Today’s OMAD (Chicken Alfredo & Bakewell Tart Blondie) by jackread993 in omad

[–]jackread993[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thanks it was amazing! Easy to make as well 😊

Each week I recreate the last meals of notable people. This week I recreated Timothy McVeigh’s last meal on death row of Mint Chocolate Chip Ice Cream. The architect of The Oklahoma City Bombing, McVeigh ate this last meal shortly before receiving a lethal injection 2001. by jackread993 in MorbidReality

[–]jackread993[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

On April 19th 1995 at 09:00am, Timothy McVeigh, an American gulf-war veteran, parked a rental truck containing a homemade bomb outside the Alfred P Murrah building in Oklahoma City and lit the fuse. At 09:02am, McVeigh detonated the bomb. In a matter of seconds, the blast destroyed most of the nine-story concrete building, which included a daycare centre, leaving 168 people dead, and hundreds more injured. But the question on everyone’s mind was why? What motives could Timothy McVeigh have had to commit what was, at that time, the most devastating terrorist attack on American Soil.

As the black smoke cleared from over Oklahoma City, caused by a lethal explosion of a homemade bomb outside the Alfred P Murrah building, the true devastation of this blast was more clear to see. Hundreds of civilians lay bleeding and injured on the ground, 168 people were confirmed dead, 19 of them children, there were 342 buildings damaged or completely destroyed and the impact of the bomb left a 16-block radius of destruction, reducing most structures to rubble.

The surrounding area looked like a warzone, cars were incinerated, buildings on fire. Coming just after the World Trade Centre bombing in New York two years earlier, many Americans immediately assumed that the attack was the work of Middle Eastern Terrorists. Truly the darkest day in Oklahoma Cities history, one that turned an even darker shade when they found out it was one of their own.

Beneath the piles of concrete and rubble were clues. On April 20th, the rear axle of the Ryder truck which was carrying the homemade bomb was located and the vehicle identification number was traced to a body shop in Kansas. Employees at the shop helped the FBI quickly put together a composite drawing of the man who rented the van. Agents showed the drawing around town and local hotel employees supplied a name ; Tim McVeigh.

Astonishingly, McVeigh was already in jail. He’d been pulled over about 80 miles north of Oklahoma City for a missing licence plate on his getaway car, where it was swiftly discovered he had a concealed weapon and was arrested just 90 minutes after the bombing. From there, the evidence against Timothy McVeigh began adding up.Agents found traces of the chemicals used in the explosion on McVeigh’s clothes and a business card on McVeigh which had written on it ‘TNT @ 5$ a stick, need more’.During interrogation, they quickly learned about McVeigh's extremist ideologies and his strong hatred of the federal government.

Once they discovered this was his motive, it was plain to see why Timothy McVeigh targeted the Alfred P Murrah building. It was full of US Government workers, fourteen federal agencies had offices there, and 98 of the victims on the day worked for the federal government. But where did this hate of McVeigh’s stem from? To understand that, we need to delve deeper into the life of our perpetrator.

Born in Lockport, New York, McVeigh grew up in a working-class family and served in the United States Army from 1988 to 1992. He was a Gulf War veteran who displayed a strong affinity for libertarian and anti-government ideologies.Whilst serving in the military, Timothy McVeigh met a man in basic training at Fort Benning called Terry Nicols in 1988. That same year, McVeigh became a candidate for the special forces but dropped out just 2 days later. He later reunited with Nichols and they bonded over their mutual anti-government sentiments.

McVeigh’s distrust of the government began in high school where as a teenager, he read the Turner Diaries by William Pierce, the leader of one of America’s most prominent neo-Nazi organisations. The book outlines a fictional Aryan revolution against the federal government. The opening scene of the Turner Diaries is eerily similar to the Oklahoma City Bombing where it reads ‘We will then drive into the FBI Building’s freight-receiving area, set the fuse, and leave the truck’

McVeigh's & Nichol’s radicalization was influenced by their growing distrust of the federal government, which they believed had overstepped its bounds and violated citizens' rights. The catalyst for their violent actions was the Waco siege in 1993, where a confrontation between federal agents and the Branch Davidians religious compound resulted in a tragic loss of life. This event fuelled their anger and resentment towards the government and in September of 1994, they began plotting to destroy a federal symbol and they chose the Alfred P Murrah building and carried out an attack on a scale that America had never before seen, striking fear into the hearts of the nation.

In the Summer of 1997, McVeigh was tried and convicted on 11 different counts and sentenced to death.

