Sunday, February 10, 2013

Dorner had training with planes?

Private airplanes for rent and/or charter. La Palma is where he called home. Lessons or known rentals or something. At the very least the airplane community needs to be aware. Armed and dangerous. Shoot and ask questions later if they have positive identification. His picture is fairly unique. He isn't going to lose body weight any time soon. Not that fast. Someone might be able to ID him and pass on some of his habits.

Beef up small airport security with real police with real weapons.

I have a suspicion why he planted the weapons in the dumpster by the police station. It seems to me he was seeking to open up the idea others could be suspected. Is there someone in that police station he held a grudge against or had some kind of affiliation with even it was dysfunctional. Is there someone that might actually have a shadow over him/her if his guilt fell into doubt? Basically, he is trying to frame someone.

FBI List and a price on his head is a good idea. He is just to adept.

It takes awhile to find them sometimes. Remember that wacko who was shooting people from inside a car trunk? They got him eventually.

I wish I understood what goes on with some of these military guys. When they lose their parameters, they lose it big. He still should come in and surrender. He was just discharged from the Reserves on February 1st, right?

Martyrs don't kill! They talk to the press, they get their story out, but, they don't kill.


Words by: Noemi Torres
...The reality is that he got fired (click here) and used the law and the system to try to make things right. He wasn’t able to do so in spite of his many attempts. His frustration was withheld for a long time and he began planning. He is now a martyr in my eyes, a hero. He has decided to give up his life to protect others.
He has sacrificed himself to bring corruption to light. He figured he had nothing to lose for such a greater cause. His goal is to stop the racism, the police brutality and all the other injustices, which he witnessed, and the rest of us witness everyday, yet choose to do nothing. Christopher Jordan Dorner is doing something! I don’t agree that killing is the best recourse, but sometimes a point has to be made in such a dramatic way so that one is heard by the masses....

He had credentials. He had impressive credentials. No one wanted to hear his story? No one was willing to stand up for him? I find that hard to believe. He had options. A former LA Police officer, former military and there are tons of programs now for former military returning home. He didn't have to take this route.

LA has problems and the country knows that, but, adding to the problems is not going to accomplish anything. He killed an innocent girl. She never did anything wrong. She had no power in the situation, except, to be a victim. That is no hero I understand.

Innocent people (collateral damage) happen as a consequence in pursuit for a greater cause.

Absolutely not. That entire mind set about allowing innocent people to pay the price of perceived injustice empowers the drug economy in the USA. It treats crime as a virtue. It is just wrong. No matter how jaded a person might become because they believe they are 'up against the machine' there is no reason for this to result. It is just wrong and there is no reward for accumulating collateral damage as a means to settle anger.

This is the United States of America, this is the age of digital crowds. What proof did he have to back his claims? That would be not taken seriously these days? That is nonsense.

Violence solves nothing and only causes more violence. The accumulation of spilled blood only increases the cost of stopping the violence. Gangs are wrong. They accomplish nothing worthwhile. If the average gang member reaches the age of 35 years old, it is considered old. There is no quality of life there. Why would anyone promote it or follow that path?