Talk:Tekkim Chemical Test Video

"Inscription" translation
The poster in the background says one or a few things repeatedly in different languages, including partial English, saying "Wind Isber Chemical Inscription." Chemical, we see what that means. Inscription ... not clear, signaling the type of outfit they are. Winds...yes, air that moves and carries chemicals, got it. Isber is mysterious. Does it mean mighty? A mighty wind chemical brigade? No relation to the mockumentary A Mighty Wind, I presume, if so. I found around "issber (let-hold on patiently [you*])", used in "so issber for your Lord's rule." Wind <-> Patient Chemical Group? That's all the time I have for that. --Caustic Logic (talk) 12:43, 7 December 2012 (UTC)


 * Off topic
 * Quote:
 * Oh a mighty winds a blowin', it's kickin' up the sand
 * It's blowin' out a message to every woman, child and man
 * Yes, a mighty winds a blowin' cross the land and cross the sea
 * It's blowin' peace and freedom, it's blowin' equality
 * Yes, it's blowin' peace and freedom, it's blowin' you and me


 * This Mighty Wind is definitely blowing from the East, slowly progressing from the high pressure system in central Eurasia. The current degeneration in weather is more Westerly, with its origin in the low pressure systems in the North Atlantic. -- Petri Krohn (talk)


 * Readers at Moon of Alabama have it largely figured out (see the comments). Kitaba (inscription) should be Katiba (brigade). Somehow Isber comes out as "furious" by one reader. But it seems unsure, compared to the good overall monologue transcription. The content of that both suggests (self-described, self-congratulatory) patience (only gassing the Alawites after negotiations), and it also makes it seem more realistic and thus quite possibly not a fake. --Caustic Logic (talk) 14:13, 7 December 2012 (UTC)

Original Upload
I don't know if it's possible to determine the exact time of a video upload on youtube, but right now when I look at their "Feed", the video Moon of Alabama said was uploaded "one hour before" the other they link says for me "uploaded two days ago", while the other one and the one from Syria Tribune both say "uploaded one day ago". So it seems that at least among those three uploaders, أحمد السوري was first, maybe around exactly two days ago. This is an account created on Oct 19th with only this video uploaded. The first action "a month ago" was to subscribe to the channel of MBC group, which is a Saudi mediagroup belonging to the "royal" family. --CE (talk) 19:22, 7 December 2012 (UTC)


 * Good work for a start. I didn't check the link he provided. That's an unusual account not likely to be an earlier picker-up of new things. Maybe the original. One month, no other videos. Subscriptions. Weird channel -rebel links at top (last). Arab lackey media 2nd. First, RT, Syrian loyalist media, and MBC group, not sure what that means. A loyalists who started real, tried to look rebel, posted this one video? Even if it's fake I support charges for the rabbits.Title/desc. ambiguous. As translated: "Look Who's Got the chemical in Syria / This is what the so-called criminals trying revolution do." Is he saying criminals, so-called criminals, clearly criminals, what? --Caustic Logic (talk) 23:07, 7 December 2012 (UTC)


 * I still don'tknow what to make of this posting/poster, nor whether it's the first-known, but left a Google-Arabic comment for the poster asking for more info. I'll try to keep an eye out for any response, but somehow I expect cryptic silence. --Caustic Logic (talk) 10:57, 8 December 2012 (UTC)


 * Yeah, should have mentioned that he also subscribed to the likes of RT. In general I agree with you that this is a bit too convenient and smells of "let's make the rebels look evil". Almost parody-like. Poor rabbits. --CE (talk) 11:16, 8 December 2012 (UTC)


 * That's how I'm leaning but not heavily. With all we've seen and learned, I can still see this being exactly the warning some cleric advising a Gulf financier mandated. It had to be sent to the targeted Alawites in advance, on CD Rom by snail mail (along with a note specifying it meant them, and giving a deadline), he said, but someone leaked it to Youtube, to this guy, someone with connections but little previous activity, (could be normal/non-rebel Syrian otherwise). Or ... it's a fake normal-Syrian-looking channel, not a hammed-up fake loyalist with too many holes to find, as the convenient host for the real warning they hope Alawites will take seriously enough. A simple fog machine might now clear a whole village in panic, and most of us will just presume it was all a hoax. And perhaps it was meant to fulfill that prophecy Obama heard some version of. Fascinating, serious stuff either way. --Caustic Logic (talk) 12:09, 8 December 2012 (UTC)


 * the one on SyriaTube, uploaded "an hour later", has higher quality, as MoA rightfully pointed out, so likely both are not the original upload. --CE (talk) 13:08, 8 December 2012 (UTC)

Sarin Simulation?
If anyone looks up or stumbles across the details (way of killing) of the poisons shown by name, the one(s) shown in action, and the "feared" government Sarin, please drop it here. Nerves are apparently attacked by both Sarin and whatever killed the bunnies. The question: could these be used to convincingly fake the exact thing the Obama regime has been predicting the government was preparing to do? --Caustic Logic (talk) 13:47, 7 December 2012 (UTC)

Location?
Is this in Syria or in Turkey? This article in the Turkish Newspaper Yurt says this happened in the eastern Turkish city of Gaziantep.

The laboratory glassware on the Bunsen burner is labeled Lamtek. It is distributed by the same Turkish company that sells Tekkim chemicals.

Is this a family kitchen or some school chemistry laboratory? I say kitchen, as there are some cooking utensils hanging from the wall.

An interesting clue appears at 1:20. The cabinet above the sink appears to be a dish draining closet (Finnish: astiankuivauskaappi). This piece of kitchen furniture is known as a Finnish innovation from the 1940s. It is generally unknown in the West, and fast loosing its utility with the adaption of dishwashers. It would be highly useful in less developed countries, like Turkey and Syria. I do not know if it has been adopted in either one. -- Petri Krohn (talk) 01:47, 8 December 2012 (UTC)
 * Great addition, thanks. I would just call it some kind of cabinet. That and the polished furniture suggests a cosmopolitan, upper-class home - something really swank with Finnish touches and such when the older person living there had it commissioned some decades ago. Somewhere not yet ravaged by rebel assaults and gov. responses. Turkey really seems more likely than not even before seeing so much Turkish stuff which, more than the whole home decor, couldjust be planted anywhere. --Caustic Logic (talk) 12:09, 8 December 2012 (UTC)


 * I think the pattern on the cloths the chemicals are on, especially the one in the beginning, don't look oriental at all, more like something you can buy at IKEA. There are electrical installations seen 1:20-1:25, right from the sink and at the wall on the other side of the door. Those look quite developed, i'd say, although I can't even determine if they're light switches or wall outlets. But not something i'd expect in rural Syria or Turkey. --CE (talk) 12:58, 8 December 2012 (UTC)

Chemical Catalog
Sporadic notes: 0:18 - 1:00 in the video: potassium chlorate (not chloride) -1 kg containers, implied by grouping, 19 of them in rows of five then four. On top (3:43), three kg bottles: Ammonium Nitrate, Urea, Magnesium Nitrate(?) To the right three more, only front one visible, not clear. On top of those, the lone bottle of brown fluid, much smaller size, label not readable. Two more kg bottles to the right, then three big containers, some liters each (?), of ammonia.