On this Monday, August 18 edition of the Alex Jones Show, Alex reports
on the overnight riots in Ferguson, Missouri, in which protestors and police
clashed with tear gas, flash bangs and Molotov cocktails, resulting in one of
the worst clashes in Ferguson. A source within Homeland Security reportedly
said the rioting and looting were “encouraged and
exacerbated by undercover DHS agents posing as members of the Black Panthers.”
It would be well within the government's prerogative to deploy provocateurs to
stir violence that can be used to program the American public into accepting a
militarized police state. On today's show, Fritz Springmeier, author of Bloodlines of
the Illuminati, explains how secret societies shape today's news,
both domestically and internationally, as well as their undue influence over
the population.
Members of
the New Black Panthers have been caught working undercover for the federal
government in the past, with the most recent example being Richard Aoki, who
was outed as an FBI informant in
2012.
Even more
intriguing is the involvement of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights
Division, which has inserted itself into the investigation of Brown’s death at
the behest of Attorney General Eric Holder.
The Justice
Department’s Civil Rights Division has proven sympathetic to the New Black
Panthers in the past. In 2010, a whistleblower who worked with the Civil Rights
Division blasted the
DOJ for dismissing its case against the New Black Panther Party
after members of the group intimidated voters outside a Philadelphia polling
location during the 2008 presidential election.
The New
Black Panther party is not a successor to the original Black Panther Party.
Members of the original organization have repeatedly distanced themselves from
the new group and have insisted it is “illegitimate.”
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