

Are you seriously suggesting this is government frame up??


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 8:42 pm
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Umm the pictures I saw (which I don't really want to repost here) shown the main suspect ranting and raving with his hands quite literally soaked in blood, carrying two very bloody large knives.

Are you seriously suggesting this is government frame up??

I'm opening that avenue of investigation~ there is certainly room to question the official narrative, but I can't say for sure what the truth is~ much as if you go to see an illusionist, you may marvel at the tricks, but you can't explain the mechanics of what you've seen~ what is real and what isn't...

though there was apparently blood on his hands, why wasn't there blood on any of his clothing? Even the guy in the light jacket had no sign of blood on his clothes...

None of the pictures or footage released show blood near the body~ even the blood trail you see from aerial photos doesn't correspond to photos or footage from closer to the scene.

The pedestrians walking past without concern, despite the apparently blood soaked hands and weapons and the lack of damage to the sign that the car crashed into also raise questions.

Who knows the truth behind it all, but going by the history of involvement by the intelligence services, I'm not rushing to believe the hype, just because it was on the front page of the newspapers...


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 9:07 pm
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airport owners can [s]maximise[/s]recover the yield from all those [s]that unused space[/s]cheap landing slots that Ryan and the other cheap operators insist on

FTFY


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 9:30 pm
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why not have a word with the guys greaving family you moron


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 9:43 pm
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It is funny how things change and we soon accept this as normal. My dad once flew up to help me renovate a flat in Edinburgh. He was given a list of jobs to do when he arrived so packed everything he needed and took it on the flight as hand luggage. Items included:

Electronic timer (for immersion heater)
Cables
Boxed of nails and screws
A hammer
Stanley Knife
Screw Drivers etc

The date of his flight? 10 Sept 2001, Funnily enough, he left most of his tools behind when he flew back!


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 9:52 pm
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why not have a word with the guys greaving family you moron

If things genuinely happened as portrayed, the fact remains he was a soldier... he was paid to kill, and if the job demanded, be killed... somehow, his death was big news

The comparatively innocent [url= http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b021m7y1/profiles/mohammed-saleem-murder ]Mohammed Saleem[/url] was murdered in a fairly similar fashion, yet received no major press coverage.

Explain that to me without resorting to knee jerk emotion please.

I won't go into depth about the lives lost daily due to allied forces overseas...


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 9:57 pm
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I'm opening that avenue of investigation~ there is certainly room to question the official narrative, but I can't say for sure what the truth is~ much as if you go to see an illusionist, you may marvel at the tricks, but you can't explain the mechanics of what you've seen~ what is real and what isn't...

[img] ?w=450[/img]


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 10:02 pm
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i wouldnt say it was knee jerk, its simply stating that youre moronic statements would have me believe you are a moron.

and mohammed saleems murder though brutal is not of the same level as this, there was also the lady beheaded in tenerife, but if you think this guy somehow should have been ready for this as he was a soldier then your moronic status in my view has just gone up again.

and what do you mean the comparatively innocent, was the soldier somehow guilty of something?


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 10:04 pm
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Posted : 04/06/2013 10:13 pm
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jivehoneyjive - Member

I'm opening that avenue of investigation

Well thank god for that 😆


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 10:18 pm
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jivehoney, i think you should take note of the words of Chuck D.

what you should do is read the statements of the witnesses, ignore the flaky phonecam footage, understand what they saw and think about your comments.
i am a very suspicious person by nature, hence my scepticism over airport security, but this attack really doesn't come in to the govt conspiracy theory category.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 10:26 pm
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what you should do is read the statements of the witnesses, ignore the flaky phonecam footage, understand what they saw and think about your comments.

Understand what who saw?

