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Thursday, April 25, 2013

Toy Car Remotes Next On The Banned List?

We are sure that Maxine Waters and those other wackos in the US Senate are quickly preparing legislation to ban pressure cookers, fireworks AND toy car remotes. Hey, if we didn't have these four people would still be alive and over 200 would not have been hurt in Boston! Right? Wrong!  

Unfortunately for other humans, those dissatisfied with their lives will always find a way to hurt others. One can ban everything under the sun and there always will be someone so devilish that they will create an instrument to do harm. It is part of human dis-nature.

Legislation cannot prevent it. Wishing it would not be will not prevent it. Laws will not stop human nature. It is time government realizes that it is not all powerful and must accept that certain things are out of their control.

Conservative Tom

Boston Bombs Were Detonated by Remote Used for Toy Cars

Wednesday, 24 Apr 2013 09:30 PM





 

The two bombs that exploded at the Boston Marathon, killing three people and wounding 264, were detonated with the kind of remote device used to control a toy car, investigators told a House panel on Wednesday.“It was a remote control for toy cars,” U.S. Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, told reporters after officials from the Department of Homeland Security, FBI, and National Center for Counterterrorism briefed the committee.
“Which says to me, and brother No. 2 has said, they got the information on how to build the bomb from Inspire magazine,” Ruppersberger added.
Inspire was created by the American-Yemeni preacher Anwar al-Awlaki, a leader of al-Qaida's affiliate in Yemen who was killed in a U.S. drone strike.
Ruppersberger said the article on bomb-building in Inspire was headlined: “How to build a bomb in your mom’s kitchen.”
Authorities say two brothers, Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, planted and detonated two pressure-cooker bombs near the finish line of the Boston Marathon on April 15.
Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26, was killed in a shootout with police. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, 19, lies wounded in a Boston hospital and has been providing some information to authorities.
Ruppersberger also confirmed that at least some of the explosives used in the attack had come from a fireworks shop in New Hampshire.
“One of the brothers, the oldest brother, went to a shop in New Hampshire ... and asked for the most volatile explosives, so that you’d ‘get the best bang,’” Ruppersberger said.

© 2013 Thomson/Reuters. All rights reserved.


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