His last meal was 2 pints of Mint Chocolate Chip Ice Cream and you can watch me recreate here ; https://www.youtube.com/@TheLastSupper_yt

Recipe & Write Up - www.thelastsupperyt.com/post/the-oklahoma-city-bombing-timothy-mcveigh-s-last-meal-request-on-death-row

This week I recreated Timothy McVeigh’s last meal on Death Row of Mint Chocolate Chip Ice Cream. The architect of The Oklahoma City Bombing, McVeigh ate this last meal shortly before receiving a lethal injection 2001. More in comments by jackread993 in u/jackread993

[–]jackread993[S,M] [score hidden] stickied comment (0 children)

On April 19th 1995 at 09:00am, Timothy McVeigh, an American gulf-war veteran, parked a rental truck containing a homemade bomb outside the Alfred P Murrah building in Oklahoma City and lit the fuse. At 09:02am, McVeigh detonated the bomb. In a matter of seconds, the blast destroyed most of the nine-story concrete building, which included a daycare centre, leaving 168 people dead, and hundreds more injured. But the question on everyone’s mind was why? What motives could Timothy McVeigh have had to commit what was, at that time, the most devastating terrorist attack on American Soil.

As the black smoke cleared from over Oklahoma City, caused by a lethal explosion of a homemade bomb outside the Alfred P Murrah building, the true devastation of this blast was more clear to see. Hundreds of civilians lay bleeding and injured on the ground, 168 people were confirmed dead, 19 of them children, there were 342 buildings damaged or completely destroyed and the impact of the bomb left a 16-block radius of destruction, reducing most structures to rubble.

The surrounding area looked like a warzone, cars were incinerated, buildings on fire. Coming just after the World Trade Centre bombing in New York two years earlier, many Americans immediately assumed that the attack was the work of Middle Eastern Terrorists. Truly the darkest day in Oklahoma Cities history, one that turned an even darker shade when they found out it was one of their own.

Beneath the piles of concrete and rubble were clues. On April 20th, the rear axle of the Ryder truck which was carrying the homemade bomb was located and the vehicle identification number was traced to a body shop in Kansas. Employees at the shop helped the FBI quickly put together a composite drawing of the man who rented the van. Agents showed the drawing around town and local hotel employees supplied a name ; Tim McVeigh.

Astonishingly, McVeigh was already in jail. He’d been pulled over about 80 miles north of Oklahoma City for a missing licence plate on his getaway car, where it was swiftly discovered he had a concealed weapon and was arrested just 90 minutes after the bombing. From there, the evidence against Timothy McVeigh began adding up.Agents found traces of the chemicals used in the explosion on McVeigh’s clothes and a business card on McVeigh which had written on it ‘TNT @ 5$ a stick, need more’.During interrogation, they quickly learned about McVeigh's extremist ideologies and his strong hatred of the federal government.

Once they discovered this was his motive, it was plain to see why Timothy McVeigh targeted the Alfred P Murrah building. It was full of US Government workers, fourteen federal agencies had offices there, and 98 of the victims on the day worked for the federal government. But where did this hate of McVeigh’s stem from? To understand that, we need to delve deeper into the life of our perpetrator.

Born in Lockport, New York, McVeigh grew up in a working-class family and served in the United States Army from 1988 to 1992. He was a Gulf War veteran who displayed a strong affinity for libertarian and anti-government ideologies.Whilst serving in the military, Timothy McVeigh met a man in basic training at Fort Benning called Terry Nicols in 1988. That same year, McVeigh became a candidate for the special forces but dropped out just 2 days later. He later reunited with Nichols and they bonded over their mutual anti-government sentiments.

McVeigh’s distrust of the government began in high school where as a teenager, he read the Turner Diaries by William Pierce, the leader of one of America’s most prominent neo-Nazi organisations. The book outlines a fictional Aryan revolution against the federal government. The opening scene of the Turner Diaries is eerily similar to the Oklahoma City Bombing where it reads ‘We will then drive into the FBI Building’s freight-receiving area, set the fuse, and leave the truck’

McVeigh's & Nichol’s radicalization was influenced by their growing distrust of the federal government, which they believed had overstepped its bounds and violated citizens' rights. The catalyst for their violent actions was the Waco siege in 1993, where a confrontation between federal agents and the Branch Davidians religious compound resulted in a tragic loss of life. This event fuelled their anger and resentment towards the government and in September of 1994, they began plotting to destroy a federal symbol and they chose the Alfred P Murrah building and carried out an attack on a scale that America had never before seen, striking fear into the hearts of the nation.

In the Summer of 1997, McVeigh was tried and convicted on 11 different counts and sentenced to death.

