Thursday 1 March 2012

CONSPIRACIES// TUPAC SHAKUR

Absolutely tons on this, '7 day theory', adding numbers and dates up that equate to the same number e.g. 





7 Day Theory


The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory.
What is with all the number 7's?

This album was released around the time of Tupac Shakur's death. The number 7 keeps appearing?

Tupac's album All Eyes on Me was released on Feb.13, 1996. Tupac "died" on Sept.13, 1996. It is quite a coincidence that the two dates are exactly 7 months apart.

He was shot on September 7th and survived on 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th, 12th, and died the 13th. (7 Days)
His time of death, 4:03, adds up to 7 (4 + 3 = 7).
Tupac's birthday is June 16th. 1+6=7
Intro to the DK 7 day theory there are 7 gunshots going off at the start of the song.

The first CD after his death has no mention of anything about his death such as RIP Tupac 1971-1996? Wouldn't it make sense to have this in the cd jacket somewhere instead of EXIT TUPAC ENTER MAKAVELI?

The only witness who was going to step up and ID the shooter was Kadafi (Yafeu Fula) but he was shot a few months after Tupac.

In the first three seconds of The 7 Day Theory, the words "Suge shot me" are spoken very softly. It is certainly is suspicious and it must mean something.

In the movie Gridlock the scene in the dinner when they show the menu board for a brief moment notice all the L's in the menu have been replaced with the number 7.

In the movie Gang Related with Jim Belushi:
Pac and Belushi wait in room 7 in the movie.
The bum they found has been missing for 7 years.
Tupac's badge number is 115. 1+1+5=7.

On the back of Cathy Scott's book "the killing of Tupac Shakur" there are 7 bullet holes.

There are 7 members of the outlawz.
Napolean,Mussolini aka Big Syke,Kastro,Kadafi,E.D.I Amin,Komani aka Mopreme,Hussein Fatal
Outlawz= Operating Under Thug Lawz As Warriorz

2Pac's double album entitled "R U Still Downwas released on November 25th. 2 + 5 = 7.

The cross on Tupac's back "Exodus 16:31." "So the people rested on the seventh day." All of Exodus 16 deals with the 7 days.

When the album Better Dayz appeared in November of 2002, many music critics noted that Tupac had released more albums since his death (seven) than many of the nation's top living artists
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TOP 5 TUPAC SHAKUR DEATH CONSPIRACY THEORIES

1) Posthumous albums pointing to death
Tupac Shakur released more albums after his death then he did during his short-lived career. But of all his posthumous work, his first release would prove the most controversial.
Makaveli: Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory was released just two months after the rapper’s death, and the seemingly bizarre title soon became a wet dream for conspiracy theorists. It referenced Italian philosopher Niccolò Machiavelli who wrote about faking one’s own death in the book Art Of War.
Tupac is said to have read the works of Niccolò Machiavelli, including Art Of War, extensively while in jail in 1995 and many took the reference as a sign that Tupac had faked his death and would once again return. The title also references the number seven, a numeral that would later become synonymous with the late-rapper (but more on that later).  
2) Lyrics pointing to his death
Since the late-rapper’s death in 1996, fanatic fans have scoured through his back catalogue and posthumous albums searching for lyrics predicting his death or hinting at his resurrection.
Similar to crazed Beatles fans sifting through the band’s extensive catalogue of work for subliminal messages and secret truths, many Tupac believers found what they believed to be signs of Tupac's ressurection.
Among the popular lyrics believed to point to his resurrection are:
‘Ain't Hard 2 Find’ from the 1996 album All Eyes on Me.
“I heard a rumour I died, murdered in cold blood dramatised
Pictures of me in my final stage you know Mama cried
But that was fiction, some coward got the story twisted
Like I no longer existed, mysteriously missing”.
‘Blasphemy’ from the album Makaveli: Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory.
“I'm contemplating plots wondering which door to go
Brothers getting shot, coming back resurrected”.
3) Obsession with the number seven
The number seven is considered a highly spiritual number in many religious texts including the Torah. Whether 'Pac fans read that religious text or not, many have taken on the number’s spiritual association in the rapper’s life as pointing to his resurrection and given him a Christ-like quality.
Among the supposed references in Tupac's life to the number seven are:
- Tupac supposedly died at 4:03pm in Las Vegas in September 13, 1996. A simple addition of the three numbers that make up the time give the equation: 4+0+3= 7. Mathematically correct? Yes. Relevant to his death and supposed ressurection? Perhaps not.
- Although Tupac died on September 13 in 1996, he was actually gunned down six days earlier on September 7 and later died in hospital from the critical injuries. Again theorists see the number seven in the date as a holy sign he will rise again like the biblical Christ.
- Tupac was killed seven months after his final album All Eyez on Me. The album was seen as his best work to date - and no doubt a fitting album to go out on. The release date suggests, according to theorists, that Tupac knew he would die in September 1996 and thus released his definitive album seven months before his death as a sign.
- And lastly, Tupac’s career lasted seven years (although it is debated whether he first entered the music scene in 1989 or 1990). The number seven is again seen as a divine representation of his time in the music scene, although it does depend on how you define the start of his career.
4) Tupac is alive in New Zealand
If Tupac’s life did in fact revolve around spiritual numbers and Christ-like references, it is perhaps only fitting that he was spotted this year in little ol’ ‘Godzone’, aka New Zealand, last month.
A story by American broadcaster PBS claimed the rapper was alive and well in a “small resort” in New Zealand, but in the short time it took for the story to circulate the web and renew hope for Tupac believers worldwide, it had already been revealed as a fake.
The hoax carried out by hacking group LulzSec, who hijacked the public broadcaster's website.
5) Witness protection
And lastly, despite Tupac’s many derogatory lyrics aimed at the boys in blue - the “po-leece” - the final popular theory in our list is that Tupac is in fact under witness protection by the FBI.
Theorists claim he helped the FBI in 1996 to investigate his former record company Death Row Records, founded by Marion “Suge” Knight.
While the theory is feasible given Tupac's history with the label and the chequered past of Mr Knight - who has alleged links to criminal groups and indeed done time in the clink - the idea of a rap star being the chief witness in a major FBI case sounds far too much like the sort of gangster-themed Hollywood film which Tupac had starred in during his career.  
Tupac would prove even more popular in death than he did in life, going on to sell millions of records after his murder. Recent revelations about the Tupac homicide inquiry may shed some factual light on his death but until then we may have to resort to creating our own stories about the beloved star.


Read more: http://www.3news.co.nz/Tupac-Shakur-Top-5-conspiracy-theories/tabid/418/articleID/215479/Default.aspx#ixzz1ntpNS5yI



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