This video shared with us by a viewer who lives next to the Consulate General of China in #Houston shows fire and activity in the courtyard of the building.
DETAILS SO FAR: https://t.co/2cOeKoap96 pic.twitter.com/0myxe6HIlC— KPRC2Tulsi (@KPRC2Tulsi) July 22, 2020
Ominous https://t.co/cGDrX0TKhH— Rich Higgins (@RichHiggins_DC) July 22, 2020
I’m struck by the similarity to the smoke seen rising from the garden of the Japanese Embassy in DC on the morning of December 7, 1941 as diplomats burned box after box of secret documents.
This video shared with us by a viewer who lives next to the Consulate General of China in #Houston shows fire and activity in the courtyard of the building.
DETAILS SO FAR: https://t.co/2cOeKoap96 pic.twitter.com/0myxe6HIlC KPRC2Tulsi (@KPRC2Tulsi) July 22, 2020
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Remember:
Attaches of the Japanese consulate began burning papers, ledgers and other records shortly after Japan went to war against the U.S.