mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-18 04:04:34 -05:00
378 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
378 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
<conspiracyFile>SUBJECT: FEMA GULAG
|
|
SECRET CONCENTRATION CAMPS
|
|
The September issue of THE OSTRICH reprinted a story from the
|
|
CBA BULLETIN which listed the following principal civilian concentra-
|
|
tion camps established in GULAG USA under the =Rex '84= program:
|
|
Ft. Chaffee, Arkansas; Ft. Drum, New York; Ft. Indian Gap, Penn-
|
|
sylvania; Camp A. P. Hill, Virginia; Oakdale, California; Eglin
|
|
Air Force Base, Florida; Vendenberg AFB, California; Ft. Mc Coy,
|
|
Wisconsin; Ft. Benning, Georgia; Ft. Huachuca, Arizona; Camp
|
|
Krome, Florida. The February OSTRICH printed a map of the expanding
|
|
Gulag. Alhough this listing and map stirred considerable interest,
|
|
the report was not new. For at least 20 years, knowledgeable Patriots
|
|
have been warning of these sinister plots to incarcerate dissidents
|
|
opposing plans of the =Elitist Syndicate= for a totalitarian
|
|
=New World Order=. Indeed, the plot was recognized with the insidious
|
|
encroachment of "regionalism" back in the 1960's. As early as 1968,
|
|
the "greatest land steal in history" leading to global corporate
|
|
socialism, was in a ="Master Land Plan"= for the United States
|
|
by =Executive Orders= involving water resource regions,
|
|
population movement and control, pollution control, zoning
|
|
and land use, navigation and environmental bills, etc. Indeed,
|
|
the real undercover aim of the so-called "Environmental Rennaissance"
|
|
has been the abolition of private property.
|
|
All prelude to the total grab of the =World Conservation Bank=,
|
|
as THE OSTRICH has been reporting. The map on this page and
|
|
the list of executive orders available for imposition of an "emergency"
|
|
are from 1970s files of the late Gen. =P. A. Del Valle's= ALERT,
|
|
sent us by =Merritt Newby=, editor of the now defunct AMERICAN
|
|
CHALLENGE.
|
|
=Wake up Americans!= The Bushoviks have approved =Gorbachev's=
|
|
imposition of "Emergency" to suppress unrest. =Henry Kissinger=
|
|
and his clients hardly missed a day's profits in their deals with
|
|
the butchers of Tiananmen Sqaure. Are you next?
|
|
<div>
|
|
SUBJECT: Executive Orders
|
|
APPLICABLE EXECUTIVE ORDERS
|
|
The following =Executive Orders=, now recorded in the Federal
|
|
Register, and therefore accepted by Congress as the law of the
|
|
land, can be put into effect at any time an emergency is declared:
|
|
10995--All communications media seized by the Federal Government.
|
|
10997--Seizure of all electrical power, fuels, including
|
|
gasoline and minerals.
|
|
10998--Seizure of all food resources, farms and farm equipment.
|
|
10999--Seizure of all kinds of transportation, including your
|
|
personal car, and control of all highways and seaports.
|
|
11000--Seizure of all civilians for work under Federal supervision.
|
|
11001--Federal takeover of all health, education and welfare.
|
|
11002--Postmaster General empowered to register every man, woman
|
|
and child in the U.S.A.
|
|
11003--Seizure of all aircraft and airports by the Federal
|
|
Government.
|
|
11004--Housing and Finance authority may shift population from
|
|
one locality to another. Complete integration.
|
|
11005--Seizure of railroads, inland waterways, and storage facilities.
|
|
11051--The Director of the Office of Emergency Planning authorized
|
|
to put Executive Orders into effect in "times of increased
|
|
international tension or financial crisis". He is also to
|
|
perform such additional functions as the President
|
|
may direct.
|
|
<div>
|
|
A Dangerous Fact Not Generally Known
|
|
<div>
|
|
THESE EXECUTIVE ORDERS GROSSLY AND FLAGRANTLY VIOLATE ARTICLE
|
|
4 SECTION 4 OF THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES. "THE
|
|
UNITED STATES SHALL GUARANTEE TO EVERY STATE IN THIS UNION A
|
|
REPUBLICAN FORM OF GOVERNMENT, AND SHALL PROTECT EACH OF THEM
|
|
AGAINST INVASION; AND ON APPLICATION OF THE LEGISLATURE, OR OF THE
|
|
EXECUTIVE (WHEN THE LEGISLATURE CANNOT BE CONVENED) AGAINST
|
|
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE." "REGIONAL GOVERNMENT IS NOT A REPRESENTATIVE
|
|
REPUBLICAN FORM OF GOVERNMENT!"
