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1075 lines
68 KiB
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<conspiracyFile>CONCENTRATION CAMP PLANS FOR U.S. CITIZENS
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Transcript of taped message concerning the implementation of a
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dictatorial government in the United States.
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A NATIONAL EMERGENCY: TOTAL TAKEOVER
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This is William R. Pabst. My address is 1434 West Alabama Street,
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Houston, Texas 77006. My telephone number is: <data type="phoneNumber">(713) 521-9896</data>. This
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is my 1979 updated report on the concentration camp program of the
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Dept. of Defense of the United States.
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On April 20, 1976, after a rapid and thorough investigation, I filed suit
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on behalf of the People of the United States against various personages
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that had a key part in a conspiratorial program to do away with the
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United States as we know it. This is a progress report to you, the
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plaintiffs, you the People of the United States. The civil action number
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is 76-H-667. It is entitled, "Complaint Against the Concentration Camp
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Program of the Dept. of Defense." It was filed in the U.S. District Court
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for the southern district of Texas, Houston division. The judge
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responsible for the case was Judge Carl Beau (phonetic spelling).
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You have no doubt heard the story: Once upon a time, under the Nazi
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regime in Germany, a man worked on an assembly line in a baby
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carriage factory. His wife was going to have a baby, but the Nazi
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government would not let anybody buy a baby carriage. The man
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decided he would secretly collect one part from each department and
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assemble the carriage himself. When this was done he and his wife
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gathered up the pieces and assembled it. When they were finished they
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did not have a baby carriage, they had a machine gun.
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And that is exactly the situation that I am going to present to you at this
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time. The center for the Study for Democratic Institutions recently
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completed a proposed constitution for the "Newstates of America." The
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Center is Rockefeller funded. To give you an indication of the type of
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constitution proposed, the term "national emergency" is mentioned 134
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times. The document did not have a Bill of Rights and the right to own
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arms was taken away. At the same time, House Concurrent Resolution
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#28 awaited for calling a constitutional convention on or before July 4,
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1976. The presiding officer of such an event would have been Nelson
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Rockefeller, Vice President and president pro tem of the Senate. This
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particular resolution awaited in committee. Obviously, money would
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not be spent on these massive programs unless there would be the
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chance for the actual implementation of such a scheme.
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However, in case the American people do not voluntarily adopt a new
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constitution less troublesome to those who desire dictatorship, there is
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Executive Order #11490, which will include its predecessors when it is
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cited herein. The Executive Order authorizes the secretaries of the
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various agencies to prepare for any "national emergency" type
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situation--including, but not limited to, those specified in the
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Executive Order itself. If you read the Order, there is nothing at all left
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to the imagination. For any conceivable pretext, a national emergency
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may be declared based upon this frightening decree, dated October
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1969. The Order itself was prefaced in March of 1969 by another
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Executive Order that established the federal regions and their capitals.
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All the departments of the government were involved, including the
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L.E.A.A. (Law Enforcement Assistance Administration) and H.E.W.
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(Health, Education, and Welfare). Congressman Larry McDonald has
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revealed to Congress that various guerrilla and terrorist groups were
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being financed by the federal government. If they (the terrorist groups)
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actually began in search of activities, Executive Order #11490 would
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be activated. But as mentioned previously, if you will read Executive
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Order #11490, you will see that a "national emergency" may be
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declared for any conceivable pretext whatsoever. If the Order itself
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were activated, here is what would happen. The next day you and your
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family would be standing in front of your local post office with your
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neighbors the front doors bursting with block-long lines of people
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waiting to be registered. After waiting in line with your family for
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hours, you finally get channeled through the doors. Once inside, you
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overhear the postal clerk with his sidearm on telling a frightened
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registrant, "Look there is nothing I can do. The truck behind the
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building will take you to a work camp where you have been assigned.
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Your wife has been assigned to a factory and there's nothing I can do."
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Then your son or daughter looks up at you with a quivering voice and
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asks, "Dad, why are we here?"
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IMPLEMENTING THE NEW GOVERNMENT
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Well, you see there's much more to life in a "free country" than paying
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your mortgage. You have to be aware of what is going on and act
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accordingly and participate in government, that is, get involved.
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Examine the organization chart on Executive Order #11490 to discover
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how we have all helped finance (through our tax dollars) the mechanics
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of the overthrow of our Constitution. Executive Order #11490
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designates certain authorities to the Office of Preparedness--which in
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turn designates authority to the various departments of the federal
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government.
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If the Order were implemented, the Post Office department would be
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responsible for a national registration. The State Department would be
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responsible for the protection of the United Nations personnel or
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property and prevention of escape from the United States. The
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Department of Defense would be responsible for its expropriation of
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industry; direction of service and national production system, control of
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censorship; and communication expropriation of non-industrial
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facilities. The Commerce Department would be responsible for
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expropriation, selection and international distribution of commodities
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(which would be the actual looting of the United States), census
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information and human resources
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The Treasury Department would be responsible for collection of cash
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and non-cash items and the recreation of evidence of assets and
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liabilities. The Justice Department would have concurrent responsibility
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with the Dept. of State for prevention of escape from the U.S.; for
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replenishing the stockpile of narcotics; for a national police force; for
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correctional and penal institutions; for mass feeding and housing of
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prisoners and for use of prisoners to augment manpower--which would
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be slave labor.
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The Federal Bulk (which is not a FEDERAL bank) would be
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responsible for regulation of withdrawal of currency. The G.S.A.
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(General Services Administration) would be responsible for confiscation
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of private property for government use. H.E.W. would be responsible
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for nationalization of education (which the Dept. of Education has
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already done), health services, hospital and mental institutions. The
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Labor Dept. would be responsible for recruiting manpower, referring
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manpower, and allocating manpower so each particular person that was
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registered at the post office in this national registration would be told
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where he (or she) was going to work. H.U.D. (Housing & Urban
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Development) would be responsible for emergency enforcement and
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control and movement of passengers and the emergency operation of the
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Alaskan railroad.
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There are two specific agencies here that we need to look at and to keep
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in mind. They are: H.E.W. and the Justice Dept., as those two agencies
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are related to the Dept. of Defense. The various military departments are
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part of the Dept. of Defense. Under it, we have the Secretary of Army,
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Chief of Staff, Deputy Chief of Staff of Personnel and law enforcement,
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U.S. Army's forces command, and continental Army Reserve &
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National Guard. And under that we have the four armies dividing up the
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United States. Under the Fifth Army we have the provost marshal, who
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is directly connected to the Deputy Chief of Staff for law enforcement
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personnel. Under the provost Marshall for the Fifth Army we have the
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300 Military Police Prisoner-of War (POW) Command at Lebonia, Michigan.
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At this point I quote from retired Admiral Elmo Zumoff's (phonetic
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spelling) book, "On Watch": Kissinger states, 'I believe the American
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people lack the will to do the things necessary to achieve parity and to
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maintain maritime superiority. I believe we must get the best deal we
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can in our negotiations before the United States and the Soviets both
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perceive these changes and the balance that occurs. When these
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perceptions are in agreement, and both sides know the U.S. is inferior,
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we must have gotten the best deal we can. Americans at that time will
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not be happy that I have settled for second, but it will be too late. "
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Zumoff said, 'Then why not take it to the American people? They will
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not accept the decision to become second best while we are in a position
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of Gross National Product twice that of the U.S.S.R."
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Kissinger responds, "That's a question of judgment. I judge that we will
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not get their support, and if we seek it and tell the fact as we would have
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to, we would lose our negotiating leverage with the Soviets."
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Zumoff stated, "But isn't that the ultimate immorality in a democracy; to
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make a decision for the people of such importance without consulting
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them?"
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Kissinger stated, "Perhaps, but I doubt that there are one million who
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could even understand the issue.
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Zumoff responded, "Even if that presumption is correct, those one
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million can influence the opinions of the majority of the people. I
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believe it is my duty to take the other course."
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Kissinger responded, "You should take care, lest your words result in a
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reduction in the Navy budget."
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So we see what the intention of the State Dept. is regarding the people.
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Another fact: On December 30, 1974, the California National Guard
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announced in a press release (which I have) that the state's Military
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Police battalions were organized and trained to provide immediate
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response to virtually every civil and man-made disaster, as well as to
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assist law enforcement officers in emergency situations to carry out their
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law enforcement as well as their military mission. When I asked four of
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the defendants in this case for their mission statement they did not
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provide it_although they say it is public information.
