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Uvalde, Texas Shooting: Conspiracy or Chaos?

Uvalde, Texas Shooting: Conspiracy or Chaos?

(Chaz Anon) It is human nature to try and understand why something tragic happens. If you’re like me, your brain will begin by questioning the anomalies in the official narrative. Why would the gunman, Salvador Ramos, want to commit such a horrific massacre of 19 children and two teachers at Robb Elementary in Uvalde, Texas?

What’s his motive?

The mother of the shooter is asking the public not to “judge” him because he “had his reasons.”

Rumor is Adriana Reyes, the mother, reportedly struggles with drug addiction. Her issues led to the 18-year-old killer to move in with his first known victim, his grandmother, who he shot in the face before going to the elementary school.

Reyes said “to get closer to those children instead of paying attention to the other bad things, I have no words. I don’t know.”

In an interview with ABC News, Reyes claimed she didn’t know about his gun purchase and said that her son “kept to himself and didn’t have many friends.”

“My son wasn’t a violent person. I’m surprised by what he did,” Reyes said. “I pray for those families. I’m praying for all of those innocent children, yes I am. They [the children] had no part in this.”

The Daily Mail reports – While the mother maintains that Ramos was not violent, other friends and relatives have reported that Ramos had begun to violently lash out toward friends, strangers, and his mother. It is also reported that Ramos was bullied in school for a speech impediment including a lisp and stutter.

Stephen Garcia, Ramos’ alleged best friend in eighth grade, told The Washington Post that he was often the target of bullying in school. “He would get bullied hard like bullied by a lot of people,” Garcia said. “Over social media, over gaming, everything.”

“He was the nicest kid, the most shyest kid,” continued Garcia. “He just needed to break out of his shell.”

But Ivan Arellano, whose good friend’s sister was killed by Ramos told WFAA-TV in Dallas said the opposite about Ramos, that he “was not a good person” and had been a bully himself.

“I would like to get that out of the way,” he said, adding, “He was not bullied!”

“He would try to pick on people but fail, and it would aggravate him,” the high school senior said.

“He would hurt animals—and he was not a good person.”

According to locals, Salvador Ramos frequently threatened to rape and kill teen girls, and had a history of aggressive behavior and disturbing social-media posts.

"I witnessed him harass girls and threaten them with sexual assault, like rape and kidnapping," one 16-year-old told the Washington Post, adding that Ramos had been posting on social networking app, Yubo.

"It was not like a single occurrence. It was frequent."

All but one of the girls Ramos threatened reported him in the months leading up to last week's elementary school shooting, which left 19 children dead. Other girls dismissed Ramos' disturbing behavior, chalking it up to just "how online is."

On Yubo, people can gather in big real-time chatrooms, known as panels, to talk, type messages and share videos — the digital equivalent of a real-world hangout. Ramos, they said, struck up side conversations with them and followed them onto other platforms, including Instagram, where he could send direct messages whenever he wanted.

But over time they saw a darker side, as he posted images of dead cats, texted them strange messages and joked about sexual assault, they said. In a video from a live Yubo chatroom that listeners had recorded and was reviewed by The Post, Ramos could be heard saying, “Everyone in this world deserves to get raped.” -WaPo

Ten days before the shooting, he wrote "10 more days," according to a Texas official. Another person replied: "Are you going to shoot up a school or something?" to which Ramos replied: "No, stop asking dumb questions. You’ll see."

In one Instagram exchange, Ramos - who went by the username "TheBiggestOpp," sent a girl a picture of a gun.

"He gave me such an odd vibe," 17-year-old Crystal Foutz, an Uvalde High School junior, told the Wall Street Journal, adding "He always seemed scary."

Ramos posted pictures on Instagram of him cutting himself, with blood in a sink, Ms. Vasquez said. Earlier this year, she said, he showed up to school one day with a mask on, and when he took it off, his face had scars and scratches that he said he had inflicted on himself.

A screenshot of an Instagram story on an account linked to him, which since has been taken down, showed an ammunition magazine. A TikTok account with the same handle, “@salv8dor_,” which also has been removed, showed a photo of two rifles. The account included in its description the line, “Kids be scared.” -WSJ

Ramos' mother, Adriana Reyes, said last week that the 18-year-old "was not a monster," but could become "aggressive."

"Sometimes I had an uncomfortable feeling, like ‘what are you doing?’," she told ABC, adding "He could become aggressive if he got really angry. (…). We all have rabies, but some people have more than others."

How was he able to commit this tragedy?

Now, with more and more information leaking from locals, we are left wondering why law enforcement was so negligent, standing down for what felt like an eternity to those parents, until ‘bigger guns’ from the boarder patrol arrived.

The official story is that Ramos entered the school from an unlocked door, he charged into a classroom and began to open fire. According to Lt. Christopher Olivarez of the Department of Public Safety, he "barricaded himself by locking the door and just started shooting children and teachers that were inside that classroom."