|
|
When Government gets out of hand and can no longer be controlled
|
|
by the people, short of violent overthrow as in 1776, there are
|
|
two sources of power which are used by the dictatorial government
|
|
to keep the people in line: the Police Power and the Power of the
|
|
Purse (through which the necessities of life can be withheld).
|
|
And both of these powers are no longer balanced between the three
|
|
Federal Branches, and between the Federal and the State and
|
|
local Governments. These powers have been taken over, with the
|
|
permission of the Federal Legislature and the State Governments,
|
|
by the Executive Branch of the Federal Government and all attempts
|
|
to reclaim that lost power have been defeated.
|
|
Stated simply: the dictatorial power of the Executive rests primarily
|
|
on three basis: Executive Order 11490, Executive Order 11647, and
|
|
the Planning, Programming, Budgeting System which is operated
|
|
through the new and all-powerful Office of Management and
|
|
Budget.
|
|
E. O. 11490 is a compilation of some 23 previous Executive Orders,
|
|
signed by Nixon on Oct. 28, 1969, and outlining emergency functions
|
|
which are to be performed by some 28 Executive Departments and
|
|
Agencies whenever the President of the United States declares
|
|
a national emergency (as in defiance of an impeachment edict,
|
|
for example). Under the terms of E. O. 11490, the President
|
|
can declare that a national emergency exists and the Executive
|
|
Branch can:
|
|
* Take over all communications media
|
|
* Seize all sources of power
|
|
* Take charge of all food resources
|
|
* Control all highways and seaports
|
|
* Seize all railroads, inland waterways, airports, storage facilities
|
|
* Commandeer all civilians to work under federal supervision
|
|
* Control all activities relating to health, education, and welfare
|
|
* Shift any segment of the population from one locality to another
|
|
* Take over farms, ranches, timberized properties
|
|
* Regulate the amount of your own money you may withdraw from
|
|
your bank, or savings and loan institution
|
|
All of these and many more items are listed in 32 pages incorporating
|
|
nearly 200000 words, providing and absolute bureaucratic
|
|
dictatorship whenever the President gives the word.
|
|
--> Executive Order 11647 provides the regional and local mechanisms
|
|
--> and manpower for carrying out the provisions of E. O. 11490.
|
|
--> Signed by Richard Nixon on Feb. 10, 1972, this Order sets up Ten
|
|
--> Federal Regional Councils to govern Ten Federal Regions made up
|
|
--> of the fifty still existing States of the Union.
|
|
<div>
|
|
Don sez:
|
|
*Check out this book for the inside scoop on the "secret" Constitution.*
|
|
SUBJECT: - "The Proposed Constitutional Model" Pages 595-621
|
|
Book Title - The Emerging Constitution
|
|
Author - Rexford G. Tugwell
|
|
Publisher - Harpers Magazine Press,Harper and Row
|
|
Dewey Decimal - 342.73 T915E
|
|
ISBN - <data type="ISBN">0-06-128225-10</data>
|
|
Note Chapter 14
|
|
<div>
|
|
The 10 Federal Regions
|
|
<div>
|
|
REGION I: Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode
|
|
Island, Vermont.
|
|
Regional Capitol: Boston
|
|
REGION II: New York, New Jersey, Puerto Rico, Virgin Island.
|
|
Regional Capitol: New York City
|
|
REGION III: Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West
|
|
Virginia, District of Columbia.
|
|
Regional Capitol: Philadelphia
|
|
REGION IV: Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi,
|
|
North Carolina, Tennessee.
|
|
Regional Capitol: Atlanta
|
|
REGION V: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin.
|
|
Regional Capitol: Chicago
|
|
REGION VI: Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas.
|
|
Regional Capitol: Dallas-Fort Worth
|
|
REGION VII: Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska.
|
|
Regional Capitol: Kansas City
|
|
REGION VIII: Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota,
|
|
Utah, Wyoming.
|
|
Regional Capitol: Denver
|
|
REGION IX: Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada.
|
|
Regional Capitol: San Fransisco
|
|
REGION X: Alaska, Oregon, Washington, Idaho.
|
|
Regional Capitol: Seattle
|
|
Supplementing these Then Regions, each of the States is, or is to
|
|
be, divided into subregions, so that Federal Executive control
|
|
is provided over every community.
|
|
Then, controlling the bedgeting and the programming at every
|
|
level is that politico-economic system known as PPBS.
|
|
The President need not wait for some emergency such as an impeachment
|
|
ouster. He can declare a National Emergency at any time, and freeze
|
|
everything, just as he has already frozen wages and prices. And
|
|
the Congress, and the States, are powerless to prevent such an
|
|
Executive Dictatorship, unless Congress moves to revoke these
|
|
extraordinary powers before the Chief Executive moves to invoke
|
|
them.
