Une bombe vient d'éclater à la ligne d'arrivée du marathon de Boston.

ca me fait rire le monde qui dise que c'est suspect de courrir et fuir les lieu du crime.....

voir que quelqu'un de normal, apres une explosion et tu sais pas si yen a d'autre ou vas en avoir d'autre etant donner que t'es pas celui qui les a placer, vas rester la en attendant que ca pette...voyon dont calisse.

moer en tk, si ca pette a coter de moi et que je suis pas mort, c'est sure que je reste pas la, pis que je criss mon camp le plus loin possible pour pas crever au cas ou qui aille d'autre engin explosif.

j'sais pas pour vous autre, mais moi c'est sure que je reste pas planter la.

apres que ce sois calmer, LA, jva aider les autres si j'ai encore mes jambes.
 
right after first bomb went off

ub9m4RL.gif
 
Estie c est horrible...Le pauvre gars qui a passé a la tele avec le femur a l air..On le voit tres bien dans ce gif. la jambe en l air..

Woah its worse than hell. Just imagine how FUCKED UP would you feel if you were one of those people...Something goes boom, youre lightly wounded, youre deaf on the ground, everybody's screaming, theres blood, skin, muscles everywhere...

Next thing you realize that the guy RIGHT in front of you has half his leg missing..and the others...oh man..the others...

Pensées speciales a TOUTES les personnes ayant deja subit qque chose du genre, peu importe le pays.
 
ce qui est intolérable dans tout ça, c'est que c'est des gens normaux, sans aucune implication politique ou sociale...c'est juste des marathoniens...c'est pas comme si la bombe avait explosé dans une ambassade ou près d'une base militaire, la, c'est 100% contre l'humanité, 100% contre le peuple, des adultes et des enfants sont morts d'autres démembrés...
 
Estie c est horrible...Le pauvre gars qui a passé a la tele avec le femur a l air..On le voit tres bien dans ce gif. la jambe en l air..

non non non, c'est un acteur qui avait déjà perdu ses jambes durant la guerre Infowar l'a dit...
 
Oh. Shit. I don't know what to think of this...

Posted Monday, JUST after the bombing.
Source: http://imgur.com/a/sUrnA#T5X1A47
paK3lGJh.png


+
Then yesterday (like the guy in the post said...):
http://www.examiner.com/article/sen...egulating-black-power-wake-of-boston-massacre


On April 17, New Jersey Senator Frank Lautenberg issued a statement to the public that he intends to propose a bill or amendment to regulate black powder, and other forms of explosive components, in the wake of the Boston Marathon Massacre. The bill would demand full Federal background checks of anyone seeking to purchase the minor explosive, similar to recent attempts by Congress to require full background checks on the sale of firearms.

In the wake of the deadly bombing attacks in Boston, U.S. Senator Frank R. Lautenberg (D-NJ) today announced that he will reintroduce legislation he has proposed in a prior Congress to require that sales of explosive powder be subject to a background check. He will also file the legislation as an amendment to the gun violence prevention bill currently on the Senate floor. - Lautenberg.Senate.com

Early indications by analysts and observers of the horrific Boston Marathon bombings show that a black powder explosive may have been the primary element in the bombs that killed three people, and injured hundreds of others. The use of black powder explosives are considered small in potency when compared to today's high tech explosives, and their use has been found to date as far back as 220 BC.

Of the $27.8 Billion spent each year on firearms, ammunition, clothing, reloading equipment, optics, and accessories by the American public, only about 7-8% of all gun owners reload their own ammunition on a regular basis. This means that only a relatively small amount of people purchase black powder explosives each year, and in comparison to other flammable, explosive, and dangerous household products such as fertilizer and gasoline, the singling out of black powder for stricter regulation bears little statistical evidence that its use in criminal activity is widespread.

