Je ne suis pas Pam Geller
So if a RWNJ sets up a deer stand surrounded by 40 off-duty cops (police presence coming close in numbers to event attendees) and attracts gun-carrying wannabee Euro-blasphemy extremists - something's bound to happen.
The question of course is no different than any kind of provocation imitating European events in terms of media speech rights, but is clearly a manufactured violent extremist act in terms of actually sewing the flags for false flags, making the RWNJs complicit and rendering so-called stochastic terrorist acts not actually stochastic. Much like calling out the Texas State Guard to keep an eye on DHS maneuvers this Summer, causality and framing get pwned. Why bother getting wildlife hunting permits in a time of RW rutting, everyone's just conducting stochastic sting operations that should be left to professional leos rather than amateurs thinking that entrapment isn't a thing.
A real extremist punishment is having to look at the 200 entries, of which nearly a third may have been submitted by a middle school art class, if they even can afford those anymore, although a couple of "professional" cartoonists with actual drawing skills and three-digit IQs did some competitive works that were actually not derivative, unlike the "winner". One wonders whether he will actually get the $10000 or like the lottery, an annuity from AFDI.
Police in Texas were still checking a car for possible explosives early Monday and authorities reportedly were searching the Phoenix home of the two suspects who were killed in an attack on an art exhibit that inflamed radical Muslims.
The City of Garland, Texas said in a statement posted on its Facebook page that the men drove up to the Curtis Culwell Center on Sunday night and began shooting at a security officer. Garland Police Department officers returned fire, killing both gunmen, the statement said.
The statement did not say whether the shooting was related to the event, a contest hosted by the New York-based American Freedom Defense Initiative (AFDI) that would award $10,000 for the best cartoon depicting the Prophet Muhammad.
One of the suspects was known to U.S. intelligence and had been part of a recent terror investigation for allegedly trying to travel to Africa, home of the Al Qaeda-linked militant group al-Shabab, sources told Fox News...
The bodies of the gunmen – who have not been identified -- still lay where they fell early Monday because they were too close to the car to be removed before the scene was clear, according to Officer Joe Harn, a spokesman for the Garland Police Department...
The event featured speeches by Pamela Geller, president of the AFDI, and Geert Wilders, a Dutch lawmaker known for his outspoken criticism of Islam. Wilders received several standing ovations as he quoted former President Ronald Reagan and Texas founding father Sam Houston.
"Muhammad fought and terrorized people with the swords. Today, here in Garland, we fight Muhammad and his followers with the pen. And the pen, the drawings, will prove mightier than the sword," Wilders said during his speech.
Geller said during the event that her group had spent thousands of dollars on private security guards, several of whom could be seen standing on stage. Wilders left immediately after his speech, and Geller was not seen by an Associated Press reporter inside the hall after the shooting.
After the shooting, about 75 attendees were escorted by authorities to another room in the conference center. A woman held up an American flag, and the crowd sang "God Bless America."
The account had posted a number of tweets supporting Islamic extremism, including Isis. Its profile picture shows Yemeni-American al-Qaida recruiter Anwar al-Awlaki, who in 2011 became the first US national killed by a drone strike.
Other tweets grabbed before the account was closed down suggested the individual behind the account was a newly converted Muslim, as it included statements such as “I don’t know Arabic” and “my fam didn’t trip when I became a Muslim”.
The name Amirul Mu’mineen, the leader to whom the individual behind the tweet pledges allegiance, is an Arabic title taken by Muslim rulers. These days it is attributed to both Isis leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and Mullah Omar, the head of the Afghan Taliban.
tweet prior to attack
Pamela Geller said the group was charged roughly $10,000 for security when it booked the school district’s arena as the site of the May 3 “Muhammed Art Exhibit and Contest.”
The money will pay for 40 extra officers at the site. Garland ISD includes security costs in all contracts that involve the Culwell Center arena.
“That’s the first time in any of our events across America,” Geller said. “We had a Ground Zero mosque protest that drew over 35,000 people. Police presence was intense and we didn’t pay a dime. I’ve never seen anything like that where you have to pay for police. … That’s what we call the high cost of freedom.”
The 200 submissions to the contest
The Winner