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Isla Vista Shootings
#11
Police went to Rodger's apartment April 30 to conduct a wellness check after being contacted by members of Rodger's family who were concerned about disturbing videos he had posted on YouTube. Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown said that deputies had reported back that Rodger was shy, polite and said the Santa Barbara community college student had been having a difficult social life.
In a 140-page manifesto that police discovered in Rodger's apartment Saturday, the suspect writes that he told the police that the videos were a misunderstanding, but adds "If they had demanded to search my room ... That would have ended everything. For a few horrible seconds I thought it was all over."
Rodger claimed in his manifesto that he had begun considering his rampage on New Year's Day of this year. The shooting was supposed to be carried out in April, but Rodger had pushed it back due to illness.
"Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws. - Mayer Rothschild
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass
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#12
This also happened around the same time:


Belgian police hunt gunman after Jewish museum murders

A couple from Tel Aviv and a French woman were shot dead at the Brussels museum in a possible terror attack

theguardian.com, Sunday 25 May 2014 13.39 BST


Jewish museum murders
A woman lays flowers at the Jewish Museum in Brussels, where three people were shot dead on Saturday. Photograph: Geert Vanden Wijngaert/AP


Belgian police were hunting a gunman who shot dead three people including two Israelis at the Brussels Jewish Museum.

The first attack against a Jewish target in Belgium for more than 30 years came as the country headed into a crucial general election and as Europe went to the polls.

"An election day is usually a celebration of democracy. Today it is clouded," said Belgium's prime minister, Elio Di Rupo.

"It is in everyone's mind. In Belgium we are not accustomed to such acts of barbarity."

The deputy public prosecutor, Ine Van Wymersch, confirmed that two Israelis were among the victims as well as a French woman. A fourth critically injured victim was Belgian, she told a news conference.

Police had not been able to identify the gunman, who was probably acting alone, she said, and was well-prepared and well-armed. A picture of the suspect would be released shortly. Belgian police thought initially two gunmen were involved.

Van Wymersch said there was no claim of responsibility and added: "I cannot confirm that it is a terrorist or antisemitic act."

The French president, François Hollande, during a visit to south-west France to vote in European elections, said there was no doubt about the "antisemitic character" of the attack.

It was the first fatal attack on a Jewish centre in Belgium since the early 1980s, home to about 40,000 Jews, nearly all living in either Brussels or Antwerp.

The head of the EU executive, José Manuel Barroso, condemned the "terrible act" , saying: "This was an attack at European values which we cannot tolerate."

A Jewish community figure, Joel Rubinfeld, told AFP the shootings were clearly a terrorist act.

The area around the museum had been closed off with security strengthened across Belgium in places associated with the Jewish community, said the interior minister, Joele Milquet.

The museum shooting lasted several minutes and took place at about 4pm, with the victims apparently shot in the face and throat. The two Israelis were a couple from Tel Aviv in their 50s.

A bystander, Alain Sobotik, told AFP he saw the corpses of a young woman and a man just inside the doors of the museum. A picture shows them lying in pools of blood.

"The young woman had blood on her head. She was still holding a leaflet in her hand. She looked like a tourist," he said.

The Belgian foreign minister, Didier Reynders, saw the two corpses at the entrance and said the two other victims had been shot further inside the museum.

He said he had been strolling nearby when he saw people fleeing and heard shots and rushed to help. When he saw "bodies on the ground in pools of blood" he called the emergency number and rounded up eyewitnesses.

The Jewish Museum of Belgium is in the heart of the Sablon district, home to many antique dealers. The area is a popular weekend haunt for shoppers and tourists.

"A deeply symbolic place was struck," said Di Rupo. "The government expresses all its support to our country's Jewish community."

In 1982, a gunman opened fire at the entrance of a synagogue in Brussels, wounding four people, two seriously. The attack on Saturday took place two years after the killing of four Jews, including three children, in the French city of Toulouse.
“The most difficult subjects can be explained to the most slow-witted man if he has not formed any idea of them already; but the simplest thing cannot be made clear to the most intelligent man if he is firmly persuaded that he knows already, without a shadow of doubt, what is laid before him.”
― Leo Tolstoy,
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#13
Link to aangirfan's take (all the usual caveats apply):

http://aanirfan.blogspot.co.uk/2014/05/u...lings.html


Also, a new piece by Jon Rappoport dealing with the parallels between this event, Sandy Hook and the 2001 Isla Vista killings:

https://jonrappoport.wordpress.com/2014/...d-numbers/
“The most difficult subjects can be explained to the most slow-witted man if he has not formed any idea of them already; but the simplest thing cannot be made clear to the most intelligent man if he is firmly persuaded that he knows already, without a shadow of doubt, what is laid before him.”
― Leo Tolstoy,
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#14
Dawn Meredith Wrote:
Lauren Johnson Wrote:Any chance this is a deep event?
People are already saying this on facebook. Calling those killed actors. Makes me sick.
I think sadly this is one kid who flipped out. His family had a welfare check on him.
But he was able to convince police he was ok.
Dawn

