To answer the tweet, it’s obvious - he drops his weapon and backs off - to reload it! He’s taking shotgun shells out of the bag.Good point, unless they are divorced or separated or not in good terms. The video footage is somewhat confusing. Here is one video on that line.
Also, for reference he’s not looking at those men. He‘s firing/looking this way:
When adrenaline is flowing, you loose peripheral vision. He probably doesn’t see the men until firing his last shot. He may spot them, but he’s simply reloading. His movement are most likely unrelated to those men.
People do weird things. They don’t believe their eyes.There’s a lot of odd things there:
- the guy in a white shirt and black cap is completely unconcerned that there’s a gun pointing at his general direction. That’s not normal.
Do we know he can see dead or injured people? Do we know he can hear (he is old) or knows what gunshots sound like?
Do we know then that when he points he is even aware of the danger?
Or maybe he is brave and knows and points anyway.
The shooter is most likely looking back at his son on the bridge. Also checking where cops are.- that man points at something and the shooter appears to follows his lead. That’s strange.
His son on the bridge. He’s reloading his weapon. You can see him taking shotgun shells out of his bag.- the shooter immediately turns around, looks at something behind and slightly above him and lowers his weapon
It looks like a top loading shotgun. All he needs to do is slide some more shells in.- then looking down it’s looks like he also reaches for something in his belt bag (not clear what). Could he be reloading? Why point an unloaded gun when out of ammo?
Any „pointing“ of the weapon at this point is to make reloading easier.
His son was on the bridge where he was looking.- he then looks up as if something is now directly above him and higher than before. Was that a drone? Was he having a hallucination? If he was under “mind control was the pointing a type of signal? Not saying there’s clear evidence of this take
If you watch the video of the son on the bridge you’ll see him wave away approaching people. They where deliberately shooting the people in that park, and not random Australians. With the exception being anyone who tries to stop them.- right after that happens, the shooter (the father of the guy on the bridge) gets jumped on by the another man in a white shirt (but no cap) who takes his gun. That is the claimed “hero” (not saying he was a plant but open to the possibility)
- right after that the hero scene, the man with the black cap that pointed before is captured running towards the father/ shooter and throwing something at him. He puts himself directly in the line of fire again from the son but is still unconcerned. Again very odd.
It’s likely that these men that attacked the shooter where full of adrenaline and having tunnel vision. Did they know their was another shooter on the bridge? Maybe or maybe not. Maybe their desire to stop this was greater than a sense of personal safety (the definition of heroism).
To me it looks like he runs away and is shot when he breaks cover from the tree. You can see the jerk of his body/head as he is struck.- later it appears that both men in white shirts are shot. The one with the black cap stumbles away presumably in shock from an initial shot and then another perhaps another to his leg when he falls.
Fear? Panic?- But again, he was behind a tree and if shot there with some cover why stumble out where there is no cover and risk more likely getting shot again?
He looks to be shot in the arm before running.
People react instinctively without thinking in such high adrenaline situations. That’s why they do earthquake drills so it’s automatic when the real one and real fear hits.
Did you know that in a building fire some people run towards the fire - even if they can do nothing about it. They are not thinking.
He seemed quite calm and calculated to me. Perhaps that level of deliberate mass murder is why it „doesn’t feel right“?There’s always the he is “not all there” explanation but either way something is not quite right.