|
|
THESE EXECUTIVE ORDERS GROSSLY AND FLAGRANTLY VIOLATE THE INTENT AND
|
|
PURPOSE OF ARTICLE 4 SECTION 3. THERE IS NO PROVISION IN THIS
|
|
SECTION OR THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES FOR FORMING A
|
|
REGIONAL STATE OUT OF A GROUP OF STATES! FURTHER, THESE EXECUTIVE
|
|
ORDERS GROSSLY AND FLAGRANTLY VIOLATE THE 9TH AND 10TH
|
|
AMENDMENTS TO THE CONSTITUTION!
|
|
By Proclaiming and Putting Into Effect Executive Order No. 11490,
|
|
the President would put the United States under TOTAL MARTIAL LAW
|
|
AND MILITARY DICTATORSHIP! The Guns Of The American People Would
|
|
Be Forcibly Taken!
|
|
<div>END:REF1<div>MORE--(40%)
|
|
<div>
|
|
<div>REF2:FEMA<div>
|
|
Bushie-Tail used the Gulf War Show to greatly expand the powers of the
|
|
presidency. During this shell game event, the Executive Orders signed
|
|
into "law" continued Bushie's methodical and detailed program to bury
|
|
any residual traces of the constitutional rights and protections of U.S.
|
|
citizens. The Bill of Rights--[almost too late to] use 'em or lose 'em:
|
|
The record of Bush's fast and loose approach to
|
|
constitutionally guaranteed civil rights is a history of
|
|
the erosion of liberty and the consolidation of an imperial
|
|
executive.
|
|
<div>
|
|
From "Covert Action Information Bulletin," Number 37, Summer, 1991 (see
|
|
bottom 2 pages for subscription & back issues info on this quarterly):
|
|
Domestic Consequences of the Gulf War
|
|
Diana Reynolds
|
|
Reprinted with permission of CAIB. Copyright 1991
|
|
Diana Reynolds is a Research Associate at the Edward R. Murrow Center,
|
|
Fletcher School for Public Policy, Tufts University. She is also an
|
|
Assistant Professor of Politics at Broadford College and a Lecturer at
|
|
Merrimack College.
|
|
A war, even the most victorious, is a national misfortune.
|
|
--Helmuth Von Moltke, Prussian field marshall
|
|
George Bush put the United States on the road to its second war in
|
|
two years by declaring a national emergency on August 21990. In
|
|
response to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, Bush issued two Executive
|
|
Orders (12722 and 12723) which restricted trade and travel with Iraq
|
|
and froze Iraqi and Kuwaiti assets within the U.S. and those in the
|
|
possession of U.S. persons abroad. At least 15 other executive orders
|
|
followed these initial restrictions and enabled the President to
|
|
mobilize the country's human and productive resources for war. Under
|
|
the national emergency, Bush was able unilaterally to break his 1991
|
|
budget agreement with Congress which had frozen defense spending, to
|
|
entrench further the U.S. economy in the mire of the military-
|
|
industrial complex, to override environmental protection regulations,
|
|
and to make free enterprise and civil liberties conditional upon an
|
|
executive determination of national security interests.
|
|
The State of Emergency
|
|
In time of war a president's power derives from both constitutional
|
|
and statutory sources. Under Article II, Section 2 of the
|
|
Constitution, he is Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces. Although
|
|
Congress alone retains the right to declare war, this power has become
|
|
increasingly meaningless in the face of a succession of unilateral
|
|
decisions by the executive to mount invasions.
|
|
The president's statutory authority, granted by Congress and
|
|
expanded by it under the 1988 National Emergencies Act (50 USC sec.
|
|
1601), confers special powers in time of war or national emergency.
|
|
He can invoke those special powers simply by declaring a national
|
|
emergency. First, however, he must specify the legal provisions under
|
|
which he proposes that he, or other officers, will act. Congress may
|
|
end a national emergency by enacting a joint resolution. Once invoked
|
|
by the president, emergency powers are directed by the National
|
|
Security Council and administered, where appropriate, under the
|
|
general umbrella of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).[1]
|
|
There is no requirement that Congress be consulted before an emergency
|
|
is declared or findings signed. The only restriction on Bush is that
|
|
he must inform Congress in a "timely" fashion--he being the sole
|
|
arbiter of timeliness.
|
|
Ultimately, the president's perception of the severity of a
|
|
particular threat to national security and the integrity of his
|
|
appointed officers determine the nature of any state of emergency.
