I was discussing the phony war on terror (on its face, since you can’t have a war against a tactic) with a friend yesterday, and the topic of the alleged May 2, 2011 killing of Osama bin Laden came up.
First, they said they had a DNA match in under 24 hours, despite that being technologically impossible; only to say that what they really meant was that they had preliminary results. Then, it came out that in producing a “match,” they didn’t actually have bin Laden’s DNA, but had used the DNA of some of his close relatives.
Here’s some DNA testing I’d like to see — where are the DNA test results of his kidneys, since there is evidence that he had kidney problemsĀ back in 2001, as explained by CNN’s Sanjay Gupta.
They found porn in the complex, but no kidney dialysis equipment.
If he was suffering severe kidney function in 2001, then he either had a miraculous recovery, or he had a kidney transplant.
In order to prove that the man they said was bin Laden actually was bin Laden, all they had to do was DNA test his kidneys and show that at least one of them weren’t his.
But even with a kidney transplant, you need anti-rejection drugs, yet no such drugs were reportedly found in the compound.
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Yesterday, I wrote an article claiming that burying Osama bin Laden’s body out at sea was a really bad idea so soon after his death without first showing it to the media as proof of his death. This even if it kept in line with Islamic laws or practices of having to bury a body out at sea within 24 hours which in fact would have given the United States ample time to show the body to the media before disposing of it in the manner which they eventually did.