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The training spoken of for the California National Guard covers such
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subjects as dealing with individual civilians/civil population, detention
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procedures, citizen's rights, and similar matters. You know as well as I
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do that when there is Martial Law, or Martial Rule, citizens have no
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rights-because the Constitution is pre-empted. Even the uniforms of the
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National Guards who participate in this program are different from the
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regular uniforms. Army spokesmen will not reveal more about the
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uniforms. But the Los Angeles Sheriff's Dept. Paramilitary units, who
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have received this training also, have army fatigues dyed black for their
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uniforms.
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A further fact is the disaster preparedness plan for the Marine Corps
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Supply Center in Barstow, CA. Quoting from that document: 'Under the
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Constitution and the laws of the United States, the preservation of law
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and order is the responsibility of local and state government. The
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authority to maintain the peace and enforce the law is invested in the
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authorities of those governments.' There are specific exceptions to the
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above concept. One of these pertains to federal intervention to the civil
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disturbances in certain situations. Military commanders are deemed to
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have the inherent authority to take any measure reasonably necessary for
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the protection of life and property in the event of a sudden unexpected
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public calamity which disrupts the normal process of government and
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presents an emergency so eminent as to make it dangerous to await the
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instructions from appropriate authorities. This includes law enforcement
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duties. The manual mentions something called "Garden plot Forces,"
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which will discuss at length in a few minutes.
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Don Bell (who writes a weekly report) reported on July 25, 1975 that in
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May of '75 the 303 Civil Affairs group of the U.S. Army Reserves in
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Kearny, NJ conducted an exercise to sharpen plans for a military
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takeover of the state government in NJ. According to Colonel Frances
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Clark, they had conducted similar studies on how to seize municipal
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and county government over the past few years. But this was the first
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time they had studies STATE government. Such units were trained
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during World War II to operate captured governments in the foreign.
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We never had federal troops training to take over government in the
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United States. When local violence of catastrophe struck, the National
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Guard--under command of the governor--went into action. This is
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definitely not the situation at this time...
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CONTROLLING THE MASSES
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On February 16, 1975, in 'San Gabriel Valley Tribune' it was reported
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that the L.E.A.A. (funded by the Dept. of Justice) and the Police
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Foundation (funded by the Ford Foundation) were prime movers toward
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implementing a national police force. Each, however, contends they
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support local police agencies. The total program involves military units
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that have the function of taking ova the administration of local and state
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governments. That program is "Operation Cable Splicer"_by Army
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civil affairs groups, a sub-plan of "Operation Garden Plot" (the Martial
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Law program).
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The method by which the national police concept is being presented to
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the public has changed. It was first disguised under the cover of
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protection against civil disturbances. This program was as follows:
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A) Keep the people from gathering in the streets.
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B) Isolate and neutralize the revolution's leadership.
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C) Dispersal of crowds and demonstrators.
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This is followed by successful prosecution in order to: I) Validate the
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action of the police; 2) Denying the arrestees propaganda materials, and,
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3) Denying them the opportunity to recover money damages against the
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police for arresting them.
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Let me quote for you the scenario which was developed for Cable
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Splicer One, Two, and Three to justify the needs for dealing with civil
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disturbances "Phase One - an arrest and shooting provoke crowd unrest
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and threats against public officials and a riot begins to form: Phase Two
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- police vehicles are ambushed, various attempted assassinations of
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public officials occur, destruction and raiding of armories occur, and
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thousands of people begin to gather and local police lose control, Phase
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Three increased movements of rioters and the crowds must be dispersed
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before they become sympathetic with the rioters. The National Guard
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and the local police lose control."
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This scenario provides for an orderly transition from state to federal
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control. The Deputy Attorney General of California commented at a
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Cable Splicer Three conference, that anyone who attacks the State--even
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verbally becomes a revolutionary and an enemy by definition. They are
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the enemy and must be destroyed. This program was taught in almost
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every state west of the Mississippi River and included as participants
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local active military, reserve military and civilian police. The course
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name was "Civil Emergency Management Course." The official
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explanation that was to be given if any questions were asked about the
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program was: "This activity is a continuous, joint law enforcement
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military liaison effort and a continuation of coordination established last
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year."
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In 1976, the 'Oakland Tribune' carried the most complete explanation of
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what is planned. It is reported in its entirety in the 'National Chronicle'
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which added an analysis to the story. (The 'Oakland Tribune's editor
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died suddenly after the story was published). And I quote:
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"Last Saturday the California National Guard unveiled a new Law
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Enforcement Assistance Force- L.E.A.F., a specially trained and
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outfitted Military Police Unit, whose members will serve as shock
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troops in the state's war against political protesters and demonstrators.
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"I saw a full-dress exhibition of what the California National Guard
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has planned for the next American revolution. Helicopters, SWAT
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teams, civilian military policemen in jackboots and helmets, twelve-
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gauge shotguns, .38 and .45 caliber pistols, radios, walkie-talkies, and
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electrically controlled intelligence centers wired for instant
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communications with any police force in one state.
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"L.E.A.F. is a 1000 member unit put together this year to handle unique
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law enforcement problems such a mass civil disobedience, protest
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demonstrations and riots. In other words, breaking heads and taking
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names. L.E.A.F. has the support of Governor Brown, a quarter million
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dollars worth of grants from the federal government, and no public
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opposition from civil liberties' groups.
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"For all its ineptitude however, L.E.A.F. has a frightening possibility
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from a civil liberty standpoint. It is a direct product of the California
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"Cable Splicer" conferences--a series of high-level secret meetings
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between government officials, law enforcement officials and military
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planners held during the late '60s and early '70s. The meetings were
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held as late as 1975 so far, as many public records show. These were
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the conferences which Counter-Spy magazine had identified as
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California's "Garden Plot Sub-plan."
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'Gary Davis, Governor Brown's right hand man, says L.E.A.F. is to
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assist civil police, not to replace them. Gary says, "Civilians could
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expect a civilian type law enforcement rather than what is commonly
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known as Martial Law." Despite this assurance, L.E.A.F.'s exercises
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look disturbingly like the military coup described in the novel, "Seven
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Days In May. "
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'L.E.A.F. soldiers with nightsticks stood at intersections, stopping cars
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with suspicious occupants, checking I.D. cards and generally
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intimidating onlookers with their SWAT style uniforms, their sidearms
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and helmets. Perhaps more ominously, several participants in the role-
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playing exercises Saturday admitted that even under simulated pressure
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there has already been a number of incidents where the L.E.A.F. troops
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used excessive force to quell disturbances - even though their orders
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forbade it.' (That ends the quotation.)
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Former L.E.A.A. Administrator, Charles Ross Dovan (phonetic
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spelling), is on record as having stated that local law enforcement has
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failed and must be replaced by a national police force. Patrick Murphy,
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the administrator of the Police Foundation, states, "I have no fear of a
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national police force. Our 40000 police departments are not sacred."
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Ex-Attorney General William Saxby warned that if we can go on as we
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are, crime will invade us and the national police will take over.
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For the policemen who do not cooperate and still want to be policemen,
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there is the program of Contemporary Research, Inc.--an organization of
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psychologists, sociologists, education specialists and economic experts--
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who work toward a solution of many of today's social problems. The
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same organization develops specialized computer base systems for law
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enforcement agencies at all levels of government.
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The L.E.A.A. alone will receive over a billion dollars a year over the
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next four years_even though it has been ineffective against crime. This
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is because the L.E.A.A. is not geared to fighting crime, it is geared to
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developing a system for takeover of the United States with the
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assistance of the Dept. of Defense.
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THE PLANNED POLICE STATE
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One of the programs the L.E.A.A. works on in its fight against crime is
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psycho-surgery. If you don't cooperate with their programs, you are
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merely operated on so that you will be as cooperative as an adding
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machine. Or, the L.E.A.A. supports drug research for the same purpose-
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-to neurological source's violence. Hence, as an example, if a law were
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passed whereby the ownership of firearms was declared to be illegal,
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you would be placed in one of these programs if you did not cooperate.
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The L.E.A.A. control exercise (at the state's level) is from the Office of
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Criminal Justice Planning of the Governor's office. Here in Texas, Mr.
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Robert C. Klowers is still the executive director in that office. But all
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states have that particular department.
