08-24-2019, 07:47 PM
(08-24-2019, 10:26 AM)BIAD Wrote: I've been noticing this for some time and felt that maybe it's just my contempt of the current lazy Journalism.
But there's been articles that seem to mock the reader or maybe even humour them with the use of a certain
wording exploit.
I'm kicking myself that I never collected the others that put me onto this, but the articles are out there and I will
search for them. They seemed to increased lately where (and I'm just making these two-up)... a guy crashes his
crop-spraying plane somewhere and the pilot is called Pete Fallen or a dog goes missing and its owner's surname
is 'Fleeing'! I know it sounds silly, but the tales are there.
I saw this one via a Tim Pool video and was surprised again that nobody has picked up on the strange facets
of this particular story. I hope other RN members can add to this thread with other accounts where names,
locations and similar anomalies indicate that the story holds an 'odd' slant to it.
Here's the outline of the incident :
Sydney, Australia. A drug-fuelled transgender male attacked customers at a local store with an axe.
The prison sentence was recently increased due to the victims demanding so.
(See here for the full article. The Guardian)
Fine, another crazy does something terrible. But look at the names of those involved.
"...Amati, who had recently transitioned to a woman, attacked Ben Rimmer and Sharon Hacker inside a 7-Eleven at
Enmore in January 2017 and then chased down nearby pedestrian Shane Redwood...'
'Hacker, Redwood' and 'Rimmer' (Merriam-Webster's definition: 'an implement for cutting, trimming, or ornamenting
the rim of something')... isn't this strange? In a different setting, wouldn't this story be found as suspicious?
The nearest I could get to Evie Amati was 'Amati' referred to a family of Italian violin makers, active in Cremona in the
16th and 17th centuries. But going out on a limb, the criminal's full name (without one of the 'e's) is an anagram of
'amative', a word meaning impassioned, fervent or romantic.
Maybe it's just me picking up on something that really isn't there, but I'm sure that among the many threads on our
Rogue Nation site, there are similar accounts where names and locations oddly coincide with the meaning of the
story.
Forgive me for my silliness, but I'll post them if more appear.
I think you are Right!
Once A Rogue, Always A Rogue!