The guy’s motive was one of four things:
1. A homegrown Jihadi.
2. A rabid leftist.
3. A guy who was nuts.
4. All of the above.
Any coverup of motives is simply the media and demonratic run FBI covering their political a**. The last thing the left wants is an unambiguous leftist terrorist who was literally trying to gun down Trump supporters.
It really isn’t very hard to understand.
I think there is some evidence for another option: he was a paid hitman doing a job he was paid to do.
The guy has made million on gambling, which suggests he’s been paid millions for illegal work and laundered through the casinos. He also traveled all over the world on mysterious trips.
He had an escape plan, which means this wasn’t about a suicide mission.
He did ballistic calculations on a notebook, which also seems to suggest he’s a professional.
What if he was a professional hitman and this was a paid job.
And/or gun-runner patsy.
The guys motive was one of four things:
1. A homegrown Jihadi.
2. A rabid leftist.
3. A guy who was nuts.
4. All of the above.
I'll take what's behind door number 2...
The word is guy started acquiring all his weapons in November of last year.. What happened in November of last year.?? The Election of President Trump.!!
A leftist he was... He was seen at liberal protest on several occasions... He was photographed there... Him and the girl both...
I do find it very curious why the folks who know he have not come forward... (?)
5. He was addicted to video poker, the "crack cocaine of gambling" as it was known.
He used his real estate fortune to live the life of a high roller in Vegas, betting big, winning big, losing big but more or less breaking even while enjoying all of the comped perks.
However, as Vegas implemented changes to the video poker software to increase the advantage to the house, Paddock's losses started accumulating. This enraged him and he blamed the Casinos for cheating.
The LA Times published a pretty good piece on the video poker world that Paddock was addicted to. And make no mistake, he was an addict. I posted a thread on it over here:
In the solitary world of video poker, Stephen Paddock knew how to win. Until he didn't