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In May 1975 the 'L.E.A.A. Newsletter' describes the function of one of
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its organizations: the National Institute of Law Enforcement & Criminal
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Justice. This organization funds something called the 'United Nations
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Clearinghouse" in Rome, Italy. The function of that organization is,
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among other things, the exchange of Criminal Justice System
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information with the Soviet Union. It goes without saying that we have
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nothing to learn from the Criminal Justice System of the Soviet Union.
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These incredible projects are being funded with our tax dollars.
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The code names for these projects are: "Garden Plot" and "Cable
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Splicer. " Garden Plot is the program to control the population. Cable
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Splicer is the program for an orderly takeover of the state and local
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governments by the federal government.
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An investigation was completed in Nov., 1975 by four sources: The
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Conservative publication, 'American Challenge' the leftist 'New Times';
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the foundation financed Fund for Investigative Journalism, and, Don
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Wood of the trustworthy 'Ozark Sunbeam. ' It involves the potential
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creation of a Police State through the use of the Pentagon and its
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computerized intelligence dossier (lodged in the Pentagon basement) of
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thousands of citizens by the National Guard, state and local police
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departments, the L.E.A.A., plainclothes military forces, SWAT teams,
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and the Dept. of Justice.
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||
|
Brigadier General J. L. Julienit (phonetic spelling), senior Army officer
|
||
|
of the Pentagon National Guard Bureau, has admitted, "I know of no
|
||
|
state that did not have some form of these exercises within the last
|
||
|
year."
|
||
|
Today the Cable Splicer handbook is composed of six loose-leaf, three-
|
||
|
ring binders that are merely an outline for the impending takeover and
|
||
|
destruction of our Constitution. The Sixth Army used the term "Cable
|
||
|
Splicer" for the name of the operation, but it has not revealed the name
|
||
|
of the operation in the other military areas within the U. S.
|
||
|
On page 4, paragraph 10 on Public Information, the instructions state:
|
||
|
"As a means to prevent adverse publicity or misleading psychological
|
||
|
effects in regard to coordinating, planning, and conducting this exercise,
|
||
|
all military participants involved will perform such duties in civilian
|
||
|
clothing when exercise oriented activities are conducted at law
|
||
|
enforcement facilities. In the event inquiries are received regarding this
|
||
|
exercise, the response should be limited to identifying the activity as a
|
||
|
continuous, joint law enforcement military liaison effort and a
|
||
|
continuation of coordination established last year."
|
||
|
On page 6, security guidance is explained to the effect that if anybody
|
||
|
asks any questions, limit the information that is given out on the basis
|
||
|
of it being in the interest of 'national interest' (security).
|
||
|
Now, in the festivities celebrating the success of completion of the
|
||
|
exercises, Attorney General Stanly R. Larsen, the commanding general
|
||
|
of the Sixth Army stated, "The most serious challenge facing all of us
|
||
|
will be the challenge of discharging our legitimate responsibilities. For
|
||
|
a significant portion of a society at large is likely to regard us with
|
||
|
suspicion and to question, even challenge, our authority on the basic
|
||
|
assumption of our profession. Part of this challenge we must be
|
||
|
prepared to deal with; a potentially dangerous portion of our society
|
||
|
which in truth, could well become the domestic enemy.
|
||
|
The manual includes instructions on operation of confinement facilities,
|
||
|
handling and processing prisoners_including searching, transporting,
|
||
|
feeding, housing and handling of the special class of persons called
|
||
|
"detainees." The plan also specifically includes a proposition for
|
||
|
confiscation of privately owned weapons and ammunition.
|
||
|
FILES ON POTENTIAL PRISONERS
|
||
|
The Army has over 350 separate record centers containing substantial
|
||
|
information on civilian political activities. Virtually every major Army
|
||
|
unit has its own set aside from this. The Fifth Army of San Antonio has
|
||
|
over 100000 files of its own. The overall operation command post is a
|
||
|
domestic room at the Pentagon. There are 25000000 cards on
|
||
|
individuals and 760000 on organizations held by the Defense Central
|
||
|
Index of investigations alone. This information includes political,
|
||
|
sociological, economical and psychological profiles. All this type of
|
||
|
information on 25000000 Americans.
|
||
|
Since 1970 local county and state police forces all over the country have
|
||
|
undertaken crash programs to install various kinds of computerized
|
||
|
information systems. A large portion of this is being paid for my the
|
||
|
L.E.A.A. Beginning in 1970, Congress and the Joint Chiefs of Staff
|
||
|
ordered the destruction of all these data banks, but they were not
|
||
|
destroyed. All the outlawed collection is now located at Mt. Weather,
|
||
|
Clark County, West Virginia and similar Pentagon facilities designed as
|
||
|
adjuncts to the president's emergency powers under the Executive
|
||
|
Orders.
|
||
|
The cadre of specialized persons to enforce this plan are found in the U.
|
||
|
S. Army Reserves Military Police POW Command at Lebonia,
|
||
|
Michigan. Mr. Fenren (phonetic spelling) of the 300th Military Police
|
||
|
POW Command at Lebonia told me, when I called him from the Federal
|
||
|
Information Center at Houston, that the camps in the Command were
|
||
|
for foreign prisoners-of-war and for "enemies of the United States." I
|
||
|
asked him if enemies of the United States included U.S. citizens. He
|
||
|
became an_, wouldn't deny it, and referred me to a very sinister
|
||
|
individual at the Army Reserve facility here at Houston whom I talked
|
||
|
to; who explained to me that the prisoners were called "inventory" and
|
||
|
"internees." He would not deny that the camps were for U.S. citizens.
|
||
|
I called the Pentagon, spoke with the defendant there, and then with the
|
||
|
provost Marshal for the Fifth Army, and do you know what? Not one of
|
||
|
these persons would deny that the system was for U.S. citizens. The
|
||
|
provost marshal for the Fifth Army--when I mentioned the names of all
|
||
|
the camp sites--said, "Well at least you've got that right."
|
||
|
The names of the detention facilities that I gave him were a list that I
|
||
|
had acquired from the 'Ozark Sunbeam.' That list of names was the
|
||
|
same list of facilities designated under the old Detention Act of 1950 as
|
||
|
"emergency detention centers." But there is only one problem: That act
|
||
|
was supposed to have been repealed in 1971. After some research, I
|
||
|
found out what the problem was. One Congressman-when the hearings
|
||
|
were held for the repeal of the Emergency Detention Act--mentioned
|
||
|
that there are 17 other bits of law that provided for the same thing. So it
|
||
|
didn't matter whether they ever repealed the Emergency Detention Act.
|
||
|
The public was in fact tricked by the Congress of the United States!
|
||
|
Here are the designated sites: Tucked away in the Appalachian
|
||
|
Mountains of central Pennsylvania is a bustling town of approximate
|
||
|
10000 people. Fifteen to twenty years ago it was a sleepy village of
|
||
|
400. Allanwood, PA is linked to New York City by Interstate U.S. 80. It
|
||
|
takes up approximately 400 acres and is surrounded by a 10-foot barbed
|
||
|
wire fence. It now holds approximately 300 minimum security prisoners
|
||
|
to keep in shape. It could hold 12000 people from one day to the next.
|
||
|
Thirty miles from Oklahoma City on U.S. 66 is El Reno, OK with an
|
||
|
approximate population of 12000. Due west, six miles from town
|
||
|
almost in sight of U.S. 66 is a complex of buildings that could pass for a
|
||
|
small school. However, the facility is overshadowed by a guard house
|
||
|
that appears to be something like an airport control tower--except that
|
||
|
it's manned by a vigilant, uniformed guard. This is a federal prison camp
|
||
|
or detention center. These camps are all located near super-highways or
|
||
|
near railroad tracks or both.
|
||
|
The federal prison camp at Florence, Arizona could hold 3500
|
||
|
prisoners. It is presently kept in condition by approximately 400 legally
|
||
|
convicted prisoners. Wickenberg, AZ is famous for its municipal
|
||
|
airport that was once government owned. It is now occupied by a
|
||
|
private party. It is rumored to be capable of being taken back by the
|
||
|
federal government without notice.
|
||
|
Now there are a couple other of these facilities that are probably existing
|
||
|
under the same arrangements. This particular rumor of instant taking
|
||
|
back without notice has existed for about 9 or 10 years. The only way it
|
||
|
can actually be established is by looking at the local contract for the
|
||
|
Wickenberg Municipal Airport itself and the parties that have
|
||
|
possession of it.
|
||
|
As I mentioned previously, these names were ratified by the provost
|
||
|
marshal of the Fifth Army who is in charge of the 300th Military Police
|
||
|
POW Command. He is the one who verified them. He said, as I
|
||
|
mentioned before, "Well at least you've got that right."
