POL “Cool Clock, Ahmed”–No, It’s A Mockup Of A Briefcase Bomb

niceguy

Veteran Member
http://www.vdare.com/posts/cool-clock-ahmed-no-its-a-mockup-of-a-briefcase-bomb


Another of "Barry's Kids" doing what comes naturally.


Ahmed Mohamed’s thing
A reader writes:
A thing about that clock. In the MSM story I read in my local paper it’s described as an innocuous clock. And the pictures they showed showed the electronic mess of wires.
They never mentioned the metal briefcase.
When finally saw this, i said, “oh, he was trying to make a mock-up of a briefcase bomb.”
do a Google images search of “briefcase bomb”
No one ever mentions this.
Screenshot-2015-09-18-02.26.41.png

A commenter named Tunacrab writes:
Anyone with an understanding of electronics will immediately see this “homemade clock” is not the tinkering of a child or teen. It was never Ahmed’s idea to begin with. This isn’t some innocent science project. The picture of the clock exposes the lie. Ahmed did not lovingly patch together IC chips and resistors, as the media would like you to believe. What you see is the guts from a manufactured digital clock, right down to the 9 volt memory backup, and the prefab button board. Absolutely nothing was made. It’s the equivalent of taking the plastic surround off of your TV and claiming you “made” a TV.
Look at the case itself. CNN calls it a “pencil case.” Please. The whole package is vaguely sinister, and it’s intentional. … It’s almost as if someone designed this clock to look like a questionable object.
Again, from CNN: “”I built a clock to impress my teacher but when I showed it to her, she thought it was a threat to her,” Ahmed told reporters Wednesday.” It was really sad that she took the wrong impression of it.””
Ahmed, you didn’t build a clock. You’re a pawn to your Dad’s political and social agenda. This is all a creation of your father. I’m sure he involved you in the process, and made you feel as though you were truly making something, but you didn’t. It’s a clock without its case. Everything in the “pencil case” was made in a factory. See, a legitimate electronics project full of diodes and resistors looks innocent. It usually runs off of a battery, not an exposed AC to DC transformer… speaking of science projects, Ahmed, why again did you bring this to class? Was it part of an assignment? Oh, you just wanted to impress your teacher with a clock you rearranged inside a small briefcase? Hmm…
From dallasnews.com: ““He fixed my phone, my car, my computer,” Mohamed Elhassan Mohamed said. “He is a very smart, brilliant kid.”
If he were so smart, he’d know the difference between creating a circuit and stripping the guts from a manufactured clock. His dad helped him “make” this, and dad helped to make this “project” look as questionable as possible, within the realm of plausible deniability.
The dad is a politician. He made this happen. Whatever agenda he’s advancing, it just further demonizes western society, and reminds us all to be guilty for how racist we all are. Maybe that’s the agenda.
It’s propaganda.
But his dad will get a picture of himself with Obama out of this, which might encourage voters in Sudan to take him more seriously if he runs for president a third time. From OkayAfrica:
From OkayAfrica:
The ninth grader is the son of Mohamed Elhassan Mohamed, a Sudanese immigrant who has made headlines of his own over the years. A February 2015 profile in the North Dallas Gazette details the elder Mohamed’s activities.
Born in Sudan in 1961, Mohamed, a former customs worker at Khartoum International Airport, earned a degree in philosophy from Cairo University in Khartoum before emigrating to the U.S. “Once I realized my dream was bigger than what Sudan had to offer I immigrated to America in the mid-1980’s,” he told the North Dallas Gazette. In that same interview, Mohamed shared that upon arrival in the U.S.– where he says his degree was not accepted– he initially sold hot dogs, candy, and newspapers in Manhattan. “I realized this wasn’t enough for me, and I packed my bag and moved to Dallas, Texas y’all,” he told the paper. In Texas, he started out as a pizza delivery man before becoming a taxi driver and ultimately launching his own business ventures– he owns a computer repair shop in Irving, Texas (perhaps where his son gets his tech acuity from), a cab company called Jet Taxi, a medical emergency transport company called Paradise Prime Investments, and the solar energy business AlSufi International in Sudan. He also served as self-elected president of the small Sufi Muslim AlSufi center in Irving. …
Mohamed has also run for president of Sudan on two separate occasions.
He’d run again in 2015 on a National Reform Party ticket. An April 2015 Bloomberg report referred to the Texan as having “the most ambitious agenda” of the incumbent President Umar al-Bashir’s competitors. …
Neither Mohamed nor his party would end up appearing on the ballot. …
Aside from his presidential bids, Mohamed also made headlines for his bizarre role in Rev. Terry Jones’ incendiary Quran trial. In 2012, when the Florida pastor made good on his threat to burn a Quran in his Gainesville church and put the Quran on “trial,” Mohamed, who refers to himself as a sheik, was apparently the one Muslim willing to play along as the defense in the mock trial. “[The church] put an ad on their channel: ‘Whoever feels in himself he has the power to defend Quran is welcome,’” he told the Dallas Observer.
Muslim leaders in Texas, meanwhile, doubted his claims to religious and scholarly leadership. “This so-called leader, we have never heard of this person,” Imam Zia ul Haque Sheikh, head of the Islamic Center of Irving, told the Seattle Times. “I believe the whole thing is made up.” In that same interview, Mohamed, who refers to himself as a sheikh, elaborated on his motivations for getting involved with Jones. “He said he agreed to serve as the defense attorney at Jones’ mock trial because the Quran teaches that Muslims should engage in peaceful dialogue with Christians,” the Seattle Times’ Annie Gowen wrote. “But there was also a more pragmatic reason. It was spring break and he wanted to take his wife and five kids to Disney World: to ‘kill two birds with one stone,’ as he put it.” He also claims he didn’t know the trial– in which the Quran was “found guilty” of “crimes against humanity”– would result in the Quran actually being set on fire. According to the Seattle Times, some of Mohamed’s small group of followers asked that he no longer lead prayers, while others refused to drive for his taxi company.
Contemporary white people have a passion for playing the chump. The shoddier the racket, the more we want to fall for it.
 