Whatever subsequent research turns up, and these things take time, one aspect that is black is the appearance of those claiming the victims of the shooter are paid actors. What better way to discredit any conspiracy than to have people say stupid things in the name of conspiracy? And yes, I think there are people paid to post ridiculous crap.
"We'll know our disinformation campaign is complete when everything the American public believes is false." --William J. Casey, D.C.I

"We will lead every revolution against us." --Theodore Herzl
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#15
People are now arguing that this footage is green-screened:




I have no expertise in this subject so I am hesitant to comment further. Here is a professional clip by way of comparison:

“The most difficult subjects can be explained to the most slow-witted man if he has not formed any idea of them already; but the simplest thing cannot be made clear to the most intelligent man if he is firmly persuaded that he knows already, without a shadow of doubt, what is laid before him.”
― Leo Tolstoy,
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#16
Probably not green-screen - there's a minute shudder of both the picture and the audio track circa 35 seconds (along with a tell-tale internal audio mic rumble from wind) which is typical of setting a camera on a tripod outside and just letting it film. That said - if the footage was green-screen, it proves absolutely nothing whatsoever, other than that the subject or a friend of his knows how to green screen video footage. (Hint - subscribe to Adobe's Creative Cloud for $30, download After Effects, layer two video tracks, add a matte effect to one and use the second for a background). Pretty much anyone can do a green screen video effect and as the footage here is simply of a person talking outdoors I'm not sure what 'faking' this footage would suggest about anything else.

The thing that did strike me as odd without even watching the entire clip to completion was the seemingly oddly rehearsed tone of the young man's narration. For a person about to commit a massacre he seems pretty laid back and aloof. Perhaps I'm missing something from later in the video.

All that said I think the USA is possibly unique at the moment in that it seems able to maintain both (probably) CIA-sponsored 'false flag' shootings for whatever purposes, and - elsewhere - genuine lone-nut psycho gun massacres, and the root causes of each will continue to be ignored.
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#17
Anthony Thorne Wrote:The thing that did strike me as odd without even watching the entire clip to completion was the seemingly oddly rehearsed tone of the young man's narration. For a person about to commit a massacre he seems pretty laid back and aloof. Perhaps I'm missing something from later in the video.
He was well prepared. I'm quite sure he would have rehearsed this talk many times a day for weeks and month inside his mind. In his dreams and fantasies. Every waking moment. It was not a spontaneous act.

Anthony Thorne Wrote:All that said I think the USA is possibly unique at the moment in that it seems able to maintain both (probably) CIA-sponsored 'false flag' shootings for whatever purposes, and - elsewhere - genuine lone-nut psycho gun massacres, and the root causes of each will continue to be ignored.

Well said Anthony. The root causes will never be explored. To do so would be the bigger horror and they aren't going to go there.
"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
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#18
The aangirfan link offers two suggestive trails via education and relatives to spook/military connections, but equally nothing that really discredits the lone-nut hypothesis. The photos of Rodger as a very young boy are quite haunting.
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#19
Anthony Thorne Wrote:The aangirfan link offers two suggestive trails via education and relatives to spook/military connections, but equally nothing that really discredits the lone-nut hypothesis. The photos of Rodger as a very young boy are quite haunting.

I agree. And certainly no green screen either.
"We'll know our disinformation campaign is complete when everything the American public believes is false." --William J. Casey, D.C.I

"We will lead every revolution against us." --Theodore Herzl
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#20

#YesAllWomen: Rebecca Solnit on the Santa Barbara Massacre & Viral Response to Misogynist Violence




Santa Barbara is grieving after a 22-year-old man killed six college students just after posting a misogynistic video online vowing to take his revenge on women for sexually rejecting him. The massacre prompted an unprecedented reaction online with tens of thousands of women joining together to tell their stories of sexual violence, harassment and intimidation. By Sunday, the hashtag #YesAllWomen had gone viral. In speaking out, women were placing the shooting inside a broader context of misogynist violence that often goes ignored. In her new book, "Men Explain Things to Me," author and historian Rebecca Solnit tackles this issue and many others. "We have an abundance of rape and violence against women in this country and on this Earth, though it's almost never treated as a civil rights or human rights issue, or a crisis, or even a pattern," Solnit says. "Violence doesn't have a race, a class, a religion, or a nationality, but it does have a gender."