|
||
|
Some of the locations are: Tool Lake in California--now in private
|
||
|
hands. It can be retaken without notice. Some of the others: We have
|
||
|
Mill Point, West Virginia. I couldn't find a thing on Mill Point, WV
|
||
|
but in that area we have all kinds of prisons. Among them are:
|
||
|
Alderson, WV, a women's federal reformatory, Lewisburg, WV, a
|
||
|
federal prison; Greenville, SC in Greenville County is now occupied
|
||
|
by the State Youthful Offenders Division. Even that is a mystery to the
|
||
|
people of that area.
|
||
|
At Montgomery, AL we have a federal civilian prison camp at Maxwell
|
||
|
Air Force Base. Now does that sound right? There's one at Tucson,
|
||
|
AZ, David Munson Air Base. In Alaska we have Elmendorf at
|
||
|
Eielson Air Force Base.
|
||
|
That brings us to a facility in Florida, called Avon Park, FL. He found
|
||
|
the Avon Park Bombing and Gunnery Range, which is also listed as the
|
||
|
Avon Park Correctional Institute. No one is permitted entrance and
|
||
|
probably there is no overfly permitted because it is a bombing and
|
||
|
gunnery range. This was one of the places ratified by the provost
|
||
|
marshal of the Fifth Army.
|
||
|
In 1976, as well as on March 20, 1979,1 went to the sheriffs Dept. in
|
||
|
Houston to see if our local sheriff's Dept. had been infiltrated by these
|
||
|
plans. Well, it appears so. I was put in contact with a Lt. Kiljan
|
||
|
(phonetic spelling) who is in charge of some secret unit in the
|
||
|
department. I asked him if he had participated in military training with
|
||
|
military personnel here in the Sheriff s Dept. He denied it, and when I
|
||
|
asked him if he would testify so under oath he became angry and stated,
|
||
|
"You are just an ordinary citizen. I don't have to tell you anything." I
|
||
|
later discovered that Lt. Kiljan is the ex-director of the Houston branch
|
||
|
office of the U. S . Secret Service. Now where does his money come
|
||
|
from? The area is administered by the Houston-Galveston Area Council.
|
||
|
In this regional-government plan, each federal region is divided into
|
||
|
state clearinghouses, and each state clearinghouse is divided into area
|
||
|
clearinghouses. And for our area we have the Houston-Galveston Area
|
||
|
Council.. It serves as a conduit for federal funds in two major areas
|
||
|
L.E.A.A. and H.E.W
|
||
|
Most everybody thinks this organization (the Houston-Galveston area
|
||
|
Council) is for the development of the area--the geographical area here
|
||
|
in Houston. But it is not. It is for the development of L.E.A.A. and
|
||
|
H.E.W. projects. Now this finds its counterpart in every community
|
||
|
across the U.S. It provides for these agencies a liaison for inter-
|
||
|
governmental communications, interaction and coordination.
|
||
|
MENTAL COOPERATION IN TAKEOVER PLANS
|
||
|
I examined their projects to see what they were doing. This region-
|
||
|
government program distributes federal funds for two major purposes:
|
||
|
1) Radio hook-ups between every police agency in the state to Fort Sam
|
||
|
Houston, and: 2) Mental health programs, including programs for the
|
||
|
mentally ill having priority of beds and hospitals.
|
||
|
Another interesting fact to consider is that in the Pine Bluff Arkansas
|
||
|
Arsenal '3-Z" is stored. It's a nerve gas which creates sleepiness,
|
||
|
dizziness, stupor, and the incapacity to move about. According to the
|
||
|
Associated Press, the agent can be sprayed by aerosol, injected or
|
||
|
sprayed over large areas by a bomb. The Military has admitted that one
|
||
|
potential use of the gas is for civilian control. So whatever they planned,
|
||
|
they've also planned a way for you to go to your destination in a tranquil
|
||
|
state of mind.
|
||
|
H.E.W., by law, is operated in conjunction with the United Nations
|
||
|
through the World Health Organization. Back in 1948, the
|
||
|
International Congress on Mental health U.N. organization-declared in
|
||
|
its pamphlet, 'Mental Health and World Citizenship, ' that, "prejudice,
|
||
|
hostility or excessive nationalism may become deeply imbedded in the
|
||
|
developing personality without awareness on the part of the individual
|
||
|
concerned. In order to be effective, efforts of changing individuals
|
||
|
must be appropriate to the successive stages of the unfolding
|
||
|
personality. In the case of almost any group of individuals, change will
|
||
|
be strongly resisted unless an attitude of acceptance has first been
|
||
|
engendered.
|
||
|
"Principles of mental health cannot be successfully furthered in any
|
||
|
society unless there is progressive acceptance of the concept of world
|
||
|
citizenship," the document states. "Programs for social change to be
|
||
|
effective require a joint effort of psychiatrists and social scientists,
|
||
|
working together in cooperation with statesmen, administrators and
|
||
|
others in positions of responsibility."
|
||
|
The three phases of the development are: 1) Mental hospitals for
|
||
|
segregation, care and protection of persons of unsound minds. 2)
|
||
|
Community Mental Health Care Centers so that persons may be treated
|
||
|
in their own neighborhood. 3) Child Care Centers for dealing with early
|
||
|
difficulties of nationalism in a child's life.
|
||
|
Two years earlier, Major General G. B. Chisholm, Deputy Minister of
|
||
|
Health in Canada_ who later became director of United Nations World
|
||
|
Health Organization--explained, "Self defense may involve a neurotic
|
||
|
reaction when it means defending one's own excessive material wealth
|
||
|
from others who are in great need. This attitude leads to war..." So his
|
||
|
solution to the problem is: 'Set's redistribute the wealth among
|
||
|
everyone.
|
||
|
Further, the re-interpretation and eventual eradication of the individual's
|
||
|
concept of right and wrong-which has been the basis of child training
|
||
|
are the belated objectives of practically all effective psychotherapies.
|
||
|
Now if we digress even further, to Buria (phonetic spelling), the director
|
||
|
of the Soviet Secret Police in the 1930's, we see he explained the
|
||
|
communist political strategy through the use of "mental heating" of
|
||
|
psychiatry:
|
||
|
"Psycho-politics is the art and science of asserting and of maintaining a
|
||
|
dominion over the thoughts and loyalties of individuals, officers,
|
||
|
bureaus, and masses, and the effecting of the conquest of enemy nations
|
||
|
through mental healing. You must work,: he stated, "Until every teacher
|
||
|
of psychology unknowingly or knowingly teaches only communistic
|
||
|
doctrine under the guise of psychology."
|
||
|
If you look at the Russian manual of instruction of psycho-political
|
||
|
warfare, we see in chapter nine, "Psycho-political operations should at
|
||
|
all times be alert to the Opportunities to organize for the betterment of
|
||
|
the community mental health centers."
|
||
|
Now, under the new national Mental Health program, at this moment
|
||
|
there are more than 600 of these community mental health centers
|
||
|
across the United States. The whole thing was promoted by Dr. Stanly
|
||
|
F. Yoles (phonetic spelling), who was the director of the National
|
||
|
Institute of Mental Health in 1969. He stated back then, that the newest
|
||
|
trend in treating mental illness is care at local health care centers where
|
||
|
the patient is not isolated from his (or her) family and friends. They
|
||
|
have been working on this program for 46 years publicly, and now
|
||
|
across the U.S._through your tax dollars_you have 603 centers (to be
|
||
|
exact), Community Health Centers that are all part of this program.
|
||
|
This is how they are part of the program. (It has already happened): In
|
||
|
the mid-1950's, there were set into motion an interesting chain of
|
||
|
events. About 1956, the Alaska Mental Health Bill was proposed and
|
||
|
later passed. It granted approximately $12000000 and one million acres
|
||
|
of public land to Alaska so that it could develop its own mental health
|
||
|
program. Now this was a little abnormal since Alaska only had a little
|
||
|
over 400 people who were classified as mentally ill!
