All the World’s a Stage
June 14, 2016
ACTORS are not generally known for being picky when it comes to well-paid roles and a national audience. Luis Burbano is one of the actors who took part in the Orlando Shooting Hoax. Sad to say, there are probably hundreds, if not thousands, of under-employed actors who, once assured that it is for the good of national security (wink, wink), would sell their souls to participate in the Department of Defense’s campaign of legal propaganda to disarm the American people, terrorize them into bitterly opposed factions and further acclimate them to moral degeneracy — all for their own good and the good of global governance, of course.
Oh, patsies. You will be remembered as some of the greatest dupes who ever lived.
Regarding Burbano’s performance, I would give it one star, at best. In terms of plausibility, it’s right up there with the performance of Chris Hurst (starting at minute 2:10), an actor in the Virginia Shooting Hoax. (See Chris interviewed by CIA-trained Anderson Cooper here.) When Burbano talks about seeing a victim walking around with a bullet that is about four inches long sticking out of his leg — and then his own heroic and entirely unconvincing application of tourniquets — he evinces not the slightest bit of trauma at such blood-soaked events and even seems to smile, so enamored is he with the role. But then the idea was not to wow the nation with a stellar performance. This isn’t the Royal Shakespeare Company, after all. This is democratic, government-run theater and thus has a third-rate, institutional quality about it, as does most propaganda. Besides, Americans are such patsies a one-star performance is good enough. Let the bloggers and you-tubers rail on about how obvious it all was. It doesn’t matter because most people will not believe them and they will go back to the absolutely addicting Trump/Hillary Show, which admittedly has much better acting.
— End of Initial Entry —
Laura writes:
A nice summary of the problems with the official accounts of the Orlando shooting by Paul Craig Roberts can be found here.
Linda N. writes:
You (previously) cited a commenter doubting the possibility of “the alleged totals of 50 dead, 53 wounded or similar.” It’s been widely publicized that the cops arrived on the scene very quickly, then milled around outside in full Mutant Ninja Turtle regalia deciding what to do FOR THREE HOURS. Mind you, I’m no expert on guns and the damage they can inflict, but I suspect dozens of people may have slowly bled to death inside the club during those precious hours.
Laura writes:
Yes, the police never do that. Emergency personnel always immediately evacuate the newly injured to hospitals, even if they are dead. The same thing happened in Paris and Sandy Hook. The bodies were just left there, in the theater and in the school. This violates all standard emergency protocol. It just isn’t done — and if it were done, there would be lawsuits by families of the deceased.
It’s very unlikely that anyone was shot in Orlando.
Lydia Sherman writes:
If I could just see someone’s cellphone pictures of these events, I might believe the reports. The crisis actors have to leave their phones and cameras when they check in to the staging area. One tell-tale sign of a drill or staged event is the government-issued packs of water bottles, inadvertently shown in some of the pictures, and the ID tags worn by the actors to show they are officially part of the crew.
As to why this is happening, well, behind our backs, the government removed the anti-propaganda laws to enable media disinformation aimed at our own country: (type in “when were propaganda laws repealed? For more links: see here and here.
Laura writes:
You can also see the article I excerpted on the propaganda law yesterday.