Transcript

This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.

AARON MATÉ: We turn now to the massacre in Santa Barbara, California, where a gunman killed six other people and wounded 13 others. Elliot Rodger, a 22-year-old college student, fatally stabbed three roommates at his apartment complex near the University of California, Santa Barbara. He then opened fire at a nearby sorority house, killing two women. Rodger continued his rampage with a drive-by shooting on scores of pedestrians, killing one. The attack ended when he crashed his vehicle, found dead at the wheel of what police called a self-inflicted gunshot wound. The rampage was part of a plot Rodger outlined in videos and a manifesto posted online hours before. He described his anger at being sexually rejected by female classmates. He spoke of launching a, quote, "war on women" for failing to see him as, quote, "the true alpha male."
ELLIOT RODGER: Girls have never been attracted to me. I don't know why you girls aren't attracted to me, but I will punish you all for it. It's an injustice, a crime, because I don't know what you don't see in me. I'm the perfect guy. I'll take great pleasure in slaughtering all of you. You will finally see that I am, in truth, the superior one, the true alpha male.
AMY GOODMAN: Elliot Rodger was armed with three semiautomatic handguns and multiple rounds of ammunition, all of which he had purchased legally. In an emotional statement the following day, Richard Martinez spoke out about the loss of his 20-year-old son Christopher, who was killed in the rampage. Martinez denounced the National Rifle Association and the politicians who stand in the way of gun control.
RICHARD MARTINEZ: Why did Chris die? Chris died because of craven, irresponsible politicians and the NRA. They talk about gun rights. What about Chris's right to live? When will this insanity stop? When will enough people say, "Stop this madness! We don't have to live like this"? Too many have died. We should say to ourselves, "Not one more!"
AARON MATÉ: The massacre also prompted an unprecedented reaction online with tens of thousands of women joining together to tell their stories of sexual violence, harassment and intimidation. By Sunday, the hashtag #YesAllWomen had been used over 500,000 times, the most on Twitter. In speaking out, women were placing the shooting inside a broader context of misogynist violence. While there's been intense scrutiny of the shooter's background and mental illness, there has been far less focus on a culture of violence in which nearly all mass shootings are carried out by men, and people like Elliot Rodger feel entitled to victimize the women who reject them.
AMY GOODMAN: In her new book, Men Explain Things to Me, the writer, historian, activist Rebecca Solnit tackles this issue and many others. She writes, quote, "We have an abundance of rape and violence against women in this country and on this Earth, though it's almost never treated as a civil rights or human rights issue, or a crisis, or even a pattern. Violence doesn't have a race, a class, a religion, or a nationality, but it does have a gender," she writes.
Rebecca Solnit joins us from the studios of San Francisco. A writer, historian and activist, she has written over a dozen books, including her latest, Men Explain Things to Me. She is also a contributing editor at Harper's Magazine.
Rebecca, your response to what happened in Santa Barbara over the weekend on Friday?
REBECCA SOLNIT: One of the things that was fascinating was the battle of the story. There was such a mainstream desire to say, "Oh, this was aberrant. Oh, he was mentally ill. This has nothing to do with us. This raises no big questions." And to see feminists and allies speak out and say, "No, this is about misogyny, this is about entitlement," was really extraordinary. The term "sexual entitlement," which I had heard before, but not widespread, suddenly began to be used everywhere. And it feels like it really changed the conversation, because so many people insisted on it, so many people got itthis sense that this guy was owed something by women and was furious at them for not giving it to him and that he had the right to exact revenge and all kinds of, you know, what our government calls "collateral damage" on the people around him because his needs weren't being met.
AARON MATÉ: What can we learn here about the broader culture that enables people like this to do what he did?
REBECCA SOLNIT: I absolutely agree with Richard Martinez that the availability of guns is a huge problem. I think it's part of a toxic brew in our culture right now that includes modeling masculinity and maleness as extremelyas violence, as domination, as entitlement, as control, and women as worthless, as disposable, as things men have the right to control, etc. And, you know, as well as one of the sad things is that he seemed to have incredibly conventional ideas about what constituted happiness and well-being and his entitlement to them. He seemed to have no resources, no models of alternative ways to meet your needs to be happy, to connect to human beings. So, all of that needs to be addressed, but particularly the violence against women, which is a huge epidemic in this country right now.
