George Webb: Unveiling the Secret (Service?) of Trump's Near Assassination

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George Webb doesn’t mince words when he discusses the significance of recent events: "You can't compare this to the Kennedy assassination or even Reagan," he asserts. What’s unfolding now rivals the gravitas of Caesar’s assassination, with the very fabric of democratic governance hanging in the balance. Despite the presence of thirty thousand attendees, armed with 30-megapixel cameras, we are left piecing together grainy images and fragmented timelines, as if the truth itself is deliberately obscured.
"If you want to see the dark hand, you have to wait for these events," Webb continues. He sees these assassination attempts as a "live study, a live autopsy" of how the deep state operates. The FBI had long known about Crooks, a sniper who frequented shooting ranges, preparing for something far more sinister than a hunting trip. "We had 700 messages over that four or five-year period," Webb recounts, messages that detailed bomb-making, detonators, and potential targets, including former President Trump.
Yet, despite the evidence, a veil of negligence—willful, according to Webb—clouds the investigation. "What part of, 'Hey, I should collect a group of people around the Pittsburgh area that are a threat to Trump' do you not understand?" Webb asks, incredulous at the lack of action. "The last thing I would do is leave anything uncovered," he continues, highlighting the glaring absence of precaution in a situation where the stakes couldn't be higher.
The most damning evidence of this negligence comes from the Special Agent in Charge, Rojek, who revealed that Crooks had been on the roof from 6:05 to 6:11 PM, precisely when Trump took the stage. Yet, "they all say they went to a vending machine," Webb notes, incredulous. "That’s the one time you don’t want to go to the vending machine."
As the story unfolds, Webb paints a picture of a security apparatus not just asleep at the wheel, but perhaps complicit in its dereliction. "This isn't one person leaving their post; this is six people simultaneously leaving," he points out, drawing a chilling parallel to John Wilkes Booth and the lone guard who left Lincoln vulnerable. The involvement of Maxwell Yearick and his possible accomplice Kennan Hooper raises even more questions. "Yearick has been on the FBI's watch list, but he’s nowhere to be found since the Trump assassination," Webb notes, suggesting that the dark hand behind these events may extend further than anyone has yet acknowledged.
In the end, the real question isn't just about who pulled the trigger, but who allowed it to happen. "Any one person could have stopped the whole assassination," Webb concludes, laying bare the unsettling truth that sometimes, the most dangerous conspiracies are the ones hiding in plain sight.
Webb’s work as a citizen journalist underscores the critical role independent voices play in uncovering the truth. In an age where mainstream narratives often obscure rather than illuminate, it’s the tireless efforts of individuals like Webb who bring hidden details to light. This mirrors my own experience with the Zika virus, where I spent nearly a year researching the phenomenon. Like Webb, I found that what the public was told didn’t quite match the reality. In my book Overturning Zika, I expose how fear was engineered to serve larger agendas.
Who uncovers the truth these days? Often, it’s those who refuse to accept the official story, who dig deeper, and who, like Webb, are willing to challenge the status quo.

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