brokenwings

Veteran Member
A lot of Americans are very angry about this! I would say this thing was made on purpose for just what happened! I think the immediate opening up of a Go Fund Me account is proof! Preplanned once again!
 

L.A.B.

Goodness before greatness.
One of the talking she heads on CNN was attempting to chastise a commanding representive LEO who was speaking on the case.

These little girls go way outside the parameters of liberal progressive, to the point of aiding and abiding a PC policy of Cultural Correctness!

You heard it here first. "Cultural Correctness" a state sanctioned foreign culture that cannot be challenged without a jury of its OWN peers. Oh, wait a minute, they're already on that, their own form of law in CON-US some more!
 
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D

Dazed

Guest
I think you are wrong....

It is a clock kit. In a small briefcase.

Here are some similar clock kits on Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_1?url=search-alias=aps&field-keywords=digital+clock+kit

He's a youn kid who built a clock from a kit and found a neat container to bring it to school in..

But some people (who wouldn't know a bomb if they held one in their hand) thought that this might be a bomb because it had wires and digital display and looked sorta like the bombs they see in MOVIES.....and they can't tell the difference between movies and reality.

I feel sorry for poor Ahmed. He got scrwed by an ignorant teacher.

If you think that that looks like a bomb (hint, nothing even resembling explosives are in the case) then you are as ignorant as the teacher was....

I built a similar device over 35 years ago and put it in plexiglass ...today people who don't know would have thought it looked like the bombs in the movies...
 

Faroe

Un-spun
When I first read the article, I completely disregarded the photo as actually being a photo the "clock" that the young and misunderstood Jr. Jihadi supposedly made.

Case of Cognitive Dissonance - the pic had nothing in common with the saccharine goodie-two-shoes story, even though I didn't put much stock in the story!
 

Jubilee on Earth

Veteran Member
I think you are wrong....

It is a clock kit. In a small briefcase.

Here are some similar clock kits on Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_1?url=search-alias=aps&field-keywords=digital+clock+kit

He's a youn kid who built a clock from a kit and found a neat container to bring it to school in..

But some people (who wouldn't know a bomb if they held one in their hand) thought that this might be a bomb because it had wires and digital display and looked sorta like the bombs they see in MOVIES.....and they can't tell the difference between movies and reality.

I feel sorry for poor Ahmed. He got scrwed by an ignorant teacher.

If you think that that looks like a bomb (hint, nothing even resembling explosives are in the case) then you are as ignorant as the teacher was....

I built a similar device over 35 years ago and put it in plexiglass ...today people who don't know would have thought it looked like the bombs in the movies...

