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Boston: One dead, one captured, city re-opened

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Any chance this kid was "setup" by his older brother? Maybe he didnt know he was placing a bomb? Maybe he thought it was something else that wouldve made him some money?

The older brother basically giving his life to protect his brother seems like he thought the younger bro could get away. Unless the older brother is some religous crazy and thought he was doing the right thing for himself.

This kid just seems so out of place to be doing this based on all of his friends and acquaintances. At least with the okc bombing everyone thought he was crazy
 
Don't put words in my mouth, I never said call off the search. Don't be an idiot. My argument is focused on the media coverage. Go after the other in this thread talking about the rights to conduct door-by-door searches.

Hmm, let's see, speaking about his background, his past, his activities and all that shit is unnecessary to help end this manhunt. It's okay to show a picture, but they the fuck should anyone care about his background while hes still being searched? That to me in idolization, much like they do to celebrities.

I mean as I type this i hear wolf interviewing some random guy "Oh he has a sister? How is his sister?" Come on man. They are already writing a biography about this kid. Same shit they did to the Sandy Hook killer (I rather not repeat his name).
And how do you make the media not do that stuff when they have a Constituional right to do it?

Also, I'd like to point out that I've been respectful toward you in this discussion. Calling me an idiot is a guaranteed way to change that.
 
http://mobile.slate.com/bullpen/the..._worried_that_he_d_be_racially_profiled_.html

The Pakistani Doctor Who Worried That He'd Be Racially Profiled Reacts to the Tsarnaev Manhunt

Haider Javed Warraich is a resident at Boston's Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. When he arrived at work today, he learned about the fate of a patient who'd arrived, been treated for 15 minutes—even given an open-chest massage to stimulate his heart—and pronounced dead. The patient was Tamerlan Tsarnaev, "Suspect #1" in the bombing of the Boston Marathon. Technically speaking, he was "white."

That didn't really matter, but it was relevant in this way: Warraich had worried that the suspect would look like him. As he wrote in a widely shared New York Times column, he's a "20-something Pakistani male with dark stubble," a look that usually appears in movies when a terrorist or archvillain is called for. Tsarnaev didn't look like that, but would it matter?
"I was disappointed and angry because I don't know what the motivations of the killers were," says Warraich. "I was disappointed because they do belong to a Muslim majority—they came from a Chechen background.
And I just feel angry, because I want this guy to be caught. I'm sure the Chechen people are angry, because they aren't responsible for this, but everyone from a Muslim country is bound to be disappointed. His background and his motivations are extrapolated to other Muslims, other people from Muslim countries. It's been done in the past."

What would happen this time? "I don't know. My wife and I were hoping to have a baby this year. I don't know what the effect will be. If our parents wanted to visit us, could they? In the past, when something like this has happened, visa issuances, visa policy, become much more strict. That's very true when you're coming from Pakistan."
But Warraich is impressed by how calmly everyone at work is handling the crisis. "Not many hospitals do much prevention to help residents who were involved in taking care of this sort of thing," he says. "On Tuesday, instead of doing the regular conference we do every day, we had this hour when everyone talked about what their feelings were. This is not something that has happened before."
 
That isn't how rights work. If the police had a warrant that he was hiding in an apartment complex to search, that would make sense. Blindly searching whole blocks is another. Your rights exist for you so you can say no, not so you can only say yes.
If they chose to cooperate, then fine. No problem. Good for them.

The point is there are people who rave and preach about "american freedom" with a patriotic tear in their eye, while in reality it seems all it takes is to say "Patriot Act + hot pursuit" and the police can legally search a home. That's all it takes for just cause, and apparently they don't even need a search warrant. How easy this so-called freedom is nullified.

American freedom is a myth.
 
So the suspects hijacked an SUV, kidnapped its owner and then released him unharmed?

Wow.

If I remember the story correctly, they drove him around to various ATMs withdrawing money and he got away unharmed by convincing an employee somewhere to call police
 
lol CNN

According to our new source 15 officers were injured during the shootout last night.

... Right. What a load of horseshit.

FOX reported something similar hours ago -- I believe they said there are 15 injured police but that they were not necessarily related to last night's violence
 
If they chose to cooperate, then fine. No problem. Good for them.

The point is there are people who rave and preach about "american freedom" with a patriotic tear in their eye, while in reality it seems all it takes is to say "Patriot Act + hot pursuit" and the police can legally search a home. That's all it takes for just cause, and apparently they don't even need a search warrant. How easy this so-called freedom is nullified.

American freedom is a myth.

Alex Jones has a GAF account?
 
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