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Las Vegas Biolab Raid Fuels Israel Iran Panic - False Flag Talk Starts

Las Vegas Biolab Raid Fuels Israel Iran Panic - False Flag Talk Starts

Kernow Damo · Damien Willey

February 8, 202613m 29s

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Show Notes

A Las Vegas biolab raid has played into Israel Iran commentary as false flag talk starts after an FBI evidence seizure - but is there anything in it? Right, so Las Vegas police have hit a house and come out using the only two words that can turn an American audience into putty overnight: “possible biolab”. Over a thousand pieces of evidence seized, samples flown out for federal testing, and the name on the paperwork is Ori Salomon, carrying an Israeli passport and a French one, with firearms listed in the court documents including an Israeli-made rifle. Now, nobody has to prove “Iran” for “Iran” to get shoved into the headline, because the Israel–Iran drumbeat has already been running hot, with the usual pro-Israel propagandists pumping “terror cells” chat and trying to pre-frame the next escalation. So when you suddenly get an Israeli-linked garage lab story, wrapped in biohazard language, with a federal aircraft and a specialist bioforensics lab, in the current climate, that frame is an easy jump people are already making. So this is about the believability of the frame, the ingredients on the record, the history that makes “false flag” a real word, and why this kind of headline can be used to shove Iran into the frame before anyone knows what was in the vials. Right, so a man called Ori Salomon has been arrested in Las Vegas after police and federal agents raided a house and described what they found as a “possible biological laboratory” inside a residential property, with more than a thousand samples collected and sent off for testing. That single phrase, “possible biological laboratory”, is the whole story’s first weapon, because it forces the public to picture the worst thing they can picture before a single test result has been shown to anyone outside the investigation, and once that picture is in your head it doesn’t politely leave just because the final explanation turns out to be mundane.