Yes, but 35 years ago was a completely different era. Before Columbine. Before Sandy Hook. Before 9-11. Before the Boston Marathon bombing. Why would anyone know what the inner workings of a bomb looks like? If someone walked into my home with that thing, I'd be freaked the heck out. Imagine for a second if that HAD been a bomb, and it went off and killed students and teachers. In the interviews afterward, people would be flamed and possibly even fired for not treating this as a possible threat. Parents want it both ways. They want their kids safe and everyone screened at the door, but then they're outraged when something suspicious is flagged. Could it have been handled better? Sure. But I understand their panic. For the love of God, kids get suspended for bringing toy guns to school. Here's a kid that brings in something that resembles what 90% of Americans would identify as a bomb, and he gets invited to the White House. Unreal.
 

Sasquatch

Veteran Member
Yes, but 35 years ago was a completely different era. Before Columbine. Before Sandy Hook. Before 9-11. Before the Boston Marathon bombing. Why would anyone know what the inner workings of a bomb looks like? If someone walked into my home with that thing, I'd be freaked the heck out. Imagine for a second if that HAD been a bomb, and it went off and killed students and teachers. In the interviews afterward, people would be flamed and possibly even fired for not treating this as a possible threat. Parents want it both ways. They want their kids safe and everyone screened at the door, but then they're outraged when something suspicious is flagged. Could it have been handled better? Sure. But I understand their panic. For the love of God, kids get suspended for bringing toy guns to school. Here's a kid that brings in something that resembles what 90% of Americans would identify as a bomb, and he gets invited to the White House. Unreal.
And ... when I was young (looong ago) I could take a shotgun to school in the back window of my truck so after school I could go pheasant hunting.

Times have changed and if this would have been a white kid, everyone would want him jailed.
 

minkykat

Komplainy Kat
I think you are wrong....

It is a clock kit. In a small briefcase.

Here are some similar clock kits on Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_1?url=search-alias=aps&field-keywords=digital+clock+kit

He's a youn kid who built a clock from a kit and found a neat container to bring it to school in..

But some people (who wouldn't know a bomb if they held one in their hand) thought that this might be a bomb because it had wires and digital display and looked sorta like the bombs they see in MOVIES.....and they can't tell the difference between movies and reality.

I feel sorry for poor Ahmed. He got scrwed by an ignorant teacher.

If you think that that looks like a bomb (hint, nothing even resembling explosives are in the case) then you are as ignorant as the teacher was....

I built a similar device over 35 years ago and put it in plexiglass ...today people who don't know would have thought it looked like the bombs in the movies...

The teacher is a teacher. She is not an explosive expert. Therefore, when presented with something that popular culture has defined as being a bomb, she reacted.
AND RIGHTLY SO.

The student, who is supposed to be bright, should have realized the effect such a presentation would have.

Or maybe he did.
 

minkykat

Komplainy Kat
Yes, but 35 years ago was a completely different era. Before Columbine. Before Sandy Hook. Before 9-11. Before the Boston Marathon bombing. Why would anyone know what the inner workings of a bomb looks like? If someone walked into my home with that thing, I'd be freaked the heck out. Imagine for a second if that HAD been a bomb, and it went off and killed students and teachers. In the interviews afterward, people would be flamed and possibly even fired for not treating this as a possible threat. Parents want it both ways. They want their kids safe and everyone screened at the door, but then they're outraged when something suspicious is flagged. Could it have been handled better? Sure. But I understand their panic. For the love of God, kids get suspended for bringing toy guns to school. Here's a kid that brings in something that resembles what 90% of Americans would identify as a bomb, and he gets invited to the White House. Unreal.

Well according to Dazed, we all just ig-nor-ant.
 
I think you are wrong....

It is a clock kit. In a small briefcase.

Here are some similar clock kits on Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_1?url=search-alias=aps&field-keywords=digital+clock+kit

He's a youn kid who built a clock from a kit and found a neat container to bring it to school in..

But some people (who wouldn't know a bomb if they held one in their hand) thought that this might be a bomb because it had wires and digital display and looked sorta like the bombs they see in MOVIES.....and they can't tell the difference between movies and reality.

I feel sorry for poor Ahmed. He got scrwed by an ignorant teacher.

If you think that that looks like a bomb (hint, nothing even resembling explosives are in the case) then you are as ignorant as the teacher was....