|
||
|
After the bill was passed, Alaska passed its own enabling legislation to
|
||
|
get into the mental health business. They started by adopting the
|
||
|
essential elements of the Public Health Service Draft Act on the
|
||
|
hospitalization of the mentally ill in the old 'interstate Compact on
|
||
|
Mental Health"_now called the Uniform Mental Health Act. There
|
||
|
were no provisions for jury trial in it or anything else. You would just
|
||
|
be picked up and taken to the Alaskan-Siberian Asylum-
|
||
|
incommunicado_and the state would also confiscate all of your
|
||
|
personal and real property! They actually tried to do it in 1954 in the
|
||
|
case of Ford vs. Milinak (phonetic spelling), which declared the act as
|
||
|
adopted in another state (the state of Missouri) as unconstitutional.
|
||
|
But the act itself still exists_and modified_but essentially in the same
|
||
|
form, the Uniform Mental Health Act, to which approximately six states
|
||
|
subscribe. And in passing most State Constitutions-if you will check
|
||
|
them from the period of 1935-made a part of their constitution the
|
||
|
practice of having a person submit to a 90-day mental examination to
|
||
|
determine his (or her) sanity, without any provisions for a trail by jury.
|
||
|
This was part of the national program at that time.
|
||
|
In this act, the governor could have anyone picked up and sent to the
|
||
|
Mental Health Institution in Alaska or elsewhere. The results of rumors
|
||
|
back in the '50s, were that there was in fact a sinister, Frankenstein-type
|
||
|
mental health person in Alaska. I wrote to Alaska (the officials, that is)
|
||
|
and asked them for a description of the kind of one million acres that
|
||
|
they were eligible to receive under the Alaska Mental Health Act. I also
|
||
|
asked them for a copy of the inventory they ran for their facilities back
|
||
|
at that same time. Well, so far no answer. And probably, I will never
|
||
|
receive an answer without a court order.
|
||
|
Through the years, there was a spot in Alaska that was continually
|
||
|
referred to: Southeast of Fairbanks, southwest of Fairbanks, northwest
|
||
|
of Fairbanks--somewhere near Fairbanks. Then I received information
|
||
|
that a pilot had flown over the entire area once and had had his license
|
||
|
revoked. So, for S1.85 each, I ordered the low-level navigation maps
|
||
|
from the federal government for Alaska and located the Alaska-Siberian
|
||
|
Asylum for the treatment of enemies of the United States. It's right
|
||
|
where rumor over the past 20 years had placed it: Southwest of
|
||
|
Fairbanks. It stands out like a sore thumb! It's the only one of that
|
||
|
geometric configuration within the state of Alaska, and you will note a
|
||
|
black line running up through Fairbanks and down over near that area of
|
||
|
the map. That is the railroad that the Dept. of Transportation would take
|
||
|
the emergency operation of under the Executive Order--if the Executive
|
||
|
Order went into effect. H.E.W. would be responsible for making a
|
||
|
determination of whether or not you were mentally disturbed because of
|
||
|
your nationalistic tendencies, your love for the United States, or your
|
||
|
adherence to any political or religious doctrine.
|
||
|
Let's look a little further into the type of program that the L.E.A.A. is
|
||
|
paying for through the Dept. of Justice. The Federal Bureau of Prisons--
|
||
|
located in the backwoods of North Carolina, near a tiny village called
|
||
|
Butner--is constructing a mammoth 42 acre research complex for
|
||
|
prisoners from throughout the East. Who will be sent for experiments to
|
||
|
test new behavioral programs and techniques? Target date for
|
||
|
completion of the entire system is ironically 1984.
|
||
|
So, they're using right now, under the L.E.A.A. program, something
|
||
|
called anectine (phonetic spelling). Punishment for troublesome
|
||
|
behavior within the prison is being done by drugs and shock, likely to
|
||
|
be the most selected examples of programs that have made use of
|
||
|
anectine--a derivative of South American curare. Anectine was
|
||
|
originally used as a beginning factor to electro-convulsive shock. Such
|
||
|
shocks applied to the head are so strong they can break and graze pores
|
||
|
under the strain, resulting in muscle contractions. Since anectine
|
||
|
paralyzes the muscles without diminishing consciousness or the ability
|
||
|
to feel pain. By first injecting the inmates with it, researchers can turn
|
||
|
up the voltage as high as they want without cracking the inmates'
|
||
|
skeleton when his body is thrown into convulsions by the jolt.
|
||
|
What the anectine does, in short, is to simulate death within 30 to 40
|
||
|
seconds of injection. It brings on paralysis first, with the small rapidly
|
||
|
moving muscles in the nose, fingers, and eyes; then in the diaphragm
|
||
|
and the cardiovascular system. As a result, the patient cannot move or
|
||
|
breath and yet remains fully conscious, as though drowning and dying.
|
||
|
This is from the 1974 publication, 'Human Behavior.
|
||
|
THE PEOPLE VS. THE CONSPIRATORS
|
||
|
The federal government answered my suit in June (1976) by filing an
|
||
|
unsworn general denial of everything that I had alleged. I spoke with
|
||
|
the assistant U.S. Attorney in charge of the case and asked him if he had
|
||
|
gone to the trouble to call any of the parties mentioned in the suits--
|
||
|
since I had provided not only the addresses, but their telephone numbers
|
||
|
to provide a faster means of investigation. He said he had not. He had
|
||
|
not even done a minimal amount of investigation of the case, but yet he
|
||
|
filed a denial of my allegations.
|
||
|
I filed a motion in the meantime to take the deposition of the person
|
||
|
who writes the training programs for the concentration camp guards,
|
||
|
Mr. Richard Burrage--the 75th Maneuver Air Command at Army
|
||
|
Reserve Center at Houston, Texas--stating that in light of all the recent
|
||
|
activity of government agents, one of the agencies involved might
|
||
|
attempt to murder this key witness, the author of the training camp
|
||
|
program. The federal judge denied my motion, stating that I had not
|
||
|
quoted enough cases to him justifying my request. However, he was
|
||
|
also aware as that there were no cases existing on this set of facts, but as
|
||
|
you will see as I go along with this report, he chose to ignore it.
|
||
|
I then made an agreement with the assistant U. S. Attorney to take the
|
||
|
deposition to Mr. Burrage. After I'd made the arrangements, the U.S.
|
||
|
Attorney refused to voluntarily go along with taking the deposition. It is
|
||
|
very difficult to find justice in our system of courts. It is a corruption-
|
||
|
driven system founded upon the buddy system, and hence, the court
|
||
|
rules are routinely overlooked or not followed.
|
||
|
On July 20, a hearing was held at the magistrate of Norman Black, U.S.
|
||
|
District Court in Houston. The courtroom was completely filled with
|
||
|
spectators. Although the news media had been contacted, no
|
||
|
representatives of the press were there. There is a news media blackout
|
||
|
on this matter here in Houston.
|
||
|
Brief oral arguments were presented. The U.S. Attorney explained that I
|
||
|
was not the proper person to bring the suit because, although the free
|
||
|
exercise of my constitutional rights was threatened by the concentration
|
||
|
camp program as alleged, it did not constitute my injury. The magistrate
|
||
|
was impressed with the information I had thus far collected and stated
|
||
|
that he would bring it to the attention of the federal judge. The U.S.
|
||
|
Attorney tried to have my investigation of the case halted, but the
|
||
|
magistrate would not go along that far with a pre-arranged decision.
|
||
|
As an additional indication of what I was up against, the original
|
||
|
hearing was scheduled for 10:30 in the morning. However, the U.S.
|
||
|
Attorney had secretly had the time changed to 2:30 in the afternoon. The
|
||
|
magistrate gave the U.S. Attorney permission to file for motion to
|
||
|
dismiss because he felt that the concentration camp program--to be used
|
||
|
for persons who exercise their freedom of speech--did not present any
|
||
|
injury.
|
||
|
Now, on July 23 I had placed in the 'Houston Post' and in the 'Houston
|
||
|
Chronicle' newspapers the following advertisement in the legal section.
|
||
|
Quote: "Solicitation for witnesses in Civil Action 78-H 667, Federal
|
||
|
District Court of Houston, People extemporal William Pabst vs. Gerald
|
||
|
Ford et d. The action titled: Complaint Against the Concentration Camp
|
||
|
Program of the Dept. of Defense. Attention: If you have participated in
|
||
|
Operation Garden Plot, Operation Cable Splicer, the 300th Military
|
||
|
Police Prisoner of War Command, or the Army Reserve Civil Affairs
|
||
|
group, you may be involved in a program that needs to be disclosed for
|
||
|
this suit. To give your testimony call or write; (and here I placed my
|
||
|
name address and telephone number).
