Media Runs Fake Photo To Illustrate Bin Laden Death Propaganda
Everything about the Bin Laden myth is fake, so why worry about illustrating his “death” with another contrived hoax?
Killing Osama bin Laden is a pretty big deal.  You’d think that it  would be in the interests of US forces to take a snapshot of  the  elusive terror leader to milk the propaganda value of such a momentous  turn  of events, and yet the corporate media has given us nothing but a  years old fake  picture. This makes little sense, unless of course,  somebody is trying to hide  something, namely the fact that Osama’s dead  corpse has been on ice for the best  part of a decade.
 According  to some reports,  Bin Laden’s body has already been hastily “buried at sea,”  meaning  that the comic book story of his dramatic killing is based solely on the   less than credible word of the U.S. government.
 Of course, it’s probable that we’ll be treated to  seeing all the  gory details in due course once Osama’s corpse has been properly  thawed  and suitably presented for public consumption.
 But the fake photo, which is still being used by  the likes of the  Daily Mail and the London Telegraph even after it was proven to  be a  contrived hoax that has been circulating on the Internet for years, fits   perfectly with everything surrounding the Bin Laden myth – the fake  video tapes,  the fake audio tapes, the fake claim of responsibility for  9/11.
 Everything about the Bin Laden myth that has been  rapaciously  whipped up by the establishment over the last 10 years has been  fake,  so why worry about putting out a fake photo and claiming it represents  the  freshly dead remains of the world’s most wanted?
We don’t need MSNC to tell us, “We  think that bin Laden ‘death photo’ is a fake,” because we know it’s a fake.  It’s been knocking around on the web since before Obama even took office. Here  it is featured in a story  released over a year ago. As Stokes Young  illustrates, the bloodied  face of Bin Laden is an obviously contrived composite  image created  from an image of Osama that dates back over 10 years.
But that didn’t stop TV news stations across the  Middle East, as  well as major newspapers in Britain like the Daily Mail and the  London  Telegraph, amongst a host of others, from passing the fraud off as   evidence of Bin Laden’s death.
 
 
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