claviger
2018-07-02 01:05:02 UTC
A disgrunteled ex-serviceman decides to become an urban
sniper to pick off any politicians he disapproves of, Democrat
or Republican. On that list is a US President, UN Ambassador,
former Vice President, and a local political personalty who is
belligerent and outspoken. All of them antiCastro.
The volunteer sniper decides to start at the bottom and work
his way up. The first attempt is a fluke miss on General Walker.
Next in line is Nixon or Stevenson. Then the most important
target comes to the sniper, who works in a building on the
downtown parade route.
The sniper is using a cheap rifle but at close range a deadly
weapon. The only question is will there be too many people
watching from every floor of the building? At the last minute
one employee leaves the 6th floor and the sniper now has the
opportunity to fire a shot at two political enemies riding in an
open vehicle.
The amateurs sniper fires the first shot using a defective scope
and misses badly. He instinctively fires another shot using the
fixed sight he trained on in the military. The second shot seems
to have no effect because the President is still sitting erect. The
sniper fires a third shot and sees the head explode. He exults in
the view and the damage he inflicted on the human target, then
hides the rifle and goes into patsy mode.
He is lucky an inexperienced police officer doesn't know what
to do with him in the lunchroom. Finally he leaves the building
and makes it all the way home. Amed with a pistol he relocates
to a movie theater but on the way is stopped by another police
officer. He panics and fires 4 shots into this unwary policeman
and continues to a commercial area and then hides in a movie
theater where he is arrested after a scuffle.
All that's left is pretend to be a patsy and see what happens.
The bad news is he is a suspect but the good news he's the
center of attention on a worldwide stage. Win or lose he will
be in the spotlight again just like in NO, but with a much larger
audience. This should be exciting messing with all the powers
that be.
sniper to pick off any politicians he disapproves of, Democrat
or Republican. On that list is a US President, UN Ambassador,
former Vice President, and a local political personalty who is
belligerent and outspoken. All of them antiCastro.
The volunteer sniper decides to start at the bottom and work
his way up. The first attempt is a fluke miss on General Walker.
Next in line is Nixon or Stevenson. Then the most important
target comes to the sniper, who works in a building on the
downtown parade route.
The sniper is using a cheap rifle but at close range a deadly
weapon. The only question is will there be too many people
watching from every floor of the building? At the last minute
one employee leaves the 6th floor and the sniper now has the
opportunity to fire a shot at two political enemies riding in an
open vehicle.
The amateurs sniper fires the first shot using a defective scope
and misses badly. He instinctively fires another shot using the
fixed sight he trained on in the military. The second shot seems
to have no effect because the President is still sitting erect. The
sniper fires a third shot and sees the head explode. He exults in
the view and the damage he inflicted on the human target, then
hides the rifle and goes into patsy mode.
He is lucky an inexperienced police officer doesn't know what
to do with him in the lunchroom. Finally he leaves the building
and makes it all the way home. Amed with a pistol he relocates
to a movie theater but on the way is stopped by another police
officer. He panics and fires 4 shots into this unwary policeman
and continues to a commercial area and then hides in a movie
theater where he is arrested after a scuffle.
All that's left is pretend to be a patsy and see what happens.
The bad news is he is a suspect but the good news he's the
center of attention on a worldwide stage. Win or lose he will
be in the spotlight again just like in NO, but with a much larger
audience. This should be exciting messing with all the powers
that be.