AMY GOODMAN: Journalist Laurie Penny wrote an article in the New Statesman headlined "Let's Call the Isla Vista Killings What They Were: Misogynist Extremism." In it, Penny writes, quote, "When news of the murders broke, when the digital world began to absorb and discuss its meaning, I had been about to email my editor to request a few days off, because the impact of some particularly horrendous rape threats had left me shaken, and I needed time to collect my thoughts. Instead of taking that time, I am writing this blog, and I am doing so in rage and in griefnot just for the victims of the Isla Vista massacre, but for what is being lost everywhere as the language and ideology of the new misogyny continues to be excused." Rebecca Solnit, I was wondering if you can comment on this and the fact that it's not just one video that Elliot Rodger had posted online. He posted numerous videos. And what was histhe indications of his hatred of women before this and why he had not been dealt with?
REBECCA SOLNIT: I think what's important is to look at the broader picture. He killed six people, but three women every day in the United States are killed by domestic partners, ex-husbands, ex-boyfriends, etc. You know, this is not an isolated event, but part of an epidemic. And you can look at other things he did earlier. In his 140-page sort of manifesto autobiography, he talks about trying to push women off a ledge at a party because they weren't paying attention to [him], throwing coffee on girls who didn't respond the way he wanted them to. And you can see these micro-aggressions, and just as you can see Laurie Penny being given rape and death threats, that there is a huge, broad network that we need to look at, and not just this guy, but the fact that, as the hastag says at #YesAllWomen, yes, all women face these kinds of things, not just the women who died and were shot in Isla Vista and the maleyou know, the men who got caught in the crossfire. So, you know, I think that we need to broaden the focus from this one guy, who's no longer alive, and his misery and rage, and to look at the broad picture of how well he fits into a culture of entitlement, how well he fits into a culture of rage, how well he fits into a culture that considers women tools and playthings and property. And then we need to start addressing that. Or maybe we just need to broaden and deepen the way that some of us have been addressing it for decades, including you, of course.
AARON MATÉ: And, Rebecca Solnit, in your book, Men Explain Things to Me, you talk about the 2012 gang rape and murder of a woman in New Delhi, and you talk about how that sort of spawned a Emmett Till moment, where India sort of had a reckoning with its rape culture. With the proliferation oflike, with the explosion of the #YesAllWomen hashtag and the response that you saw, are you seeing a similar moment here?
REBECCA SOLNIT: I think we are. I actually feel like, in early 2013, really worldwide, very strongly in India and the United States, we changed the way we talked about rape. You know, we won the battle of the story to stop treating rape as sort of isolated, aberrant incidents and treat it as a widespread problem that arises not from anomalies in the culture, but from the mainstream of the culture. And changing the language was part of that. The word "rape culture," or the words "rape culture," the phrase "rape culture," became very widespread last year and a really important tool in addressing the epidemic of rapes in the military, on campuses and all over the country and in a lot of parts of the world. I feel like the word this year, because we've made another kind of breakthrough in discussing it, is "sexual entitlement," so thatto discuss the broad problems that underlie this particular incident.
So, yeah, I feel like we really shook things up this weekend and that we won the battle of the story. There's half a million #YesAllWomen tweets. An addressing of theyou know, annoyance of "not all men" as this constant refrain, that changes the subject to the needs of male bystanders, got addressed. And a lot of very powerful womenLaurie Penny, Jennifer Pozner, Amanda Hess and so many more of the great feminist voices of our timewere there immediately to frame this story as a broad story, as a big story, as a story that's central to our culture, as a story that impacts all women, not just the women who were directly attacked in Isla Vista. And I think that's
AMY GOODMAN: Rebecca
REBECCA SOLNIT: that's remarkable. I feel like I saw a huge struggle this weekend and one in which we made enormous gains.
AMY GOODMAN: Rebecca, explain "yes all women," those words, that phrase.
REBECCA SOLNIT: There's this incredibly annoying phrase, "not all men," that comes up all the time. You know, you say three women a day are murdered by male partners, and so often some guy will say, "Not all men." An angry feminist said to me yesterday, you know, "What do they want? A cookie for not raping, beating and murdering?" And, you know, we know it's not all men, but we need to talk about the fact that it is all women. And that's what "yes all women" said, is, "Yeah, we know not all men are rapists and murderers, are not abusers and misogynists, but all women are impacted by the men who are." And that's where the focus needs to be, because it has such a huge impact.