I built a similar device over 35 years ago and put it in plexiglass ...today people who don't know would have thought it looked like the bombs in the movies...


You call me ignorant ... I call you dangerously naïve.
 

JohnGaltfla

#NeverTrump
WE’VE BEEN HAD!! AHMED DIDN’T EVEN MAKE THAT CLOCK!!

WE’VE BEEN HAD!! AHMED DIDN’T EVEN MAKE THAT CLOCK!!


Posted by soopermexican on Sep 18, 2015 at 8:25 PM
THE RIGHT SCOOP


This story has been so annoying I’ve been mostly ignoring it, and while I’m generally not about conspiracy theories, this is… kinda weird.


So Ahmed has been invited to the White House and become an intern for Twitter because the media says evil racist cops and teachers arrested him for innocently bringing an invention, a clock, to his classroom. It’s Islamophobia!!!
But wait… what if… he didn’t actually build any clock?!


From AV Artvoice Blog:
I’m an electronics geek. I was interested in the clock! I wanted to figure out what he had come up with.


I found the highest resolution photograph of the clock I could. Instantly, I was disappointed. Somewhere in all of this – there has indeed been a hoax. Ahmed Mohamed didn’t invent his own alarm clock. He didn’t even build a clock. Now, before I go on and get accused of attacking a 14 year old kid who’s already been through enough, let me explain my purpose. I don’t want to just dissect the clock. I want to dissect our reaction as a society to the situation. Part of that is the knee-jerk responses we’re all so quick to make without facts. So, before you scroll down and leave me angry comments, please continue to the end (or not – prove my point, and miss the point, entirely!)

For starters, one glance at the printed circuit board in the photo, and I knew we were looking at mid-to-late 1970s vintage electronics. Surely you’ve seen a modern circuit board, with metallic traces leading all over to the various components like an electronic spider’s web. You’ll notice right away the highly accurate spacing, straightness of the lines, consistency of the patterns. That’s because we design things on computers nowadays, and computers assist in routing these lines. Take a look at the board in Ahmed’s clock. It almost looks hand-drawn, right? That’s because it probably was. Computer aided design was in its infancy in the 70s. This is how simple, low cost items (like an alarm clock) were designed. Today, even a budding beginner is going to get some computer aided assistance – in fact they’ll probably start there, learning by simulating designs before building them.
Now, the blogger continues to show that basically what Ahmed did is buy an old clock, rip out it’s insides, stuff it into another box, and take off to school.
So I turned to eBay, searching for vintage alarm clocks. It only took a minute to locate Ahmed’s clock. See this eBay listing, up at the time of this writing. Amhed’s clock was invented, and built, by Micronta, a Radio Shack subsidary. Catalog number 63 756.





The shape and design is a dead give away. The large screen. The buttons on the front laid out horizontally would have been on a separate board – a large snooze button, four control buttons, and two switches to turn the alarm on and off, and choose two brightness levels.



A second board inside would have contained the actual “brains” of the unit. The clock features a 9v battery back-up, and a switch on the rear allows the owner to choose between 12 and 24 hour time. (Features like a battery back-up, and a 24 hour time selection seems awful superfluous for a hobby project, don’t you think?) Oh, and about that “M” logo on the circuit board mentioned above? Micronta.
Sooooo…. what happened here? The blogger draws some conclusions:
So there you have it folks, Ahmed Mohamad did not invent, nor build a clock. He took apart an existing clock, and transplanted the guts into a pencil box, and claimed it was his own creation. It all seems really fishy to me.


If we accept the story about “inventing” an alarm clock is made up, as I think I’ve made a pretty good case for, it’s fair to wonder what other parts of the story might be made up, not reported factually by the media, or at least, exaggerated.


I refer back again to this YouTube video interview with Ahmed. He explains that he closed up the box with a piece of cord because he didn’t want it to look suspicious. I’m curious, why would “looking suspicious” have even crossed his mind before this whole event unfolded, if he was truly showing off a hobby project, something so innocuous as an alarm clock. Why did he choose a pencil box, one that looks like a miniature briefcase no less, as an enclosure for a clock? It’s awful hard to see the clock with the case closed. On the other hand, with the case open, it’s awful dangerous to have an exposed power transformer sitting near the snooze button (unless, perhaps his invention was to stop serial-snooze-button pressers by giving them a dangerous electrical shock!)
Now I think it’s a real leap in logic to believe this was all an elaborate CAIR planned hoax. They would have done it better if it was. What it seems like is this dumb kid did this as a joke, got caught, and it was taken WAYY too far, and the easiest way to get out of it was to claim racism, or Islamophobia.


