I'm going to say the government tends to ride the political winds. I.E. right now, many agencies are anti-gun due to the political climate and DNC leadership.
Problem is they can't get the necessary legislation through Congress. But don't kid yourself, if the State Department has rules about gun ownership as well as regulations about gun dealers, you could say the problem is widespread.
It's Muldrow Oklahoma. Population 3,000.
I'm not surprised.
But the police chiefs name is on the paper along with his number counselor.
You mean someone took their letterhead and put that on it, then copied it?
Look, it may be legit, but I find it difficult to believe that there would be nothing about this on any website linked to that agency, or otherwise, if there were two people out there being sought because they were planning a terrorist attack.
I just find that odd.
I never said there isn't a problem, and I'm glad these folks are being monitored.
But your copy of the flyer came from somewhere. I suspect a pretty militant anti-Muslim source. And I find it strange that an agency would identify two people as having converted to Islam, then say they have made threats to create national news with some sort of act, to be on the lookout for them and call police if you see them ....
and there is nothing out there on it, at least that I can find.
It came from the PD.
A young marine (19) recently died and was laid to rest last week in Muldrow Oklahoma. He was active duty and was in the Middle East.
I haven't heard back from yet I started to stop and ask the Arkansas state police, but I didn't want to get in to trouble.
He's saying that individuals that work within those agencies are exactly that: individuals, with opinions on things, just like anyone else, and not walking brainwashed government ideological platforms like in the old Soviet Union.
A suicide bomber was killed in Paris today while shouting "alah Akbar". Media kept running with "his suicide belt was fake". Saw it on dozens of headlines. Turns out his belt was real.