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Well, at least not until they have cgi'd it.
This is a good exercise in people WANTING to believe what they are told without really examining or thinking beyond the magic trick. They prefer the 'security' of authority.
Ceffer says
Well, at least not until they have cgi'd it.
This is a good exercise in people WANTING to believe what they are told without really examining or thinking beyond the magic trick. They prefer the 'security' of authority.
That would be ultra subterfuge like at a MK Ultra level. Like some demonic version of a Mission Impossible operation.
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LOL! Everybody chooses their own comfort level and denial with their Overton Windows. I suppose it's better than cringing in a corner all day.

What if Ceffer himself is MKUltra psyop and has 10 doubles posting conspiracies?
Vance Boelter, the curiously wealthy but unemployed Congolese preacher and master of disguise, who’s charged with shooting two politicians and their spouses, claimed in a letter addressed to the FBI —to Kash Patel— that Governor Tim Walz (D-MN) asked him to assassinate Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-MN). The one-page-and-a-half letter was described as rambling and “difficult to read,” but Boelter claimed he had been secretly trained by the U.S. Military and was asked to perform the killing so that Walz could run for Klobuchar’s Senate seat.
Police say they found the handwritten letter in Boelter’s truck.
Naturally, Walz called the allegations “deeply disturbing” — but only in the “this is very sad” kind of way, not in the “I definitely didn’t do this” kind of way. Prosecutors said they’ve seen no evidence backing Boelter’s story, and that’s fair, since as far as we know, it only described a private conversation that just two people would’ve known about.
Despite Boelter’s explicit, written allegation that Governor Tim Walz ordered a political hit on a sitting U.S. Senator, the media coverage has been painfully incurious. No mainstream outlet appears to be investigating any contacts or overlap between Walz and Boelter; tracing campaign donations, email records, or social media interactions; asking whether Boelter ever worked for or contracted with any state agency; checking whether Boelter’s “military training” claim has any verifiable kernel; or demanding to see the actual letter to the FBI, or whether it was logged, scanned, or buried. ...
Next, the FBI’s unsealed affidavit (here it is) raised profound questions that corporate media is studiously avoiding. You can’t make this stuff up.
https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/x1trypvs1hxe6hcqyqcqn/Boelter-Dist.Minn._0-25-mj-00375-1_7_1.pdf?rlkey=j7mh8m1lwiem4ojdgmu1m6wqs&dl=0
First, Jennifer Boelter, who was briefly nabbed and then released, was found with cash, a safe (?), guns, a bug-out bag, and the couple’s four kids. She told the FBI that she and Boelter were preppers, and he’d told her to “prepare for war.”
Second, the affidavit stated, “Boelter’s wife further identified that Boelter has a business partner from Worthington, MN who resides in Washington state and is partners with Boelter in Red Lion, a security company and fishing outfit in Congo, Africa.”
Wait, what? First of all: what business partner? Who is this mysterious person? The affidavit doesn’t say. Next, what a weird coincidence— the Congo, an unaccountable endless war zone. And that curious little phrase — security and fishing outfit — deserves more attention.
Red Lion smells less like a legit business and more like a front. It’s the kind of off-the-books stuff that thrives in lawless mining zones and conflict-adjacent states. As mentioned above, Eastern Congo, rich in cobalt and chaos, has been a mercenary playground for decades.
And “fishing” is exactly the kind of innocent cover that makes customs paperwork easier.
But the third one was the bombshell. The affidavit said that, after the shootings, Boelter went to the bank and emptied his accounts. Then— "A third party identified as REDACTED then drove Boelter from the bank in an automobile."
It wasn’t some random Uber driver. It was someone Boelter knew —someone Boelter trusted right after two homicides— who helped him vanish during the largest manhunt in Minnesota history. There could be several reasons why the FBI redacted the driver’s name. They might be trying to flip him. He might be an asset they don’t want to burn. Or he might be a politically inconvenient link.
Whichever way— this is already a much bigger story than lone gunman strikes again. He’s far from alone. Just from the FBI affidavit, we have a wife with guns and cash walking free. We have a security partner with African ties who’s apparently vanished. And we have an unidentified driver helping a fugitive escape the scene of a domestic political assassination — and nobody in media is asking who the hell it was.
You’d think a masked man gunning down elected officials in their homes would be the biggest political violence story in a decade. You’d think the wife caught with guns, passports, and a bug-out bag full of cash would raise some flags. You’d think an unnamed driver helping a fugitive vanish from a bank would get, at minimum, a press inquiry or two. ...
From the moment Boelter was caught, corporate media slipped into damage control mode. The New York Times ran its sprawling profile that read more like a eulogy than a crime report: lots of gas station jobs, Bible school trivia, and vague “mental health struggles” — but no follow-up on the $10,000 in cash, no curiosity about the wife with weapons and passports, no mention of the vanished business partner, and no questions about the REDACTED driver who helped Boelter escape during the largest manhunt in state history.
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His wife was just busted with cash and passports!
https://t.co/zTacDhgQN8