And the proof of this, is that he really didn’t invent the clock.


Also Obama is an idiot.



UPDATE!!! Here’s a video for those of you who don’t like to read long stuff:
 

JohnGaltfla

#NeverTrump
I think you are wrong....

It is a clock kit. In a small briefcase.

Here are some similar clock kits on Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_1?url=search-alias=aps&field-keywords=digital+clock+kit

He's a youn kid who built a clock from a kit and found a neat container to bring it to school in..

But some people (who wouldn't know a bomb if they held one in their hand) thought that this might be a bomb because it had wires and digital display and looked sorta like the bombs they see in MOVIES.....and they can't tell the difference between movies and reality.

I feel sorry for poor Ahmed. He got scrwed by an ignorant teacher.

If you think that that looks like a bomb (hint, nothing even resembling explosives are in the case) then you are as ignorant as the teacher was....

I built a similar device over 35 years ago and put it in plexiglass ...today people who don't know would have thought it looked like the bombs in the movies...

No, it is is not a "clock kit" and if you believe that, you're a fool. It's a Micronta alarm clock that has been disassembled then put into a case to look like a bomb.
 

Rabbit

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Clock/timer? Important component for future endeavors? Come on, in this environment when a child gets expelled from school for making a pretend gun with his finger.

Yeah bring something to school in a wired up briefcase. LOL
 

Gercarson

Veteran Member
There's NO WAY a teenage jihadist would EVER bring a bomb to school disguised as a "home made" clock that the geniusness and stuff would absolutely WOW his teacher..
You're in biiiiggggg trouble now for doubting this very young and innocent martyr wannabe.
 

cjoi

Veteran Member
[Oops! Pics and article are already posted in niceguy's thread, here: http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...d%94%96No-It%92s-A-Mockup-Of-A-Briefcase-Bomb

Nevermind...] Going away to make a breakfast now.




Found this over at The Tree of Liberty:

http://www.thetreeofliberty.com/vb/forumdisplay.php?8-Committees-of-Correspondence

“Cool Clock, Ahmed”–No, It’s A Mockup Of A Briefcase Bomb
http://www.vdare.com/posts/cool-clock-ahmed-no-its-a-mockup-of-a-briefcase-bomb STRONGLY RECOMMEND GOING TO LINK TO SEE THE PICS. (Pleeease, someone with the smarts and equipment post the pics, here.)

"Another of "Barry's Kids" doing what comes naturally."




"Ahmed Mohamed’s thing
A reader writes:

A thing about that clock. In the MSM story I read in my local paper it’s described as an innocuous clock. And the pictures they showed showed the electronic mess of wires.

They never mentioned the metal briefcase.

When finally saw this, i said, “oh, he was trying to make a mock-up of a briefcase bomb.”

do a Google images search of “briefcase bomb”
No one ever mentions this.


A commenter named Tunacrab writes:

Anyone with an understanding of electronics will immediately see this “homemade clock” is not the tinkering of a child or teen. It was never Ahmed’s idea to begin with. This isn’t some innocent science project. The picture of the clock exposes the lie. Ahmed did not lovingly patch together IC chips and resistors, as the media would like you to believe. What you see is the guts from a manufactured digital clock, right down to the 9 volt memory backup, and the prefab button board. Absolutely nothing was made. It’s the equivalent of taking the plastic surround off of your TV and claiming you “made” a TV.

Look at the case itself. CNN calls it a “pencil case.” Please. The whole package is vaguely sinister, and it’s intentional. … It’s almost as if someone designed this clock to look like a questionable object.

Again, from CNN: ”I built a clock to impress my teacher but when I showed it to her, she thought it was a threat to her,” Ahmed told reporters Wednesday.” It was really sad that she took the wrong impression of it.”

Ahmed, you didn’t build a clock. You’re a pawn to your Dad’s political and social agenda. This is all a creation of your father. I’m sure he involved you in the process, and made you feel as though you were truly making something, but you didn’t. It’s a clock without its case. Everything in the “pencil case” was made in a factory. See, a legitimate electronics project full of diodes and resistors looks innocent. It usually runs off of a battery, not an exposed AC to DC transformer… speaking of science projects, Ahmed, why again did you bring this to class? Was it part of an assignment? Oh, you just wanted to impress your teacher with a clock you rearranged inside a small briefcase? Hmm…

From dallasnews.com: ““He fixed my phone, my car, my computer,” Mohamed Elhassan Mohamed said. “He is a very smart, brilliant kid.”

