These Crazy Times...
Truth still remains illusive, as a stand-up comedian incites the Malaysian government's outrage
This headline caught my attention when I was perusing the Interpol list of important incidents this past week.
MH370 joke: Malaysia asks Interpol to track down comedian
As I try to make sense of the presumed affront to Malaysia’s image and character, I simply cannot fathom how this ever became an international insult. It defies logic, especially as a much bigger revelation is finally coming to the international stage, and Mel Gibson is bringing the entire child-sex-trafficking secret to the world’s attention. Gibson’s revelatory four part documentary reveals that the child sex trafficking trade is a $34 Billion/ year industry.
Clayton Morris noted that Gibson will most likely be targeted by the Mainstream (pedo-crony) media as they take his previous comments(made some years ago) out of context and strive to depict him as a racist and crazed ‘conspiracy nutjob.’ The likelihood of predictable smears made against Gibson is yet another example of how crazy the world seems today.
In stand-up comedian, Jocelyn Chia’s case, the alleged insult stems from the fact that innocent people presumably died on the MH370 flight, and this somehow reflects on Malaysia’s inability to provide any conclusive resolution regarding the cause of the strange disappearance of the flight. How dare a comedian make a joke about a mysterious incident that still remains unsolved! …and this is cause for engaging Interpol in tracking down a stand-up comic? The fact that Interpol considers a stand-up comic, a ‘person of interest’ may be even funnier than what Jocelyn Chia said during her appearance on the comedy circuit.
The BBC reported this basic overview of the ‘incendiary’ remarks made by Jocelyn Chia:
“MH370 went missing after taking off from Kuala Lumpur in March 2014.
Despite a four-year search in the Indian Ocean, the main body of the plane was never found. All 239 people on board are presumed dead.
On Tuesday Malaysian national police chief Acryl Sani Abdullah Sani said an application was going to be filed with Interpol to get Ms Chia's "full identity" and "latest location".
The row began after she posted a clip of her recent stand-up set at Manhattan's Comedy Cellar venue.
It included a routine about the historic rivalry between Singapore and Malaysia, which were once briefly part of the same country.
Noting that Singapore had risen to be a "first-world country" while Malaysia remained "developing", she joked that Malaysian airplanes "cannot fly".
Ms Chia added:
"Malaysian Airlines going missing not funny huh? Some jokes don't land."
Conclusion: What some governmental officials consider as ‘a joke made in poor taste’ may seem deliciously witty to other listeners.
The real outrage ought to stem from the fact that the flight still appears to be shrouded in mystery. And the fact that the designated detectives and expert accident analysts still remain stumped for an explanation for the plane’s disappearance—almost ten years later.
Salon published a report that lists the most popular theories on flight MH370’s disappearance.
The primary plausible explanations are:
MH370 pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah flew a suicide route
"Tomnoders" believe the plane crashed in the South China Sea
MH370 was hijacked by three Russian passengers
MH370 was intercepted by two American AWACS
Salon’s expansion on #4 (above) reads thus:
MH370 was intercepted by two American AWACS
"MH370: The Plane That Disappeared" (Netflix)
“Florence De Changy, an author and investigative journalist, proposed that MH370 was interrupted by two US AWACS planes. MH370's cargo list noted that 2.5 tons of electronics, including lithium batteries, walkie-talkies, and accessories, were being carried in the plane. However, the cargo was loaded without being scanned, which caused De Changy to believe that it contained highly sensitive U.S. technology.”
“De Changy also learned that two US AWACS planes were spotted near MH370. The planes, De Changy said, must have asked Shah to land so they could inspect the cargo. But he refused to do so, thus prompting the AWACS to shoot down MH370 over the South China Sea.”
“There were a few naysayers to De Changy's theory, including adventurer Blaine Gibson, who found MH370 plane debris on La Reunion Island and in Mozambique. However, De Changy's theory reinforced Hendry's findings in the South China Sea.”
… Netflix is still streaming a documentary about the incident:
My thoughts— in consideration of DeChangy’s theory:
If there was military interest in cargo aboard flight MH370, I would presume that the proposed explanation of lithium batteries and walkie-talkies is a silly attempt to undermine any legitimate consideration of more valuable electronic tech that may have been useful to an enemy or adversary. In effect, a plausible 007/Bourne narrative seems more likely. Truth is still stranger than fiction.
In my wildest speculative ‘what if?’ frame of mind I might suggest that HAARP or DEW gear was aboard the plane—on the way to some island where a top-secret DARPA installation was being built.
Regardless of speculation, or call it: a plausible probability, whatever the reason for the plane’s disappearance may have been a military-related event. That’s not a big stretch of anyone’s imagination.
Which brings my attention to the question of the hubbub surrounding the Malaysian Government’s presumed outrage with regard to Chia’s jokes surrounding the mysterious disappearance of the plane. Why should this be a cause célèbre at all?
Unless the Malaysian government is in deep state waters and there is some reason why they hoped the public’s interest in the flight would disappear from the collective radar. Apparently, the families and friends of the missing passengers aren’t ready to forget about the loss of loved ones, and closure remains more important than the jokes made by a comedian. Meanwhile, the Malaysian government might possibly wish for folks to forget about the incident and drop the investigation altogether.
https://rumble.com/v2sua7o-bombshell-mel-gibson-about-to-expose-all-of-them-redacted-with-natali-and-c.html
Salon article link:
https://www.salon.com/2023/03/10/mh370-malaysia-plane-disappeared-netflix/