Sky news witness \/

[img] :large[/img]

EDL Rally that night /\


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 10:30 pm
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again you are believing the hype, like i said your moronic status in my eyes just keeps going up, i said read, not listen to sound bites you are believing the hype, go do some research and read up on what people saw, blogged, tweeted, etc, its the peoples words not tv you need to discover to find out what happened.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 10:38 pm
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I've read alot of fictional books by ghost writers... I've also seen alot of fictional films with a cast of actors~ there are a number of discrepancies which need explaining before this is put to rest~ regardless, it may be wholly real, but even despite that, the media portrayal is blatantly heavily skewed to bring about patriotism and justification of aggressive actions by our forces.

Although this represents the U.S., please scrutinize where [url= http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Top_100_Contractors_of_the_U.S._federal_government ]government money is going[/url]

(I would've supplied info for the UK, but it doesn't appear to be readily accessible...)


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 10:47 pm
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you are right the media portrayal is total flag waving whip up a frenzy typical rubbish.
but reading some of the blogs, tweets etc from actual witnesses, then no i dont believe it is made up.

its a tragedy for all involved, especially Lee Rigby.


 
Posted : 04/06/2013 10:50 pm
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To stop you bringing unwanted goods in unless I'm mistaken, don't think anyone's ever pretended it was s security thing

From where? Griffith, Burnie, or Mount Gambier?? It's an internal regional flight, I'm not aware of things (other than a sense of humour) that aren't permitted in Melbourne that are in any of those places.

Moral of the story - if you want to hijack or blow up a plane, get on one from a regional airport!


 
Posted : 05/06/2013 8:00 am
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i wouldnt say it was knee jerk, its simply stating that youre moronic statements would have me believe you are a moron.

Excellent irony there 😆


 
Posted : 05/06/2013 8:09 am
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I am just very sceptical on this, and would be happier if the security was tightened up, but tightened up properly not just some lame excuse to get yo to buy more stuff in the airport.

You can take empty bottles in and fill them once through security. I do this on long-haul flights usually so I don't have to go and look for a drink when I'm thirsty between services. That said, airports are definitely about keeping you in the shopping/dining areas; I've noticed that few flights these days give you your gate number until right before the flight so you have plenty of time to browse the shops or drink at an overpriced weatherspoons.

[quote=jivehoneyjive] Understand what who saw?

Oh, you're one of those people. Apparently a witness can't also be in the EDL? Anyway, the fact you're classing the EDL as part of a conspiracy proves you've lost the plot, they can't string a coherent statement together about what they believe in without it either becoming obviously racist or obvious they're covering up the racism.

jivehoneyjive is kaesae and I claim my 5 quid of bearings.


 
Posted : 05/06/2013 8:10 am
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jivehoneyjive » Understand what who saw?

Oh, you're one of those people. Apparently a witness can't also be in the EDL? Anyway, the fact you're classing the EDL as part of a conspiracy proves you've lost the plot, they can't string a coherent statement together about what they believe in without it either becoming obviously racist or obvious they're covering up the racism.

I'm just opening up the possibility that the witnesses may not be all they seem...food for thought

jivehoneyjive is kaesae and I claim my 5 quid of bearings.

😆 Now who's the conspiracy nut?


 
Posted : 05/06/2013 8:53 am
 D0NK
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jivehoneyjive is kaesae and I claim my 5 quid of bearings.
the obvious choice, I was leaning more towards fred.


 
Posted : 05/06/2013 9:13 am
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I miss Kaesae


 
Posted : 05/06/2013 10:14 am
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It's natural that someone who witnesses such a barbaric act would want to do something about it. Like attend an EDL march. Hell, if I'd witnessed that and were a massive racist, I'd try and organise the damn march.

But then again, I'm a corporate shill.

Brought to you by
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Posted : 05/06/2013 10:22 am
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The eye witness guy who was tweeting at the scene was on channel 4 news tonight.

I for one am glad to see that our secret service now recruit black, gangster rappers with links to criminal gangs rather than the traditional public school network.


 
Posted : 05/06/2013 6:44 pm