If he were so smart, he’d know the difference between creating a circuit and stripping the guts from a manufactured clock. His dad helped him “make” this, and dad helped to make this “project” look as questionable as possible, within the realm of plausible deniability.

The dad is a politician. He made this happen. Whatever agenda he’s advancing, it just further demonizes western society, and reminds us all to be guilty for how racist we all are. Maybe that’s the agenda.
It’s propaganda.

But his dad will get a picture of himself with Obama out of this, which might encourage voters in Sudan to take him more seriously if he runs for president a third time. From OkayAfrica:
From OkayAfrica:

The ninth grader is the son of Mohamed Elhassan Mohamed, a Sudanese immigrant who has made headlines of his own over the years. A February 2015 profile in the North Dallas Gazette details the elder Mohamed’s activities.

Born in Sudan in 1961, Mohamed, a former customs worker at Khartoum International Airport, earned a degree in philosophy from Cairo University in Khartoum before emigrating to the U.S. “Once I realized my dream was bigger than what Sudan had to offer I immigrated to America in the mid-1980’s,” he told the North Dallas Gazette. In that same interview, Mohamed shared that upon arrival in the U.S.– where he says his degree was not accepted– he initially sold hot dogs, candy, and newspapers in Manhattan. “I realized this wasn’t enough for me, and I packed my bag and moved to Dallas, Texas y’all,” he told the paper. In Texas, he started out as a pizza delivery man before becoming a taxi driver and ultimately launching his own business ventures– he owns a computer repair shop in Irving, Texas (perhaps where his son gets his tech acuity from), a cab company called Jet Taxi, a medical emergency transport company called Paradise Prime Investments, and the solar energy business AlSufi International in Sudan. He also served as self-elected president of the small Sufi Muslim AlSufi center in Irving. …

Mohamed has also run for president of Sudan on two separate occasions.
He’d run again in 2015 on a National Reform Party ticket. An April 2015 Bloomberg report referred to the Texan as having “the most ambitious agenda” of the incumbent President Umar al-Bashir’s competitors. …
Neither Mohamed nor his party would end up appearing on the ballot. …

Aside from his presidential bids, Mohamed also made headlines for his bizarre role in Rev. Terry Jones’ incendiary Quran trial. In 2012, when the Florida pastor made good on his threat to burn a Quran in his Gainesville church and put the Quran on “trial,” Mohamed, who refers to himself as a sheik, was apparently the one Muslim willing to play along as the defense in the mock trial. “[The church] put an ad on their channel: ‘Whoever feels in himself he has the power to defend Quran is welcome,’” he told the Dallas Observer.

Muslim leaders in Texas, meanwhile, doubted his claims to religious and scholarly leadership. “This so-called leader, we have never heard of this person,” Imam Zia ul Haque Sheikh, head of the Islamic Center of Irving, told the Seattle Times. “I believe the whole thing is made up.” In that same interview, Mohamed, who refers to himself as a sheikh, elaborated on his motivations for getting involved with Jones. “He said he agreed to serve as the defense attorney at Jones’ mock trial because the Quran teaches that Muslims should engage in peaceful dialogue with Christians,” the Seattle Times’ Annie Gowen wrote. “But there was also a more pragmatic reason. It was spring break and he wanted to take his wife and five kids to Disney World: to ‘kill two birds with one stone,’ as he put it.” He also claims he didn’t know the trial– in which the Quran was “found guilty” of “crimes against humanity”– would result in the Quran actually being set on fire. According to the Seattle Times, some of Mohamed’s small group of followers asked that he no longer lead prayers, while others refused to drive for his taxi company.

Contemporary white people have a passion for playing the chump. The shoddier the racket, the more we want to fall for it."
 
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brokenwings

Veteran Member
I always thought something was fishy! I never believed that he built it. I think it nothing is ever how it seems. We are now being conditioned to accept Muzzies and everything they do. Just like we were with the blacks!
 

almost ready

Inactive
His comment that he was teased in Middle School called "Ahmed the bomb builder" was a giveaway. No way could he do this innocently. It was a set-up. Yes, it appears to be an old clock that he dismantled and lied about making. Obama didn't take the bait, it was a more fake news from the fakers.

