Friday, March 27, 2015

The Germanwings Flight 9525 Smoking Gun?

by JASmius



This would certainly shed light on Tuesday's deliberate crash of the Airbus jetliner in the Alps, slaying all one hundred fifty passengers and crew:

All evidence indicates that the copilot of [the] Airbus machine in his six-months break during his training as a pilot in Germanwings, converted to Islam and subsequently either by the order of “radical” (i.e. devout) Muslims, or received the order from the book of terror, the Qu'ran, on his own accord decided to carry out this mass murder. As a radical mosque in Bremen is in the center of the investigation, in which the convert was staying often, it can be assumed that he – as Mohammed Atta, in the attack against New York – received his instructions directly from the immediate vicinity of the mosque.

Converts are the most important weapon of Islam because their resume do not suggest that they often are particularly violent Muslims. Thus Germany now has its own 9/11, but in a reduced form. And so it is clear that Islam is a terrorist organization that should, in accordance with §129a of the Criminal Code, be prohibited and its followers investigated. But nothing will happen. One can bet that the apologists (media, politicos, “Islamic Scholars”) will agree to assign this an act of a “mentally unstable” man, and you can bet that now, once again, the mantra of how supposedly "peaceful" Islam is will continue. And worse still, the attacks by the Left against those who have always warned against Islam, will be angrier and merciless. [emphases added]

Interesting, no?  Which may help explain why we haven't seen this anywhere in the establishment media, yes?

Oh, the "mental instability" angle has been played up, to be sure.  But there is this little detail:

[S]ources familiar with the investigation sa[id] that Lubitz suffered from a “personal life crisis,” following a recent breakup with a girlfriend.

German reporters found Lubitz’s former classmates, who said he took a six-month break from training due to “burnout-syndrome” or “depression,” Der Spiegel’s Matthias Gebauer wrote on Twitter. [emphasis added]

Episodes of "burnout syndrome" and "depression" following watershed life events like the loss of a loved one through either death or estrangement are fertile ground for dramatic life turns and decisions, are they not?  If Mr. Lubitz was sufficiently distraught over his girlfriend leaving him, he might, given that he was already a pilot, have become a prime jihadist recruitment target.

And then there's this (since pulled) Facebook page:



Kinda hard to explain this one away.

But I've no doubt the First Unarmored Dhimmi Brigade will find a way.

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