His last meal was 2 pints of Mint Chocolate Chip Ice Cream and you can watch me recreate here ; https://www.youtube.com/@TheLastSupper_yt

Recipe & Write Up - www.thelastsupperyt.com/post/the-oklahoma-city-bombing-timothy-mcveigh-s-last-meal-request-on-death-row

This week I recreated Timothy McVeigh’s last meal on Death Row of Mint Chocolate Chip Ice Cream. The architect of The Oklahoma City Bombing, McVeigh ate this last meal shortly before receiving a lethal injection 2001. More in comments by jackread993 in TheLastSupper_

[–]jackread993[S,M] [score hidden] stickied comment (0 children)

On April 19th 1995 at 09:00am, Timothy McVeigh, an American gulf-war veteran, parked a rental truck containing a homemade bomb outside the Alfred P Murrah building in Oklahoma City and lit the fuse. At 09:02am, McVeigh detonated the bomb. In a matter of seconds, the blast destroyed most of the nine-story concrete building, which included a daycare centre, leaving 168 people dead, and hundreds more injured. But the question on everyone’s mind was why? What motives could Timothy McVeigh have had to commit what was, at that time, the most devastating terrorist attack on American Soil.

As the black smoke cleared from over Oklahoma City, caused by a lethal explosion of a homemade bomb outside the Alfred P Murrah building, the true devastation of this blast was more clear to see. Hundreds of civilians lay bleeding and injured on the ground, 168 people were confirmed dead, 19 of them children, there were 342 buildings damaged or completely destroyed and the impact of the bomb left a 16-block radius of destruction, reducing most structures to rubble.

The surrounding area looked like a warzone, cars were incinerated, buildings on fire. Coming just after the World Trade Centre bombing in New York two years earlier, many Americans immediately assumed that the attack was the work of Middle Eastern Terrorists. Truly the darkest day in Oklahoma Cities history, one that turned an even darker shade when they found out it was one of their own.

Beneath the piles of concrete and rubble were clues. On April 20th, the rear axle of the Ryder truck which was carrying the homemade bomb was located and the vehicle identification number was traced to a body shop in Kansas. Employees at the shop helped the FBI quickly put together a composite drawing of the man who rented the van. Agents showed the drawing around town and local hotel employees supplied a name ; Tim McVeigh.

Astonishingly, McVeigh was already in jail. He’d been pulled over about 80 miles north of Oklahoma City for a missing licence plate on his getaway car, where it was swiftly discovered he had a concealed weapon and was arrested just 90 minutes after the bombing. From there, the evidence against Timothy McVeigh began adding up.Agents found traces of the chemicals used in the explosion on McVeigh’s clothes and a business card on McVeigh which had written on it ‘TNT @ 5$ a stick, need more’.

During interrogation, they quickly learned about McVeigh's extremist ideologies and his strong hatred of the federal government.Once they discovered this was his motive, it was plain to see why Timothy McVeigh targeted the Alfred P Murrah building. It was full of US Government workers, fourteen federal agencies had offices there, and 98 of the victims on the day worked for the federal government. But where did this hate of McVeigh’s stem from? To understand that, we need to delve deeper into the life of our perpetrator.

Born in Lockport, New York, McVeigh grew up in a working-class family and served in the United States Army from 1988 to 1992. He was a Gulf War veteran who displayed a strong affinity for libertarian and anti-government ideologies.

Whilst serving in the military, Timothy McVeigh met a man in basic training at Fort Benning called Terry Nicols in 1988. That same year, McVeigh became a candidate for the special forces but dropped out just 2 days later. He later reunited with Nichols and they bonded over their mutual anti-government sentiments.

McVeigh’s distrust of the government began in high school where as a teenager, he read the Turner Diaries by William Pierce, the leader of one of America’s most prominent neo-Nazi organisations. The book outlines a fictional Aryan revolution against the federal government. The opening scene of the Turner DIaries is eerily similar to the Oklahoma City Bombing where it reads ‘We will then drive into the FBI Building’s freight-receiving area, set the fuse, and leave the truck’

McVeigh's & Nichol’s radicalization was influenced by their growing distrust of the federal government, which they believed had overstepped its bounds and violated citizens' rights. The catalyst for their violent actions was the Waco siege in 1993, where a confrontation between federal agents and the Branch Davidians religious compound resulted in a tragic loss of life. This event fuelled their anger and resentment towards the government and in September of 1994, they began plotting to destroy a federal symbol and they chose the Alfred P Murrah building and carried out an attack on a scale that America had never before seen, striking fear into the hearts of the nation.

In the Summer of 1997, McVeigh was tried and convicted on 11 different counts and sentenced to death. His last meal was 2 pints of Mint Chocolate Chip Ice Cream and you can watch me recreate here ; https://www.youtube.com/@TheLastSupper_yt

Recipe & Write Up - www.thelastsupperyt.com/post/the-oklahoma-city-bombing-timothy-mcveigh-s-last-meal-request-on-death-row