Given the rapidfire response, from the WH Idiot, the Go Fund Me, the twitter army, and media empty heads, it's clearly a set-up to reframe and control the discussion vis-a-vis the flood of immigrants Obama is flying in from Africa.

Whatever, the divide between the Obama crowd and everyone else is growing. It seems they have become a little island floating off. Sure they have tv networks, but nobody watches their spew unless they are showing the opposition.
 

33dInd

Veteran Member
blah, blah,blah blah, yeah defend the muzzie kid........don't call it a mock up or not a real bomb..................bull.
When I went to bomb tech school way way back when........we built a very effective mock up of a bomb with an old big ben wind up, two c cell batteries wired in sequence and a rocket igniter.........so, defend the muzzie kid, then wonder what happened when you or yours get your arsed blasted to bits cause their all so cute.....and just like us
 

MtnGal

Has No Life - Lives on TB
no one said he INVENTED it you loony tunes youtuber, he BUILT IT!!!
:rolleyes:

According to O 'you didn't build that" means it's okay for muzzies to say they built it but not Americans. Nothing racist about that is there.
 

Faroe

Un-spun
He didn't even *build* anything! It was nothing but a sloppy craft project.
He broke a cheap clock out of its case, and glued the various components around the inside of a briefcase styled pencil case.
He thought is was funny; his teachers didn't.

If we are going to accept the notion of "hate speech" in this country (personally, I find that to be a slippery slope), a bomb mock-up by a muslim kid clearly qualifies.
Nevertheless, if I remember correctly from the first posted article yesterday, his momma said he was a "genius."
It would be racis to question that, but we are "profiling" if we should find the suitcase bomb mock-up alarming.
 

raven

TB Fanatic
no one said he INVENTED it you loony tunes youtuber, he BUILT IT!!!
:rolleyes:

Ahmed is quoted as saying it was an invention. Just about every liberal media article sprinkles the word somewhere in the article.
http://www.businessinsider.com/ahmed-mohamed-arrested-after-bringing-clock-to-high-school-2015-9
"An officer and the principal came and took me and they took me to a room filled with five officers," Ahmed said. "They interrogated me and searched through my stuff and took my tablet and my invention."
 

TerryK

TB Fanatic
Yes, but 35 years ago was a completely different era. Before Columbine. Before Sandy Hook. Before 9-11. Before the Boston Marathon bombing. Why would anyone know what the inner workings of a bomb looks like? If someone walked into my home with that thing, I'd be freaked the heck out. Imagine for a second if that HAD been a bomb, and it went off and killed students and teachers. In the interviews afterward, people would be flamed and possibly even fired for not treating this as a possible threat. Parents want it both ways. They want their kids safe and everyone screened at the door, but then they're outraged when something suspicious is flagged. Could it have been handled better? Sure. But I understand their panic. For the love of God, kids get suspended for bringing toy guns to school. Here's a kid that brings in something that resembles what 90% of Americans would identify as a bomb, and he gets invited to the White House. Unreal.

You would be "freaked out" because you have no understanding of electronics.
As some one else has already said it's a clock kit.
They are available from amazon for about 5 bucks. These range from 5 to 8 dollars and there are at least a dozen more on Amazon.
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They are meant for electronic hobbyists and kids science projects.
The electronics were in a pencil box not a briefcase. These pencil boxes are frequently used by hobbyists to build their kits in, if it's something they will be carrying around. They are 8"x5"x2" in size. Not the optimal size for a suitcase bomb.
The pictures in the media tried to make is look like a full size briefcase.

Second if you are going to make a time bomb, you don't buy an electronics kit.
You buy an already functional battery powered alarm clock and use the leads going to the buzzer to operate a relay that operates the detonator. Sheesh :shk:
Actually most IEDs are operated by phones now days.

If you are automatically scared because you see some electronics and wires it is more your problem than the kid who made it. I recommend you don't attend any science fairs or visit any science classrooms.

Sheesh people he has dozens of projects he has made in the past, and people at his junior high remember him from all the electronics and robotics he did there.

Add to that, the fact that the very first thing he did when he brought it to school was to show it to his science teacher. That doesn't sound like the act of a terrorist or someone who was planing a hoax.