Every woman, every day, when she leaves her house, starts to think about safety: Can I go here? Should I go out there? Do I need to take the main street? Do I need to be in by a certain hour? Do I need to find a taxi? Is the taxi driver going to rape me? You know, women are so hemmed in by fear of men, it profoundly limits our lives. And of course it's not all men, but it's enough that it impacts all women. And it's pretty nearly worldwide. The tweets were coming from all over the English-speaking world and parts of the world that aren't primarily English-speaking, to say that this problem impacts me, this problem impacts us, and we need to keep doing things about it. We need to escalate, and we need to address how deeply embedded it is. And we need to make visible what's been invisible, and we need to change it. And I think this weekend we really started to do that.
AMY GOODMAN: Rebecca, the title of your book, Men Explain Things to Me, explain it to us, and also the first story and how it relates to what we see this weekend in Santa Barbara.
REBECCA SOLNIT: Yeah, Men Explain Things to Me came about because all my life men would explain things to me that they didn't necessarily know better than I did, and sometimes I knew much better than they did, because there was this assumption that because of gender they were just inherently knowledgeable and superior and in control, and I was inherently ignorant and in need of an injection of their knowledge, wisdom, insight, etc.
The title storyor the story that inspired it came about in 2003. I was at a party when some guy said to me, "So, I hear you've written a few books." And I said, "Several, actually." I was at about eight books or seven books at that point. And he said, "And what are they about?" And the most recent one was about Eadweard Muybridge. It's the father of motion pictures. It's called River of Shadows: Eadweard Muybridge and the Technological Wild West. And he didn't comment on that. He said, "Oh, have you heard about the very important Muybridge that just came out?" And he started doing what feminists, immediately after this essay came out, coined or defined as mansplainingone of the great new words that's helped us discuss what's going on in the world. He started telling me about this very important book I should know about. And the woman I was with, my friend Sally, kept saying, "That's her book." And he literally didn't hear her until she had said it three or four times. So this man was telling me about this book I should know about, and it was a book I had written. And he was so full of himself, he literally couldn't hear me, couldn't hear her, didn't ask questions first.
And that was incredibly funny, but it's part of a slippery slope where men assume the right to talk over you, to not listen to you, to tell you how it's going to be, to explain reality. What surprised me when I wrote that essay is that I started out with a pretty amusing incident, although one that's indicative of sexism and a kind of conversational bullying, and I ended up talking about rapes and murders, the ways that women are literally silenced, deprived of their powers, etc. I think it's important that we look at all this stuff together. It begins with these micro-aggressions; it ends with rape and murder and what Italian feminists call "femicide."
AARON MATÉ: On our show recently, we featured the voices of college women who have been fighting back against sexual assault, both the incident and then the inabilityor the refusal of the schools to punish them. Your take on the way schools in this country have handled rape on campus?
REBECCA SOLNIT: It's been pretty damn pathetic in a whole lot of ways. One thing is that they tend to worry a lot more in many cases about the well-being of the perpetrators than the victims. Another thing is that they shifted responsibility for preventing rape from men not to rape to women to do all kinds of things to not get raped, which we don't do with any other crime. And, you knowand then they haven't pursued these things seriously. It's also kind of crazy. It's like, OK, if there's petty vandalism on campus, maybe that's a campus issue, but if there's a felony crime that involves, you know, a woman being strangled, a woman being brutalized, why is that not turned over to the legal system, which is there to deal with those things, the idea that it's an in-house incident? But whatyou know, it's been mishandled or overlooked, not handled at all, for decades, forever.
But what's amazing is, because these young women rose up, they said, "This is not acceptable. This is not a legitimate way to deal with it." Because they used social media, their voices, the mainstream media, they're organizing to say, "This has to stop. This has to change." They're really radically changing how it's being treated and exposing the universities
AMY GOODMAN: Five seconds, Rebecca.
REBECCA SOLNIT: which are universities from California to Rhode Island, from Florida to Alaska, and saying, "This is going to change." And they are changing it. This is a very exciting time in feminism. I think that we're shifting things profoundly.
"Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws. - Mayer Rothschild
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass
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