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Thomas C. Mountain

ASMARA, Eritrea -- I first wrote about the assassination of American Rap Music superstar Tupak Shakur almost a decade ago. At the time I used the title “The Hand of The Man in Tupak’s Assassination” and I use the term “assassination” for good reason.
Tupak was gunned down on the Las Vegas Strip in front of the mega gambling casino Circus Circus after a Mike Tyson boxing match. Hundreds of people witnessed the killing and it had to have been captured on multiple CCTV (close circuit television) systems used to monitor the front of the hotel. The killers had to have arrived and departed from the scene of the crime via the main thoroughfare, The Strip, and were certainly recorded doing so on dozens if not hundreds of other CCTV systems. -Yet to this day, well over a decade later, law enforcement claims they have no idea who committed this crime. No photos extracted from the multiple video cameras that recorded the assassination, not even the license plate number of the killer’s vehicle.
It is so obvious that a cover up has taken place that even black American superstar comedian and actor Chris Rock raised this in one of his HBO comedy specials.
While Chris Rock may not consider Tupac’s killing an assassination, all one needs to do is watch the documentary made about Tupac’s life to understand how Tupac’s message to the youth of America, and the world, was something that was not going to be tolerated by those in the highest levels of law enforcement.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in the USA has a long history of targeting black American political activists, amongst others, and through the notorious “COINTELPRO” program, law enforcement death squads assassinated hundreds of black, Latino and American Indian activists during the 1960s and 70s.
After viewing the documentary on Tupak Shakur’s life, it becomes quickly apparent that Tupak met the profile for law enforcement “neutralization.”
Tupak stood for everything the FBI is known to hate. His mantra of living the “Thug Life,” with its portrayal of the American Dream as the American Nightmare for black American and Latino youth, with a militant disrespect for law enforcement along with almost all aspects of the American elite had not only sunk deep roots amongst minority youth but had been taken up by millions of white American youth (the majority of rap music is actually bought by white kids of all demographics).
Tupac was not only talented but very charismatic and had begun a career in Hollywood. His revolutionary message, though mixed with the decadent lifestyle all too often part of the celebrity scene in Western society, was undeniable, and it was clear that Tupak was not about to kneel down and apologize for earlier “indiscretions” a la Ice Cube and Ice T, i.e., “Cop Killer” and “F*** the Police.”
If Tupak were still alive today, he would be more influential amongst the youth of the USA, and internationally, than Barak Obama. Whether he would have fallen for the Obamarama “change we can believe in” scam is a good question. But what is clear is that the FBI and its law enforcement network was not about to take that chance.
For law enforcement in the USA to confiscate multiple video evidence of the murder of a prominent black celebrity, and then say they have “no suspects” when they actually have images of the killers of Tupak Shakur means only one thing, that law enforcement must have been involved in the killing.
Tupak Shakur was assassinated, the US government had to be involved at the highest levels and we should add Tupak Shakur’s name to the long, bloody list of those murdered by the FBI and its minions in law enforcement.
Stay tuned to Online Journal for news and views that the so called “free press in the West” will never cover.
Thomas C. Mountain, the last white man living in Eritrea, was in a former life, educator, activist and alternative medicine practitioner in the USA. Email thomascmountain at yahoo.com.
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Source: http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/article_5266.shtml