According to Department of Public Safety Director Steve McCraw, it took between 40 minutes and 1 hour from when Ramos began opening fire to when the CBP agent, backed by his tactical team, shot him.

It is alleged that one brave mother drove 40 minutes from work, was handcuffed for trying to enter, talked police into freeing her, breached the perimeter, and went in and got her children out of the building.

It now being reported that several cops may have entered the school to save their own children while the shooting was unfolding and the parents were being held back.

When questioned about the response by CNN’s Wolf Blitzer, Texas Department of Public Safety Lt. Chris Olivarez said that police were reluctant to engage the killer because they “could have been shot.”

Instead, they attempted to keep him in one room. Inside that room, a little girl was bleeding out and would later die at the hospital.

“Don’t current best practices, don’t they call for officers to disable a shooter as quickly as possible, regardless of how many officers are actually on site?” Blitzer asked Olivarez.

he official explained that though the police were in the building quickly, they heard gunfire and decided to wait for a tactical team to arrive while isolating the killer to that class — almost like those children were sacrificial lambs.

“The active shooter situation, you want to stop the killing, you want to preserve life, but also one thing that – of course, the American people need to understand — that officers are making entry into this building. They do not know where the gunman is. They are hearing gunshots. They are receiving gunshots,” the DPS official said.

“At that point, if they proceeded any further not knowing where the suspect was at, they could’ve been shot, they could’ve been killed, and that gunman would have had an opportunity to kill other people inside that school,” Olivarez continued.

Did Ramos have Handlers?

Former New York Police Commissioner Bernie Kerik has hinted that the ‘Deep State’ may have played a role in Tuesday’s Texas school shooting.

“Based on what we’re hearing … there were some major problems…. The question is what was the initial response, what was the SWAT team response… why was this guy in there for almost an hour before anybody engaged him. The other question is why was this school open? How does somebody walk into a school like this?” Kerik told host Steve Bannon in an interview.

Texas Representative Tony Gonzales, whose congressional district includes Uvalde, told Fox News that he found out on Thursday night that “the shooter was arrested years ago—four years ago—for having this plan for basically saying, for saying, you know, when I’m a senior in 2022, I am going to shoot up a school.”

Authorities say Ramos legally purchased two assault rifles and scores of ammo last week for his 18th birthday.

How did an 18-year-old man, with no known employment, who was living with his grandmother because of an addicted mother, afford:

  • Two expensive firearms made by Daniel Defense ($2,000 each)

  • an EOTech optic ($400-$700)

  • 1,657 rounds of .223 ammo ($800-1000 depending on how they were purchased)

  • body armor ($500-1000)

  • and over 60 magazines ($10-20 each)

That’s somewhere between $6300 to $8,000.

The important questions to ask ourselves:

Why did a *teacher* prop open a secure entry exactly one minute before the shooter arrived on scene?

  1. Why did that teacher not close the door and ensure it was locked when they reportedly saw the accident, the shots fired, retrieved their phone, and called 911 to report it?

  2. Col. McGraw said the teacher “apparently” called 911…has DPS confirmed the teacher called 911? Have they confirmed it was a teacher who propped open the door?

  3. Why did the timeline shrink by seven minutes from yesterday to today when yesterday’s press conference was given based on video evidence as stated by Escalon in the presser? It was not as if Escalon responded to a question, off the cuff, with the times. It was part of his deliberate and detailed statement to the press. Are you telling me something as important as time, which he reiterates the time twice, was inaccurate on the video? Or did he just make up “11:40” when he was writing the press conference without bothering to confirm the time?

  4. Where was the school’s police officer and why was he not on school property? Where was he that he was able to respond in under three minutes time but unable to find the wrecked truck and correlate the closest entry to the school to the wreck? How did he not hear the gun shots going off in his immediate vicinity when he, or other officers, were reportedly at the funeral home?

  5. Why were seven officers not able to breach a room with two doors and windows to eliminate the suspect?

  6. Why could they STILL not breach the room with 19 officers?

  7. Why did it take a BORTAC unit and ballistic shields to breach the room?

  8. Why was BORTAC even there? A federal law enforcement agency tasked with border protection is somehow on scene in a school shooting?

  9. Why were US Marshalls out front of the school in adequate PPE (personal protective equipment) holding back parents and waving tasers at them, but not helping with the situation inside the school?

  10. Col. McGraw reported that BORTAC used keys from the janitor to “breach” the room. Let’s be real: it’s simply called unlocking…breaching is defined as “to make a gap in by battering” according to Merriam Webster Save the “heroic” sounding words for the investigations. But I digress: If BORTAC was able to “breach” with the keys after an hour outside the room, would Ramos have been able to “breach” the classroom if the doors were locked? Were they locked and if not, why?

So to summarize the shooting, basically the cops provided security for the mass shooter and then went in and killed him when his job was done.

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