“How did you know this?”
I’m guessing he pulled it out of his behind, because he didn’t get those ideas from facts or reality. The town is nearly 300 hundred years old. There really are not a lot of “new” communities in one of the oldest settled areas of North America.
Heck, even the school is not new:
“The building that now houses Hawley School was built from donations to Newtown by Mary Elizabeth Hawley in 1921”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandy_Hook_Elementary_School
I am going by news accounts and helicopter footage.
This was reported as being a newly built (rebuilt?) school, with the latest video security system. The school is in an isolated area. Surrounded by woods.
If the school was there since 1921, surely it would be surrounded now by housing or something, just like the older schools in any normal town or city.
The pictures of the school that have been on the internet sure look like a fairly new building.
Thanks for the response and link.
Would you agree that since this building has been there so long and since it didn’t have even a cafeteria, and used to be a high school and is now a Kindergarten School that it may have been recently rebuilt ?
I see your point. However, while it may have existed a long time, there is a constant turnover of 'faces'. In many older neighborhoods, as the owners die off, young couples typically move in.
I admit the Eureka concept is a bit far-fetched.
But... what if all it took was 30 or 40 couples with children who would be a part of a test ?
Would people in our government go that far ? Is doing that possible ?