Born in Czechoslovakia, I experienced the realities of life very early. My family and I cheated death many times, from being bombed during World War II to dodging snipers in South East Asia.
To escape from communist treachery my family and I crossed borders through muddy fields, barbed wire, and armed guards.
At the age of nine I arrived in New York City. Two weeks in a new country I was immersed in the NYC school system, the best thing that could have happened to me.
I learned English quickly without forgetting Czech or German.
I immediately picked the political party that I would support, the Republican Party. That’s right; I knew where I belonged even at the age of nine.
I was a musician with my own band, worked with various promotional groups, started an out sourcing business for assembly of small manufacturing items, a computer company marketing hardware and software.
I served in South East Asia in Military Intelligence, held several positions in various fraternal organizations, worked on the U. S. Bicentennial Celebration, and now doing my best to strengthen the Republican Party.
A Somali Muslim terrorist accidentally detonated his bomb prematurely, blowing him out of a passenger airline. The terrorist’s body smashed onto the ground with force, putting an end to his jihadist-inspired life.
A Somali Muslim terrorist accidentally detonated his bomb prematurely, blowing him out of a passenger airline. The terrorist’s body smashed onto the ground with force, putting an end to his jihadist-inspired life.
“Investigators believe a passenger who boarded a commercial plane in a wheelchair may have been a suicide bomber responsible for an explosion that tore a hole in the side of the jet as it took off from Somalia’s capital, a Western diplomat briefed on the probe said,” reportsThe Wall Street Journal. "Investigators’ theory is that the man was able to use the wheelchair to bypass rigorous security screening in Mogadishu and then detonated a bomb that ripped a hole in the fuselage but failed to down the plane. The force of the blast ejected the alleged bomber from the cabin and his body fell to earth near the town of Balad, about 20 miles from Mogadishu, where it was recovered by authorities.”
New evidence seems to suggest that the explosion on board the Daallo Airline flight on Tuesday was deliberate. However, the airline’s chief executive has been careful about calling the incident a terror attack.
“It’s not 100% sure,” said Mohammed Ibrahim Yassin. “They’re saying it’s suspicious but it’s not conclusive.”
He noted that the airline is complying with investigators. “Every single passenger is being studied and profiled,” stated Yassin.
If investigators conclusively determine that an attacker breached security, the airline company’s business may suffer dramatically. Although all 74 passengers aboard the flight survived, two people were injured.
Somalia’s deteriorating security situation may be to blame for such a brazen attack. Islamic terrorist group al-Shabaab has been gaining ground in the country for the last few years. Somalia’s dysfunctional government and corruption has failed to spread the group’s growth.
As a result, Somali officials are downplaying the bombing, blaming the explosion on plane malfunction. “There was no bomb,” said the Somali transportation minister on Thursday.
U.S. officials, however, believe that a bomb was indeed detonated onboard the flight, just 15 minutes after takeoff.
The force of the blast ejected the alleged bomber from the cabin and his body fell to earth near the town of Balad, about 20 miles from Mogadishu, where it was recovered by authorities.”
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