He kept it in his backpack throughout the rest of the day. It beeped in english class and the teacher wanted to see it. She was probably a typical liberal teacher with no education in any science, and like the ignorant PC leftist she was, she panicked.

The funny part is that even after she and the school administrator panicked and called the police, they failed to follow standard procedures and evacuate the school. Probably because they knew it wasn't really a bomb since they probably talked to the science teacher who already had examined it the first thing in the morning. The liberal English teacher and school administrator, angry at feeling foolish, called police and made a big deal of it.

This was mishandled from the very beginning through the end. The science teacher should have kept it in the science classroom until the end of the day. The ignorant English teacher and school administrator should have listened to the science teacher.
The police should never have arrested the boy. They should not have held him without access to a lawyer or his parents, and they should not have tried to coerce a written confession from him without legal representation.

The whole deal about the teacher and administrator being alarmed by the clock is bogus. Otherwise they would have evacuated the school.
The English teacher was probably just pissed, no I mean actually pissed because the PC libtard probably did wet her pants when the kid followed her orders and showed her what was in the pencil box. :lol:
So they decided to teach this boy a lesson. :shk:
Ignorant people are so sad.

Anyway, the kid will soon be transferring to another school with more intelligent teachers and administrators, where things like wires and LEDs do not terrify them. This whole incident just confirms my previous belief that 90% of Americans have zero understanding of technology or science.
 

TerryK

TB Fanatic
Then there is the 2002 New York Times story, Only a year after 9-11 a kid (not moslem) in Colorado, brought an actual inert bomb to school as a project.
It was a fuel oil/fertilizer bomb. The chemical ingredients were inert but nobody could tell than. The circuitry to detonate it was functional.
He didn't get suspended or arrested. The teacher who gave him the project was disciplines. Just goes to show that the ignorant ones are pretty much always the teachers.
http://gawker.com/7-kids-not-named-mohamed-who-brought-homemade-clocks-to-1730999866

Plus, here’s an anonymous kid in Kiowa, Colorado who brought an actual inert bomb and wasn’t suspended (his teacher was)

A high school student’s science project was meant to demonstrate how heat is involved in transferring energy. But because the project was an inert bomb, the student and his teacher are taking some heat of their own.

The bomb, made with fertilizer and diesel in a test tube, was displayed last week at a science fair with traditional experiments when an anonymous caller alerted the authorities. The bomb was made with the approval of the 17-year-old student’s teacher.
...

The student, whose name officials refused to release, remains in school
 

Coulter

Veteran Member
blah, blah,blah blah, yeah defend the muzzie kid........don't call it a mock up or not a real bomb..................bull.
When I went to bomb tech school way way back when........we built a very effective mock up of a bomb with an old big ben wind up, two c cell batteries wired in sequence and a rocket igniter.........so, defend the muzzie kid, then wonder what happened when you or yours get your arsed blasted to bits cause their all so cute.....and just like us


Exactly.

I just hope when the next bomb goes off it's - right beside the kids - of those who are convinced it was just an innocent invention - made by people who blow people up.

Some people are just plain stupid.
 

Faroe

Un-spun
My much older brother liked to build electronics as a teenager in the '70's. I remember a digital clock with the numbers in vacuum tubes (?). It was the first digital clock we had in the house, and I had trouble getting the hang of how to read it. He made radios, a working calculator, and a receiver out of a Heath kit that was beautiful. He had to fix that twice because my hamster escaped and chewed the innards.

They were good looking functional projects.
This Ahmed thing is crap.
 

L.A.B.

Goodness before greatness.
Try walking through a U.S. DHS AIRPORT with that device and see what kind of PC Greeting you garnish!

This is more agenda driven Politically Correct Pavlovian Conditioning with the introduction of Culturally Correct races or religions.
 

Bogey

“Where liberty dwells, there is my country.”

Exactly!
On the other hand. Those white Islamophobic, full of hate white American kids, with a pop tart in their hands! :shkr::siren: OMG!!! sarcasm off. Ah, hell I can't even laugh at this crap anymore.
 

FarmerJohn

Has No Life - Lives on TB
A mock-up bomb wound have to contain a mockup explosive, which Ahmed's clock did not contain. The school officials realized that, otherwise they would have evacuated the school. The police realized that, otherwise they would have called for the bomb squad.

The police are supposed to be enforcers of the law, not punishers of kids of the wrong color.
 
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