Politicians are well known for using tragic events for their own political gain, as seen recently by the addition of children as props during speeches and debates over gun control. However, the real issue is not the tool or elements used in the orchestration of a crime, but the person behind that use that should be the focus of any criminal indictment, or legislative regulation. And even as no suspect, nor full analysis of the bombing has taken place since the bombing, Senator Frank Lautenberg is choosing to propose legislation which would regulate black powder, and will potentially hurt a retail product that is part of the $67.8 Billion economic impact that hunting and firearm ownership adds to the nation's annual GDP.
 
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^Dude I could bake you a cake, sit you down with Dick Cheney, have him tell you he orchestrated 9/11 and you still wouldn't believe me. Note the cake baking part.
 
^More evidence I was right. I told you guys...

You didnt had to tell us because we KNEW it was comming. Its ALWAYS like that. Someone uses something and it gets regulated after.

Its the SAME shit that happens here, they sell one sided spoons with teeth, someone licks it and cuts his tongue and it automatically gets regulated... Doesnt mean its a conspiracy!
 
Sincèrement, tu trouves même pas ça un peu bizarre que le gars aille "callé" la shot lundi soir et qu'hier cette nouvelle là sorte au sujet du "ban" de la poudre à canon? Faut admettre que c'est crissement étrange, non?

Pas vraiment non, ce genre d'attaque envers tout ce qui attrait au gun est rendu assez courante. En plus, la description du suspect à maintenant plus rien à voir avec ce que "M. je travail au governement raconte"... typical sockpuppet bullshit
 
Pas vraiment non, ce genre d'attaque envers tout ce qui attrait au gun est rendu assez courante. En plus, la description du suspect à maintenant plus rien à voir avec ce que "M. je travail au governement raconte"... typical sockpuppet bullshit

youre so cool

Kmab6RG.gif
 
Too bad two men are pinned and not one like the text says, the story doesnt make sense starting at first sentence, bullshit.

Oh. Shit. I don't know what to think of this...

Posted Monday, JUST after the bombing.
Source: http://imgur.com/a/sUrnA#T5X1A47
paK3lGJh.png


+
Then yesterday (like the guy in the post said...):
http://www.examiner.com/article/sen...egulating-black-power-wake-of-boston-massacre


On April 17, New Jersey Senator Frank Lautenberg issued a statement to the public that he intends to propose a bill or amendment to regulate black powder, and other forms of explosive components, in the wake of the Boston Marathon Massacre. The bill would demand full Federal background checks of anyone seeking to purchase the minor explosive, similar to recent attempts by Congress to require full background checks on the sale of firearms.

In the wake of the deadly bombing attacks in Boston, U.S. Senator Frank R. Lautenberg (D-NJ) today announced that he will reintroduce legislation he has proposed in a prior Congress to require that sales of explosive powder be subject to a background check. He will also file the legislation as an amendment to the gun violence prevention bill currently on the Senate floor. - Lautenberg.Senate.com

Early indications by analysts and observers of the horrific Boston Marathon bombings show that a black powder explosive may have been the primary element in the bombs that killed three people, and injured hundreds of others. The use of black powder explosives are considered small in potency when compared to today's high tech explosives, and their use has been found to date as far back as 220 BC.

Of the $27.8 Billion spent each year on firearms, ammunition, clothing, reloading equipment, optics, and accessories by the American public, only about 7-8% of all gun owners reload their own ammunition on a regular basis. This means that only a relatively small amount of people purchase black powder explosives each year, and in comparison to other flammable, explosive, and dangerous household products such as fertilizer and gasoline, the singling out of black powder for stricter regulation bears little statistical evidence that its use in criminal activity is widespread.

Politicians are well known for using tragic events for their own political gain, as seen recently by the addition of children as props during speeches and debates over gun control. However, the real issue is not the tool or elements used in the orchestration of a crime, but the person behind that use that should be the focus of any criminal indictment, or legislative regulation. And even as no suspect, nor full analysis of the bombing has taken place since the bombing, Senator Frank Lautenberg is choosing to propose legislation which would regulate black powder, and will potentially hurt a retail product that is part of the $67.8 Billion economic impact that hunting and firearm ownership adds to the nation's annual GDP.
 
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