|
||
|
As I previously mentioned, there is a news media blackout on the story
|
||
|
here in Houston. Both newspapers refused to carry the ad. First, at the
|
||
|
'Houston Post,' I had to threaten them with a lawsuit to carry out the ad,
|
||
|
even though I was paying for it. Then, at the 'Chronicle' I had to meet
|
||
|
with the president and various vice presidents because a refusal from
|
||
|
that paper had come up from their own lawyers. Both newspapers
|
||
|
finally carried it, but only after two days of complaining. The initial
|
||
|
response of both papas was, "We don't carry stories like that" and:
|
||
|
"Don't you think that the people planning the concentration camps have
|
||
|
our best interest in mind?" As you will hear for yourselves, the policies
|
||
|
definitely do not reflect our best interests.
|
||
|
The next event that occurred was that the U.S. Attorney filed a
|
||
|
"Statement of Authority," showing the reasons he could find why I
|
||
|
should not be allowed to take depositions to get more information from
|
||
|
the person who was writing the concentration camp guard training
|
||
|
program. However, his brief was completely filled with misquotes of
|
||
|
the law from many cases. He'd mention the case and then invent
|
||
|
whatever the case should say. In my brief to the court at this point, I
|
||
|
notified the judge of the violation of the law requiring honesty in such
|
||
|
matters. But, the notification was ignored by the judge, who apparently
|
||
|
sanctioned this most dishonest of acts, commonly known as "quoting
|
||
|
out of context."
|
||
|
THE GENEVA CONVENTION
|
||
|
My brief was filed on August 27. On August 31, formal arguments were
|
||
|
set. The new courtroom of the magistrate was almost filled again.
|
||
|
However, no one from the news media showed up for this hearing
|
||
|
either. The few who were contacted had been told not to go; they would
|
||
|
lose their jobs.
|
||
|
At the hearing I introduced evidence that heretofore had never been
|
||
|
introduced in any court of law in the U.S. The U.S. Attorney had
|
||
|
denied, you will remember, everything in my suit without so much as
|
||
|
even a tiny investigation. So, I introduced him to evidence the following
|
||
|
letter from the Dept. of the Army, Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff of
|
||
|
Personnel, signed by 1B Sergeant, Colonel G.S., Action Director of
|
||
|
Human Resources Development.
|
||
|
Quoting: "On behalf of President Ford, I am replying to your letter 27
|
||
|
May, 1976, regarding a news article in the Dallas Morning News. As
|
||
|
much as he would like to, the president cannot reply personally to every
|
||
|
communication he receives. Therefore, he has asked the departments
|
||
|
and agencies of the federal government in those instances where they
|
||
|
have special knowledge or special authority underlogued.
|
||
|
"For this reason your communication was forwarded to officials of the
|
||
|
Dept. of Defense. Within the Dept. of Defense, the Army is responsible
|
||
|
for custody and treatment of enemy prisoners of war and civilian
|
||
|
internees as defined under terms of the Geneva Convention of 1949.
|
||
|
Therefore, the Army is prepared to detain prisoners of war and detainees
|
||
|
as defined in Article IV of the 1949 Geneva Convention relative to the
|
||
|
treatment of prisoners of war and protection of civilian persons.
|
||
|
'It is U.S. policy that its Armed Forces adhere to the provisions of
|
||
|
international law to set the example for other countries of the world to
|
||
|
follow and respecting the rights and dignity of those who become victim
|
||
|
of international conflict. It should be noted that the Army program is
|
||
|
designed for implementation during conditions of war between the U.S.
|
||
|
and one or more foreign countries. The Army had no plans nor does it
|
||
|
maintain detention camps to imprison American citizens during
|
||
|
domestic crises."
|
||
|
The problem with this letter is that it's not true, and that's what I'm
|
||
|
going to discuss at this point. First of all, in verifying the authenticity of
|
||
|
the claims in the letter, I checked the Geneva text. There is no article in
|
||
|
the Geneva Convention entitled as the letter states. There is, however,
|
||
|
on each of the classifications, "Protection of War Victims / Civilian
|
||
|
Persons" and a separate article on "Prisoners of War." "That was the
|
||
|
first discrepancy.
|
||
|
Then I turned to Article IV of the Geneva Convention. That article did
|
||
|
not set up any requirements or authorizations for military units of any
|
||
|
type and does not even suggest it. Hence, the second discrepancy.
|
||
|
The next problem with the letter from President Ford's representative
|
||
|
is that it states that the prisoner of war guard program is set up for the
|
||
|
implementation for "conditions of war between the U.S. and one or
|
||
|
more (foreign) countries." However, Article III of the Geneva
|
||
|
Convention reads that the treaty applies to (and I am quoting): 'In case
|
||
|
of an armed conflict, not of an international character, occurring within
|
||
|
the territory of one of the high contracting parties." Obviously and
|
||
|
armed conflict occurring within one's own territory did not mean
|
||
|
between one or more of the parties to the treaty, especially if only one
|
||
|
is involved. Now, the examples of this type of conflict are: civil war,
|
||
|
armed insurgency and guerrilla activities. In other words, they're
|
||
|
speaking of a domestic conflict.
|
||
|
An even more shocking item is found in the pages of the 1949 Geneva
|
||
|
Convention under "Protection of War Victims/Civilian Persons." You
|
||
|
will find the index card, the identification card, forms to be used to
|
||
|
writing your family, and everything necessary for the administration of
|
||
|
a concentration camp is contained in this treaty that the U.S. signed and
|
||
|
ratified. Further, if there is a conflict in the U.S. involving only the U.S.
|
||
|
this convention or treaty can go into operation_which includes the
|
||
|
procedures for setting up the concentration camps.
|
||
|
Article LXVIII of the Convention states (and I paraphrase): If you
|
||
|
commit an offense that is solely intended to harm the occupying power,
|
||
|
not harming the life or limb of members of the occupying power, but
|
||
|
merely talking against such a force_such as the Martial Law situation
|
||
|
you can be imprisoned provided that the duration of such imprisonment
|
||
|
is proportionate to the offense committed. Well, President Dwight
|
||
|
Eisenhower didn't feel that provision was strong enough. So he had the
|
||
|
following additions placed in the treaty, which state: "The U.S. reserves
|
||
|
the right to impose the death penalty in accordance with the previsions
|
||
|
of Article LXVIII without regard to whether the offense is referred to
|
||
|
therein are punishable by death under the law of the occupied territory at
|
||
|
the time the occupation begins."
|
||
|
So not only can you be imprisoned for having exercised freedom of
|
||
|
speech; you can be put to death under the provisions of the Geneva
|
||
|
Convention in 1949 for having exercised, or attempting to exercise
|
||
|
freedom of speech.
|
||
|
The next item that I introduced into evidence was a field manual; FM
|
||
|
41-1-, '<Civil Affairs activities includes: 'item 4. Assumption of full or
|
||
|
partial executive, legislative and judicial authority ova a country or
|
||
|
area." So let's see what a "country or area" is defined as in the same
|
||
|
manual. It includes: "small towns and rural areas, municipalities of
|
||
|
various population sizes, districts, counties, provinces or states, regions
|
||
|
of national government."
|
||
|
Nowhere in the manual does it exclude this program from being put into
|
||
|
effect right here in the United States. As a matter of fact, in Kearny,
|
||
|
New Jersey, the Civil Affairs group went into that area and practiced
|
||
|
taking ova that governmental unit. Yet the Army, in it's letter of June
|
||
|
16, states that these programs are not for us. However, they are practiced
|
||
|
here in the United States under conditions that can only occur here t
|
||
|
home.
|
||
|
The study outline of field manuals FM 41-10 on page j-24 under Penal
|
||
|
institutions 1-B," you see there is a program on concentration camps and
|
||
|
a labor camp are always located near each other for obvious reasons.
|
||
|
Again on page d-4 of the same manual you'll find a sample receipt for
|
||
|
seized property; a sample receipt written in English and containing
|
||
|
terminology applicable to only U.S. territory. On page 8-2 of the same
|
||
|
manual, under the heading "Tables of Organization and Equipment," we
|
||
|
find that there are three other organizations that would be working along
|
||
|
with the Civil Affairs operation: the Chemical Service Organization, the
|
||
|
Composite Service Organization, and the Psychological Operations
|
||
|
Organization, along with the various Civil Affairs organizations.
|
||
|
In July of that year (1976), the following Civil Affairs groups met with
|
||
|
the following airborne groups at a staging area in Fort Chaffee, AR A
|
||
|
staging area is where military units meet before they go into action.
