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INVESTIGATION: Do These Photos Of George W. Bush With Harambe’s Mother Prove Beloved Gorilla’s Death Was An Inside Job?

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We all want answers as to why Harambe the gorilla was needlessly executed at the Cincinnati Zoo on May 28, 2016, a date that will live in infamy. With so much heartache and grief even months after the tragedy, we try to pull ourselves together and attempt to maintain a somewhat normal everyday life. But there are still so many questions about the fallen gorilla. Hopefully, this latest development will point us to the real reason that Harambe the almighty was gunned down in cold blood.

In July of 1996, then-Governor George W. Bush visited the Gladys Porter Zoo in Brownsville, Texas. There he seemingly has a great time with two young Western Lowland Gorillas, Martha and Kayla.


Does Kayla look familiar? That’s right, Kayla is the mother of Harambe.



Does this new development of a relationship with Harambe’s mother exonerate the accusations that George Bush was somehow behind the death of the beloved gorilla?


Or does it only place more culpability on George W. Bush for the untimely death of Harambe? Did Bush have a falling out with Harambe’s mother and put a bounty on Kayla and her family?

George W. Bush became President of the United States on January 20, 2001.

Nearly exactly one year after Bush came into power, members of Harambe’s family started mysteriously dying.

On January 6, 2002, three gorillas died at the Gladys Porter Zoo after chlorine tablets “accidentally” became wet, creating toxic fumes. One of them was Kayla, Harambe’s mother. Kayla was only 10-years-old when she was prematurely taken from us. Kayla’s 1-year-old son Makoko, who is Harambe’s only one full sibling, also died in the “accident.”

Harambe had a half-brother named Caesar, who was the son of Mary and Moja. Caesar was born on June 26, 1999. Only a few weeks before Caeser’s 3rd birthday he died at the Gladys Porter Zoo in Texas from the “effects of chlorine gas poisoning from January.”

It’s rather strange or coincidental, that three of the four gorillas that perished in the 2002 chlorine poisoning incident were related to Harambe, yet the other seven gorillas in the gorilla habitat where the 100-gallon drum of calcium hypochlorite leaked lived suffered only “sore throats” and went on to have healthy lives.

Harambe had a half-sister named Pearl, named that because she was born on Pearl Harbor Day in December. At the tender age of only two months, Pearl died at the Gladys Porter Zoo in Texas from an “intestinal infection,” zoo officials claimed.

“She fought really hard, but she just didn’t make it,” General Curator Jerry Stones said in a statement. “It happened rather quickly. It was almost as if someone had turned off the switch.”

Was Pearl a target of an early assassination attempt when she was just born:

Two weeks after her birth, Pearls arm was broken in a fight between her mother and aunts, Kayla and Mary. The sibling fight had to be physically stopped by Stones, who is reportedly seen as an authority figure by the young and female gorillas. Pearls broken arm had since healed and wasn’t related to her death.

Harambe had another half-brother, but the unnamed baby died after a miscarriage.

Harambe lived at the Gladys Porter Zoo until he was moved to the Cincinnati Zoo on September 18, 2014. Is it a coincidence that George W. Bush signed the Authorization for Use of Military Force EXACTLY twelve years earlier to the date? Did Bush think that Harambe was a terrorist? Was the killing of Harambe a false flag operation? Did the Saudis, who have much influence over GWB, have Bush take out Harambe to lessen mounting suspicions that Saudi Arabia was involved in the 9/11 attacks?

We just want answers.

You can see more photos of Kayla, Harambe’s siblings, and even adorable baby Harambe over at Riosmith.


Heroes are remembered, but a legend never dies.

#DicksOutForHarambe

[Esquire]

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