Posted on 07/31/2006 4:28:04 PM PDT by Uncledave
Was Qana Staged? Cont'd [Jonah Goldberg]
I don't want to get too far out ahead on this, but I know we've got a zillion printer-type folks among our readers. Do you guys think such a banner could be made in 2-4 hours (particularly in a supposedly war-ravaged area)?
Update: From a reader:
"Do you guys think such a banner could be made in 2-4 hours (particularly in a supposedly war-ravaged area)?"
Heck no. A designer could throw it together in probably 15 minutes or so, but the longest part would be the printing. Notice how deep the reds and blacks are - this means they didn't just bust it out. I wouldnt be surprised if that job itself (requiring special equipment, as it looks to be printed on canvas or nylon, not merely paper) took 6 hours simply to print.
Also, that puppy would be expensive.
Update II: From a reader:
Nope. Not possible in 2 hours to design, typeset, print, assemble and transport to the site. 24 hours if you're really good to do all the above. I say that as an career commercial artist of 18 years now.
Update III: From another reader:
called a close friend who has a very large printing company in NY with the question. he called out to one of his technicians as to how long a color 30 foot banner would take to produce. the response was that it would have to be done by a special machine and that machine would take "5 to 6 hours." by the way, their rather enormous, state of the art (less than 6 months old) facility doesn't even have the equipment necessary to do it. so make a guess as to what's available in a war-ravaged area...
14'x 20' @ 1000 sq ft per hour would be 2.8 hours. It 's also not wide enough to do a 15 ft wide banner.
Everyone has at template, including you and me. In my case the template is that mass-market journalism attracts its mass market by promoting itself, and it promotes itself by criticizing anyone and everyone who we count on for things we need.Journalism is negative, and since it is written on a short deadline it is superficial, and is written to a predictable negative template. Journalism is arrogant in promoting itself above all the people who are doing the serious things like providing food, water, and security to us all. And journalism is hypocritical in the way it attacks safe targets which will not hit back:
- You need water? Journalists will suggest that something serious is wrong with the water company.
- You need food? Journalists will suggest that something serious is wrong with the chemicals used to promote the growth and retard the spoilage of your food.
- You need security? Journalists will suggest that the police and the military are brutal but ineffective.
The journalistic template simply does not include admitting that it was wrong in any significant way. Once they have told us that there was a massacre, journalism is unwilling to admit that it was a con. It would much rather continue to run with what fit its template in the first place. Just as they continue the "McCarthyism" slur even though the evidence against McCarthy is also largely evidence for him.
- Christians and Jews, not Muslims,
- American authorities in America and not Iraqi authorities in Saddam's Iraq,
- Churches and not other journalists.
14'x 20' @ 1000 sq ft per hour would be 2.8 hours. It 's also not wide enough to do a 15 ft wide banner A 14x20 is 280 sq ft. 280sqft/1000sqft/hour = .28 hours. 0.28hours x (60 min/hour) = 16.8 minutes which converts to 16 minutes and 48 seconds to be precise. Secondly there are no 15 ft wide printers running around that I'm aware of. This particular one is 42" there are 60" wide printers in both the HP and Xerox series. It prints in 4 parts of 3.5' x 20 and you glue the segments together. Ever watch a billboard go up? |
"Thankyou American liberals and media outlets for your continued support."
Bad math apology.
What a load of crap this whole article is. Israel actually have admitted bombing this building and it's subsequent collapse.
There is absolutely no context for the banner (where is it hung, when was it hung?)
The conspiracy theories listed on this thread are risible to say the least.
It is far more plausible that the banner is photoshopped on the photograph or the letters are simply stuck on.
Caption:
Reuters - Sun Jul 30, 12:55 PM ET
Lebanese protesters unfold a poster of U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice during a protest in Beirut, July 30, 2006 after an Israeli air raid on Qana, killed more than 54 people, 37 of them children, in south Lebanon, July 30, 2006.
It says that Hillary Clinton was named after Sir Edmund Hillary.
wondered the exact same thing. Who is that?
Also of note...Condi's lipstick is intentionally smeared in the banner photo...maybe to appear as blood...that, plus the exagerated fang. Interesting.
See #169. It's not just the banner. It's "the preponderance of the evidence". It's overwhelming that this was a setup.
And those here that know me know that I'm a cautious type who doesn't fall for wild conspiracy theories.
The poster mentions the Aug 30 incident as Qana 2. Qana 1 was a very similar incident in 1996, when it is likely that the Hezzies staged a mass casualty event after an IDF bombing run.
No rescue efforts. Dead, but apprently uninjured child. Green Helmet guy (everything about him, including the fact that he is the Greg Packer of bombed buildings).
All of this, combined with the strange timing of the banner, make one go hmmmmmm....
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3284514,00.html
Lebanese website blames Hizbullah for Qana deaths
Anti-Syrian elements in Lebanon openly point finger at Hizbullah as guilty of killing of dozens of civilians in order to curtail plans for disarming group. 'Hizbullah has placed rocket launcher on building's roof and brought invalid children inside in bid to provoke Israeli response,' they write
Roee Nahmias
Is Hizbullah behind the tragic incident in the village of Qana that claimed the lives of some 60 people? While the Israeli army continues to investigate the circumstances leading to the building's collapse, some in Lebanon do not hesitate to point the finger at the Shiite organization and claim it is to blame for the death of dozens.
The Lebanese website LIBANOSCOPIE , associated with Christian elements in the country and which openly supports the anti-Syrian movement called the "March 14 Forces," reported that Hizbullah has masterminded a plan that would result in the killing of innocents in the Qana village, in a bid to foil Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora's "Seven Points Plan", which calls for deployment of the Lebanese army in southern Lebanon and the disarming of Hizbullah.
'Disabled children placed inside building'
"We have it from a credible source that Hizbullah, alarmed by Siniora's plan, has concocted an incident that would help thwart the negotiations.
Knowing full well that Israel will not hesitate to bombard civilian targets, Hizbullah gunmen placed a rocket launcher on the roof in Qana and brought disabled children inside, in a bid to provoke a response by the Israeli Air Force. In this way, they were planning to take advantage of the death of innocents and curtail the negotiation initiative," the site stated.
The site's editors also claimed that not only did Hizbullah stage the event, but that it also chose Qana for a specific reason: "They used Qana because the village had already turned into a symbol for massacring innocent civilians, and so they set up 'Qana 2'." Notably, the incident has indeed been dubbed "The second Qana massacre" by the Arab media.
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