|
||
|
They met with the 82nd Airborne and part of the 101st Airborne; the
|
||
|
32nd Civil Affairs group of San Antonio, TX headquarters; the 362nd
|
||
|
Civil Affairs brigade from Dallas, TX; the 431st Civil Affairs company
|
||
|
from Little Rock, AR headquarters; the 306th Civil Affairs group, U.S.
|
||
|
Army Reserves, Fayetteville,AR commanded by Lt. Colonel N.
|
||
|
McQuire (phonetic spelling) and William Highland. The 486th Civil
|
||
|
Affairs company from Tulsa, OK; the 418th Civil Affairs company from
|
||
|
Kansas City, MO; the 307th Civil Affairs group from Abilene, IX; the
|
||
|
413th company from Hanlin, LA, the 12th S.S. group, 2nd Battalion
|
||
|
(headquarters unknown).
|
||
|
They're ready to go into action. The problem is, as it appears they were
|
||
|
ready to take over the entire government of the United States as their
|
||
|
mission sets out. One man who attended this staging area talked to a
|
||
|
Civil Affairs sergeant and asked him what his job was. The sergeant
|
||
|
explained that the civilians of this country will really be surprised some
|
||
|
day when the Civil Affairs groups begin to operate the government.
|
||
|
Now, the Dept. of the Army still maintains that all this not for the
|
||
|
United States--yet this training continues here for us. The evidence is
|
||
|
overwhelming: the plan exists for the imprisonment of millions of U.S.
|
||
|
citizens. Even though all this information was presented to the federal
|
||
|
magistrate, he still felt that no one was injured by such a plot.
|
||
|
On the second day of September, 1976, the magistrate recommended to
|
||
|
the federal judge that the case be dismissed. The sole basis for his
|
||
|
reasoning to dismiss was that we have to be actually physically injured
|
||
|
before we can maintain a lawsuit of this type. He did not feel that,
|
||
|
although all this active planning, preparation and training was going on,
|
||
|
that any U.S. citizen had been injured-even though the citizen may fear
|
||
|
exercising his or her freedom for fear of being detained and imprisoned
|
||
|
in a concentration camp at a later date.
|
||
|
IGNORING THE CONSTITUTION
|
||
|
The case of Tatum B. Laird, heard before the Supreme Court in 1974, is
|
||
|
a case in point. It involved the Army intelligence's collecting apparatus,
|
||
|
which was developing a list of names of persons who the Army felt
|
||
|
were troublesome. The Supreme Court held that the making of list of
|
||
|
this type did not of and by itself present any injuries. The minority
|
||
|
opinion in that case was that the injury in the case with a program such
|
||
|
as this, made people afraid to use their freedom of speech for fear of
|
||
|
being sent to jail for it. But the majority did not buy that argument.
|
||
|
The difference between that case and this case-although we also have
|
||
|
the computer program--is that we have something much further past that
|
||
|
point, the concentration camp guard program and the Civil Affairs
|
||
|
program for the taking over of all functions of our government. In light
|
||
|
of that the federal judge said that this is not an injury. As a matter of act,
|
||
|
the U. S. Attorney alleged that even if people were place in
|
||
|
concentration camps, if they were all treated the same they would still
|
||
|
not have the right to go to federal court.
|
||
|
On the 20th day of September, I filed a memorandum to notify the
|
||
|
magistrate and the federal judge that I had discovered that the federal
|
||
|
government had a program for a number of years to suspend our
|
||
|
constitutional right of the writ of habeas corpus. This information
|
||
|
substantiated the complaint. Habeas corpus is the name of that legal
|
||
|
instrument utilized to bring someone before a judge when the person is
|
||
|
being illegally imprisoned or detained so that he (or she) may obtain his
|
||
|
(or her) freedom. The Constitution states that the writ of habeas corpus
|
||
|
shall never be suspended.
|
||
|
I found the disturbing information in a report: 94-755, 94th Congress,
|
||
|
2nd Session Senate, April 26th, 1976, entitled "Intelligence Activities
|
||
|
and the Rights of Americans Book II." On page 17-d, entitled "First
|
||
|
Amendment Rights," the report states that more importantly "the
|
||
|
government surveillance activities in the aggregate, whether expressly
|
||
|
intended to do so, to deter the exercise of First Amendment rights by
|
||
|
American citizens who become aware of the government's domestic
|
||
|
intelligence program."
|
||
|
Beginning on page 54 it is stated that, beginning in 1946_four years
|
||
|
before the Emergency Detention Act of 1950 was passed--the FBI
|
||
|
advised the Attorney General that it had secretly compiled a secret
|
||
|
index of potentially dangerous persons. The Justice Dept. then made
|
||
|
tentative plans for emergency detention based on suspension of the
|
||
|
privilege of the writ of habeas corpus. Department officials
|
||
|
deliberately avoided going to Congress. When the Emergency
|
||
|
Detention Act of 1950 was passed, it did not authorize the suspension
|
||
|
of the writ of habeas corpus. But shortly after passage of that act,
|
||
|
according to a bureau document, Attorney General J. R. McGraft told
|
||
|
the FBI to disregard it and to proceed with the program as previously
|
||
|
outlined.
|
||
|
A few sentences later on page 55 it states, "With the security index, use
|
||
|
broader standards to determine potential dangerousness than those
|
||
|
described in the statute." Unlike the act, Department plans provided fro
|
||
|
issuing a master search warrant and a master arrest warrant. This is the
|
||
|
center importance: It is the same thing that I am alleging in federal
|
||
|
court. Yet, the magistrate chose to ignore these facts also.
|
||
|
We have government officials not only ignoring the will of Congress,
|
||
|
but doing the opposite of what the Constitution provides by planning
|
||
|
illegally for the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus. In addition, as
|
||
|
mentioned before, the master search warrant and the master arrest
|
||
|
warrant are forms fed into the computer, which print the names and
|
||
|
addresses on them from the tapes previously prepared by the
|
||
|
intelligence-gathering program.
|
||
|
As you are arrested, your home will be searched and anything found
|
||
|
there may be confiscated. This program has existed since 1946 up to and
|
||
|
including 1973, and without proper access to judicial discovery
|
||
|
techniques. It can't be determined whether the same plan now exists
|
||
|
under the same name or under another name altogether.
|
||
|
This memorandum was filed on September 28 to make the court aware
|
||
|
of the danger that our rights of freedom of speech and lawful assembly
|
||
|
are in. But the court, on September 30--after this notification was
|
||
|
received--dismissed the case. however, in keeping with the practice of
|
||
|
federal courts in Houston of actively participating in the obstruction of
|
||
|
justice, I was not notified of the dismissal until the 6th of October--
|
||
|
which gave me just two working days to submit any further motion in a
|
||
|
10-day period before time starts running for the appeal.
|
||
|
What I have just said regarding the federal courts in Houston is not only
|
||
|
my opinion; The 'Houston Chronicle' surprisingly, published an
|
||
|
extensive document severely criticizing the federal courts in Houston for
|
||
|
making up their own rules as they go along with the proceedings, a well
|
||
|
as commenting on the communist-like Supreme Court attitude of the
|
||
|
judges and the court personnel. l My experience here has been that the
|
||
|
court has returned to me almost every document I filed. Then after a big
|
||
|
argument, they reaccept the document, stating that they just made a
|
||
|
mistake. In reality, the power structure doesn't want these types of cases
|
||
|
in any federal court.
|
||
|
SUMMARY OF EVIDENCE
|
||
|
On the 8th of October, I had submitted a request for finding the facts in
|
||
|
the filing which had been established by the evidence presented:
|
||
|
* 1) The 300th Military Police POW Command is located at Livonia, Mich.
|
||
|
* 2) The Dept. of the Army has stated that said Command exists per se
|
||
|
the Geneva Convention of 1949, a treaty of the U.S., Article IV thereof
|
||
|
under the title relative to the treatment of prisoners of war and
|
||
|
protection of civilian prisoners.
|
||
|
* 3) However, no such title exists in the Geneva Convention per se.
|
||
|
* 4) Nevertheless, there are separate titles, one of which is; a.
|
||
|
Multilateral Protection of War Victims/Prisoners of War; b. Multilateral
|
||
|
Protection of War Victims/Civilian Persons.
|
||
|
* 5)Nevertheless, Article IV of both titles does of provide for the
|
||
|
creation of any military programs for concentration camps.
