For those who actually read you'd have noticed that I was talking about the first explosion.
That's the source of the photo's, you know, the ones showing rather strange behaviour from the victim's, the guy pausing to put on his shades and adopt a relaxed sprawl in the middle of a bomb site.
The guy with his legs off but no blood. Who recieved no triage, check the pic's, he was left, until wheeled away in a wheelchair (?) with a tourniquet that wasn't tightened.
But thats fine, and I'm really happy that you Americans have finally had a bombing that wasn't carried out by the FBI.
http://www.globalresearch.ca/t ... o-terror-suspects/5331517
It must have been getting embarassing, have a 12 year 'War on Terror
tm' and the only people who attack on American soil are your own security forces.
At least now you can feel like you've got a 'real' 'War on Terror
tm'
Quick, bring in laws banning pressure cookers !
Invade Czechoslovakia !
Bring in military checkpoints everywhere.
"WAR IS PEACE, FREEDOM IS SLAVERY, IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH."
"She had not a thought in her head that was not a slogan, and there was no imbecility, absolutely none, that she was not capable of swallowing if the Party handed it out to her." Part 1, Chapter 6, pg. 67
And if you want a job in the area of Disaster acting :
John Pickup: We came out of the film and TV industry portraying injured soldiers in productions such Saving Private Ryan and Band of Brothers.
Some fellow actors [and I] quickly realised that there was a niche market for amputees outside of the major agencies, so we could specialise.We set up the company in 2004 primarily to provide a one-stop shop for the industry. In 2005 we got invited to work with the military playing roles in training exercises.
With the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the crews needed help to do the training [and] it’s grown from there. We’ve now got nearly 300 actors on our books, plus, SFX (special effects) personnel for the role-playing side.
We work quite a lot with the military, taking part in about five different exercises a year, with some of them spanning a ten-week period, which is quite a big timeframe.
“We’ve also been working hard on the corporate sector, such as dangerous places like oil rigs that need emergency training.”
As not all our actors are ex-military, we have to train them in military protocols and maintain secrecy; we’ve got about 80 guys trained up at the moment and we’re in the process of more training.
BB: What special effects do you provide?
JP: What we do in the role-playing industry is slightly different to what they do in the film and TV industry. The medics will have to interact with the fake amputated limb. The mechanisms of the injury are different from how it works on film and the make-up looks completely different.
There are also more time constraints during an exercise than on a film set. Though it’s very realistic, we don’t make it so horrific the medics run away; we give them training as close to the real thing as possible to help them save lives.
http://www.zengardner.com/ampu ... shock-effect-in-military/