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Clydach murders new book coming out. on 11:29 - Nov 25 by Flashberryjack
I bet most of them also think the CIA brought down the twin towers as well, people love a good conspiracy that's for sure.
Ahhhhhhhhh the Twin Towers collapse? According to many that could only happen by means of (what would be required) a demolition team encompassing hundreds of operatives (that thousands of 9-11 employees somehow failed to even notice!) in the biggest take-down in history.
Or an alternative according to some other loons? A top secret powder called Thermite.
Here’s my take! The extreme temperatures from (God that’s a lot!) 50,000 thousands of gallons of aviation fuel caused a fire, that weakened the steelwork, that caused a downward (bowing of trusses initially) collapse of structural weight causing a devastating unstoppable force of gravity.
A domino effect for each and every descending floor, whereupon tens upon tens of thousands of tons of the building fell with huge downward force……..That huge downward force sheared tens upon tens of thousands of bolts from top to bottom on each and every floor..... The very bolts that actually held the entire building together and kept it upright. 0.8 seconds sort of says something? Unsexy explanation that!
Argus!
-1
Clydach murders new book coming out. on 12:19 - Nov 25 with 6509 views
Clydach murders new book coming out. on 11:48 - Nov 25 by Wingstandwood
Ahhhhhhhhh the Twin Towers collapse? According to many that could only happen by means of (what would be required) a demolition team encompassing hundreds of operatives (that thousands of 9-11 employees somehow failed to even notice!) in the biggest take-down in history.
Or an alternative according to some other loons? A top secret powder called Thermite.
Here’s my take! The extreme temperatures from (God that’s a lot!) 50,000 thousands of gallons of aviation fuel caused a fire, that weakened the steelwork, that caused a downward (bowing of trusses initially) collapse of structural weight causing a devastating unstoppable force of gravity.
A domino effect for each and every descending floor, whereupon tens upon tens of thousands of tons of the building fell with huge downward force……..That huge downward force sheared tens upon tens of thousands of bolts from top to bottom on each and every floor..... The very bolts that actually held the entire building together and kept it upright. 0.8 seconds sort of says something? Unsexy explanation that!
What weakened the steelwork on the third building that didn't have 50000 gallons of aviation fuel to weaken it?
The creatures outside looked from pig to man, and from man to pig, and from pig to man again; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
Clydach murders new book coming out. on 12:19 - Nov 25 by Highjack
What weakened the steelwork on the third building that didn't have 50000 gallons of aviation fuel to weaken it?
Is that the other building that was (when has that ever happened?) left unattended to burn for many hours?.... That never saw intervention from a firemans hose? That fires heat (like Twin Towers) caused the steel to weaken, buckle, holding plate holes to expand, for external mebrane and steel to collapse? Is that the one you're on about? That little minow of a building (by comparrison) would not have required aviation fuel.
Never Mind The Bollocks, Here's My Common Sense!
[Post edited 25 Nov 2017 12:30]
Argus!
0
Clydach murders new book coming out. on 12:31 - Nov 25 with 6486 views
Clydach murders new book coming out. on 21:43 - Nov 25 by jack_lord
Jarv, now I am back in this neck of the woods, I would say there is a divide. The ones I know more are absolutely convinced Morris is guilty.
None of the people I know who ever had dealings with Morris have any doubt that he's capable of it.
Pain or damage don't end the world. Or despair, or f*cking beatings. The world ends when you're dead. Until then, you got more punishment in store. Stand it like a man... and give some back.
2
Clydach murders new book coming out. on 09:21 - Nov 26 with 6151 views
Clydach murders new book coming out. on 09:21 - Nov 26 by exiledclaseboy
There’s a huge divide between him being capable of it and him actually doing it.
No shit.
Pain or damage don't end the world. Or despair, or f*cking beatings. The world ends when you're dead. Until then, you got more punishment in store. Stand it like a man... and give some back.
-1
Clydach murders new book coming out. on 13:50 - Nov 26 with 6049 views
Clydach murders new book coming out. on 12:19 - Jan 3 by Neath_Jack
Alison Lewis was/is a martial arts expert, specialising in using those stick things (technical i know).
RE-cut and paste
I’ve worked on a (of type you plug into a wall) portable blacksmiths forge, two others on here, on this forum have also, my claims can indeed be proven.
I can hit and have hit by means of downward overhead motion the impact area of a blacksmiths flatter with a long handled sledge, it takes no unique, special skill. Many if not most on here could do it no problem IMO.
I only tended to miss when fatigue kicked in after prolonged effort. That impact area of a flatter is vastly smaller than human anatomical parts e.g. head. I can also wield a similar (to murder pole) sized four foot wrecking bar with accuracy also. And if in confined space? Thats all I need to do is? I adjust my grip (hands placed higher up) to compensate. Seriously its not rocket science, I and others on here will know exactly what I'm taking about! No lies!
The cluster injuries were unremarkable because one victim was in bed, one cowering on the floor and the others only needed one or two blows for them to be incapacitated to present easy targets. You see victims static/semi-static, unconscious, semi-conscious, in a state of shock, in a coma, or already dead present cluster-injury inevitabilty i.e. absolutely impossible to miss.
Argus!