|
||
|
* 6) Whether Mr. Fenren of the 300th Military Police POW Command
|
||
|
has stated that the purpose of the Command is for the detention of
|
||
|
foreign prisoners of war and enemies of the United States.
|
||
|
* 7) Further, Article III, concerning civilian persons, makes the treaty
|
||
|
applicable to conflicts occurring solely within the territory of the U.S.
|
||
|
that are not of an international character, which is capable of including
|
||
|
any type of conflict in its description whether it be civil war or
|
||
|
guerrilla activity or anything else. The text states: "In case of armed
|
||
|
conflict not of an international character occurring in the territory of
|
||
|
one of the high contracting parties, each party to a conflict shall be
|
||
|
bound to apply to the minimum of the following provisions."
|
||
|
* 8) Dept. of the Army field manual FM 41-10, Civil Affairs Operations
|
||
|
of Civil Affairs Organization, lists as one of its functions the
|
||
|
assumption of full or partial executive, legislative and judicial authority
|
||
|
over a country or an area and there is no specific exclusion of the U. S.
|
||
|
as such a country or area.
|
||
|
* 9) Said manual defines country along certain geographical population
|
||
|
basis, county, state regions and national government.
|
||
|
*10) Said organization in fact conducted practiced takeovers of local
|
||
|
and state governments in the continental U.S., including but not limited
|
||
|
to the state of New Jersey.
|
||
|
* 11) Said organization includes in its study outline page j-24 a section
|
||
|
on concentration camps and labor camps.
|
||
|
* 12) Said organization includes in it operations composite service
|
||
|
operations and psychological operations organizations.
|
||
|
*13) Said psychological operation is working with the U. S. Public
|
||
|
Health Service, are prepared to operate any and/or all mental health
|
||
|
facilities in the U. S. as tools of repression against outspoken but
|
||
|
nonviolent political conduct of the U. S. citizens in conjunction with all
|
||
|
the above, which is to be used for the same purpose.
|
||
|
* 14) Further, the Dept. of Justice, inconjunction with this program, has
|
||
|
had plans for the suspension of writ of habeas corpus since the year of
|
||
|
1946, has planned depriving persons being detained under this total
|
||
|
program any means for protection against tyrannical political repression.
|
||
|
The plaintiff requested that the court make findings of fact and draw
|
||
|
conclusions of law, consistent therewith as shown by the evidence on
|
||
|
record before the court. The effect of this request is that the case must
|
||
|
go back to the district judge for further consideration. I mentioned that
|
||
|
it appeared that all this planning for concentration camps was to be
|
||
|
directed against anyone regardless of this political persuasion or his deo-
|
||
|
ideology who exercised freedom of speech against the established power
|
||
|
structure of international bankers and multinational corporation. But,
|
||
|
with Proposition B-type movements threatening to reduce taxes
|
||
|
throughout our nation, I foresee an activation of emergency programs so
|
||
|
that the parasites on the federal take will continue to receive their
|
||
|
checks.
|
||
|
PRICE OF PATRIOTISM
|
||
|
In the same Senate document, on intelligence activities on the rights of
|
||
|
Americans referred to on pages 166 and 167, you will find that the
|
||
|
federal government has targeted its intelligence activities against one
|
||
|
group of Americans. On page 166, the first classification listed is
|
||
|
rightists and anti-Communist groups. The first group on page 167 on
|
||
|
Army surveillance lists the John Birch Society as number one and the
|
||
|
Young Americans for Freedom as the number two target. Therefore, the
|
||
|
groups of U.S. American citizens considered to be the biggest enemy of
|
||
|
the U.S. by the federal government at this is the conservative patriot.
|
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Although this information has been available since April of this year
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(1979), no one has mentioned this incredible discovery that the federal
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government considers the patriotic conservative as its greatest enemy. I
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have received all kinds of information regarding this case from all
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across the United States.
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PRICE OF APATHY
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I obtained the 1945 report of the O. S. S. (Office of Strategic Services)-
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-the precursor of the C.I.A.-7th Army, William W. Quinn, Colonel
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G.F.CA.C.of the G2, on the liberation of Dachau, a concentration camp
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|
during the liberation in Germany. It contains much groupings of
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|
information, but the relevant portion of the report concerns itself with
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the section on the townspeople. Quoting from his report, on why the
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people of this little town didn't complain or didn't overthrow
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oppressors, but just continued to go along and get along even though
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they lost their freedom in the process. I quote:
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|
"These words crop up again and again. They are the rationalization of a
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man who admits that he was a member of the Nazi party. 'I was forced
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to do so by business reasons,' they state. We were lied to in every
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|
respect but they admit they knew the camp existed. But, they saw the
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|
work detail to the inmates passing through the streets under guard, and
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in some instances the S.S. behaved brutally even towards the
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|
townspeople.
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|
"When asked if they realized that within the last three months before the
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|
liberation 13000 men lost their lives within a stone's throw of where the
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|
people lived, they claimed they were shocked and surprised.
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|
'When asked if they never saw transports of dead and dying pass
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|
through the streets along the railway, they referred only to the last one.
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They insist that most of the trains came in at night and that they were
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|
sealed cars.
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|
"Did they never ask what was in the endless procession of cars that
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|
came in full and always went out empty? A typical reply was, 'We were
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|
told it was all army material and booty from France.'
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|
"It is established that anyone who stated that he was only one train come
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|
in in the daytime was telling a flat lie. There are quite a few such
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|
people in Dachau."
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|
The analysis of the anti-Nazi element of the town: 1) The people knew
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|
what was going on in the camp, even ten years prior to liberation; 2)
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|
The town did a thriving business from the concentration camp guard; 3)
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|
Ninety percent are guilty and have dabbed themselves with the blood of
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|
innocent human beings; 4) The people are to blame for their cowardice--
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|
they were all too cowardly. They didn't want to risk anything--and that
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|
was the way it was in all of Germany.
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|
The conclusion of this report written on Dachau written in 1945 on the
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|
liberation of the concentration camp applies today. The conclusion is as
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|
follows: If one is to attempt tremendous task and accept the terrible
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|
responsibility of judging a whole town, assess it in mass as to collective
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||
|
guilt or innocence of all its inhabitants for their complicity in
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||
|
committing this most heinous of crimes, one would do well to
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|
remember the fearsome shadow that hangs over everyone in this state in
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|
light of the similar conditions that now prevail in the midst of our own
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|
circumstances.
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||
|
So you can see how the whole program is related here. My lawsuit was
|
||
|
against one single aspect of the total program: The enforcement arm of
|
||
|
the conspiracy. The people who makeup the cadre that is going to
|
||
|
occupy the concentration camps where enemies of the U. S. will be
|
||
|
placed. Remember Solzhenitsyn's words in the 'Gulag Archipelago':
|
||
|
"Resistance should have begun right there but it did not begin. You
|
||
|
aren't gagged, you really can and you really ought to cry out that arrests
|
||
|
are being made on the strength of false accusations. If many such
|
||
|
outcries had been heard all over the city would arrests have no longer
|
||
|
have been so easy.
|
||
|
They, the tyrants, can't work in the public eye. These people who were
|
||
|
so apathetic, hoping that nothing was really wrong, that nothing would
|
||
|
happen to their persons and property, sat back and watched. The
|
||
|
anarchists, financed by multinational interests, looted and pillaged their
|
||
|
country.
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||
|
If you think that all (that) is necessary is to pay your house notes, to pay
|
||
|
your TV notes, to go vote when there is an election, and to stand back
|
||
|
during the rest of the year and watch as your country and way of life are
|
||
|
replaced by a system in which you will be a slave in a concentration
|
||
|
camp, you_not the conspirators_are guilty because you, by silent
|
||
|
acquiescence, invite tyranny and oppression.
|
||
|
When you have to steal food to eat because our production is for foreign
|
||
|
use because the Dept. of Commerce--through Executive Order 11490
|
||
|
and its predecessors--is responsible for international distribution of our
|
||
|
commodities, don't sit in the culvert hiding and eating and wondering
|
||
|
what happened because you made it all possible.
|
||
|
When your family is split up and spread across the United States to do
|
||
|
slave labor and you never see your loved ones again, it will be your fault
|
||
|
because you did nothing to prevent it. Once we lose our freedom, we
|
||
|
are never going to regain it. That is why we must stand together to
|
||
|
prevent the loss of our freedom as citizens of the United States.
|
||
|
Thank you very much. (Conclusion of taped report.)</conspiracyFile>
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