
From wired.com newstory on McVeigh:
Another juror said she thought the building that was bombed was the "Fred MacMurray Building." Fred MacMurray was an actor perhaps best known for his role as a father in the 1960s TV series "My Three Sons." And Capt. Buttons thought his A-10 could reach Denver because it was running on Flubber. I wonder if perhaps Capt. Buttons wasn't perhaps involved in an AP scheme wherein various military personnel can win big bucks by guessing the date of the bombing of the Federal Building in Denver. Oh, I forgot...he just headed for Denver with a planeload of bombs for no apparent reason. We wouldn't want to jump to any conclusions just because it was at the beginning of the trial of a military terrorist. It's not like the military harbors militaristic types, or anything. It's not like anyone hosting Jim Bell's "Assassination Politics" on their system has close ties to the Davis-Monathan airbase in Tucson. It's not like Dave Foreman of Earth First was involved in monkey- wrenching with airmen in Tucson. It's not like airmen from Tucson trade landmines for dope in Arivaca, south of Tucson. Nope, they're all too busy eating mom's apple pie and singing "God Bless America" to do any of those things. And when one of them goes off on a bombing run and heads for the site of the Oklahoma City bombing trial, well, it's just one of life's little mysteries. Of course, the government isn't nervous about the loyalty of their own military personnel. That certainly couldn't have anything to do with them clamping down so hard on the release of details of the trial. TruthBomber
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