0
Clydach murders new book coming out. on 12:50 - Jan 3 with 5584 views
Clydach murders new book coming out. on 12:41 - Jan 3 by Wingstandwood
RE-cut and paste
I’ve worked on a (of type you plug into a wall) portable blacksmiths forge, two others on here, on this forum have also, my claims can indeed be proven.
I can hit and have hit by means of downward overhead motion the impact area of a blacksmiths flatter with a long handled sledge, it takes no unique, special skill. Many if not most on here could do it no problem IMO.
I only tended to miss when fatigue kicked in after prolonged effort. That impact area of a flatter is vastly smaller than human anatomical parts e.g. head. I can also wield a similar (to murder pole) sized four foot wrecking bar with accuracy also. And if in confined space? Thats all I need to do is? I adjust my grip (hands placed higher up) to compensate. Seriously its not rocket science, I and others on here will know exactly what I'm taking about! No lies!
The cluster injuries were unremarkable because one victim was in bed, one cowering on the floor and the others only needed one or two blows for them to be incapacitated to present easy targets. You see victims static/semi-static, unconscious, semi-conscious, in a state of shock, in a coma, or already dead present cluster-injury inevitabilty i.e. absolutely impossible to miss.
And?
Let's not forget that you're one of those double hard macho bastards, that can walk on steel beams hundreds of feet in the air without a fall restraint harness.
Your comparison makes no difference to what the martial arts expert said in court.
I can hit 20mm re-bar over and over again whilst driving it into the ground with a sledge hammer, that doesn't equate to me being able to handle a bo or jo in an expert way though.
I want a mate like Flashberryjacks, who wears a Barnsley jersey with "Swans are my second team" on the back.
Clydach murders new book coming out. on 12:50 - Jan 3 by Neath_Jack
And?
Let's not forget that you're one of those double hard macho bastards, that can walk on steel beams hundreds of feet in the air without a fall restraint harness.
Your comparison makes no difference to what the martial arts expert said in court.
I can hit 20mm re-bar over and over again whilst driving it into the ground with a sledge hammer, that doesn't equate to me being able to handle a bo or jo in an expert way though.
Yes indeed you can hit (I can hit, everyone on here can hit) a 20mm target area over and over again because it presents exactly the same easy to hit target that an already dead, unconscious, semi-conscious, or a person in a coma etc. Bang on!
And yes indeed! An incapacitated individual moving slowly along a landing after suffering the initial assault i.e. one or two blows that probably caused semi-consciousness, incapacitation or stroke like symptoms caused by scull bone fragmentation-splinters into the brain? That also (unremarkably) creates ease of target opportunity just like your mentioned 20mm target area that requires no martial arts expertise also!
A bit off subject i.e. a gas axe (I prefer to use propane) is nowhere near comparable to a blacksmiths forge for twisted e.g. angle iron straightening over a required surface wider area!!!!!
[Post edited 3 Jan 2018 13:26]
Argus!
0
Clydach murders new book coming out. on 13:33 - Jan 3 with 5543 views
Clydach murders new book coming out. on 13:25 - Jan 3 by Wingstandwood
Yes indeed you can hit (I can hit, everyone on here can hit) a 20mm target area over and over again because it presents exactly the same easy to hit target that an already dead, unconscious, semi-conscious, or a person in a coma etc. Bang on!
And yes indeed! An incapacitated individual moving slowly along a landing after suffering the initial assault i.e. one or two blows that probably caused semi-consciousness, incapacitation or stroke like symptoms caused by scull bone fragmentation-splinters into the brain? That also (unremarkably) creates ease of target opportunity just like your mentioned 20mm target area that requires no martial arts expertise also!
A bit off subject i.e. a gas axe (I prefer to use propane) is nowhere near comparable to a blacksmiths forge for twisted e.g. angle iron straightening over a required surface wider area!!!!!
[Post edited 3 Jan 2018 13:26]
Right, you may as well knock it on the head wuss, because you're not going to make me even question the martial arts expert against your comparisons.
This is an interesting thread, which is why i wanted to dig it up, but there's nothing in here that answers any of the questions posed in the book.
I tell you what you could do for me though, if you will please. Can you link me to the two vicious assaults you say Morris carried out previously? There must be reports of them knocking about? (Not that they have any bearing on the Clydach Murders mind, just interested to see what happened).
I want a mate like Flashberryjacks, who wears a Barnsley jersey with "Swans are my second team" on the back.
Clydach murders new book coming out. on 13:33 - Jan 3 by Neath_Jack
Right, you may as well knock it on the head wuss, because you're not going to make me even question the martial arts expert against your comparisons.
This is an interesting thread, which is why i wanted to dig it up, but there's nothing in here that answers any of the questions posed in the book.
I tell you what you could do for me though, if you will please. Can you link me to the two vicious assaults you say Morris carried out previously? There must be reports of them knocking about? (Not that they have any bearing on the Clydach Murders mind, just interested to see what happened).
Clydach murders new book coming out. on 13:53 - Jan 3 by Neath_Jack
I'm surprised there's not a copy knocking about on YouTube, never mind, thanks anyway.
The programme did provide (unbroadcast by news media) crime scene footage of the (police video) bath and (looked like a still police photographs) the kitchen fire damage and of the crime scene/chain itself that was (in pool of blood) lying half- paritially buried underneath a knocked over dinner/tea plate and what looked to be a magazine.
Morris father spoke, Alison Lewis spoke, a fire officer spoke and a neighbour and a few others. Thats what I can remember.