Thursday, November 16, 2017

On February 28, 1993, federal agents with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives attempted to raid a church in Waco, Texas over allegations of “weapons violations.”


Revising, modifying, segregating and unpranking the most ahistorical, contrived, racist and attention-seeking fakeries in the week’s fake news.
Not the deadliest, not by a long shot
In the wake of the massacre at the First Baptist Church of Sutherland Springs, Texas, we were told that the shooting that claimed 26 lives and left 20 more wounded was the deadliest church shooting in modern U.S. history.
The truth is, this horrific event is not the deadliest church shooting in Texas history, so the media is, once again, peddling fake news.
On February 28, 1993, federal agents with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives attempted to raid a church in Waco, Texas over allegations of “weapons violations.”
A gun battle erupted in which four feds and six church members died. After a standoff that lasted 51 days, federal agents shot incendiary devices into the compound which set it ablaze, killing 76 people, including women and children. So whether you count 81 dead over the course of the entire event or just the 76 people killed at the end of the siege, this is clearly far and away a “deadlier” shooting than the one at Sutherland Springs.
Of course, the feds initiated the raid to “save the children,” which is the usual excuse for the specious nonsense that often leads to liberty-stealing government laws and sometimes government murder and mayhem. The church was the Branch Davidian sect led by David Koresh. And the charge that Davidians were abusing children turned out to be propaganda.
Somehow, when the government kills people it’s not called murder. So the careless, if not intentional, murder of 81 people in the church of their choice by the government does not count on official statistics. But those people are dead all the same.

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