|
|
For this reason, those who were aware of the modern development of
|
|
presidential emergency powers were apprehensive about the domestic
|
|
ramifications of any national emergency declared by George Bush. In
|
|
light of Bush's record (see "Bush Chips Away at Constitution" Box
|
|
below) and present performance, their fears appear well-founded.
|
|
The War at Home
|
|
It is too early to know all of the emergency powers, executive
|
|
orders and findings issued under classified National Security
|
|
Directives[2] implemented by Bush in the name of the Gulf War. In
|
|
addition to the emergency powers necessary to the direct mobilization
|
|
of active and reserve armed forces of the United States, there are
|
|
some 120 additional emergency powers that can be used in a national
|
|
emergency or state of war (declared or undeclared by Congress). The
|
|
"Federal Register" records some 15 Executive Orders (EO) signed by
|
|
Bush from August 21990 to February 141991. (See "Bush's Executive
|
|
Orders" box, below)
|
|
It may take many years before most of the executive findings and
|
|
use of powers come to light, if indeed they ever do. But evidence is
|
|
emerging that at least some of Bush's emergency powers were activated
|
|
in secret. Although only five of the 15 EOs that were published were
|
|
directed at non-military personnel, the costs directly attributable to
|
|
the exercise of the authorities conferred by the declaration of
|
|
national emergency from August 2, 1990 to February 1, 1991 for non-
|
|
military activities are estimated at approximately $1300000000.
|
|
According to a February 11, 1991 letter from Bush to congressional
|
|
leaders reporting on the "National Emergency With Respect to Iraq,"
|
|
these costs represent wage and salary costs for the Departments of
|
|
Treasury, State, Agriculture, and Transportation, U.S. Customs,
|
|
Federal Reserve Board, and the National Security Council.[3]
|
|
The fact that $1300000000 was spent in non-military salaries alone
|
|
in this six month period suggests an unusual amount of government
|
|
resources utilized to direct the national emergency state. In
|
|
contrast, government salaries for one year of the state of emergency
|
|
with Iran[4] cost only $430000.
|
|
<div>
|
|
|
|
Bush Chips Away at Constitution
|
|
|
|
George Bush, perhaps more than any other individual in
|
|
U.S. history, has expanded the emergency powers of
|
|
presidency. In 1976, as Director of Central Intelligence,
|
|
he convened Team B, a group of rabidly anti-communist
|
|
intellectuals and former government officials to reevaluate
|
|
CIA inhouse intelligence estimates on Soviet military
|
|
strength. The resulting report recommended draconian civil
|
|
defense measures which led to President Ford's Executive
|
|
Order 11921 authorizing plans to establish government
|
|
control of the means of production, distribution, energy
|
|
sources, wages and salaries, credit and the flow of money
|
|
in U.S. financial institutions in a national emergency.[1]
|
|
As Vice President, Bush headed the Task Force on
|
|
Combatting Terrorism, that recommended: extended and
|
|
flexible emergency presidential powers to combat terrorism;
|
|
restrictions on congressional oversight in counter-
|
|
terrorist planning; and curbing press coverage of
|
|
terrorist incidents.[2] The report gave rise to the Anti-
|
|
Terrorism Act of 1986, that granted the President clear-cut
|
|
authority to respond to terrorism with all appropriate
|
|
means including deadly force. It authorized the
|
|
Immigration and Naturalization Service to control and
|
|
remove not only alien terrorists but potential terrorist
|
|
aliens and those "who are likely to be supportive of
|
|
terrorist activity within the U.S."[3] The bill superceded
|
|
the War Powers Act by imposing no time limit on the
|
|
President's use of force in a terrorist situation, and
|
|
lifted the requirement that the President consult Congress
|
|
before sanctioning deadly force.
|
|
From 1982 to 1988, Bush led the Defense Mobilization
|
|
Planning Systems Agency (DMPSA), a secret government
|
|
organization, and spent more than $3000000000 upgrading
|
|
command, control, and communications in FEMA's continuity
|
|
of government infrastructures. Continuity of Government
|
|
(COG) was ostensibly created to assure government
|
|
functioning during war, especially nuclear war. The Agency
|
|
was so secret that even many members of the Pentagon were
|
|
unaware of its existence and most of its work was done
|
|
without congressional oversight.
|
|
Project 908, as the DMPSA was sometimes called, was
|
|
similar to its parent agency FEMA in that it came under
|
|
investigation for mismanagement and contract
|
|
irregularities.[4] During this same period, FEMA had been
|
|
fraught with scandals including emergency planning with a
|
|
distinctly anti-constitutional flavor. The agency would
|
|
have sidestepped Congress and other federal agencies and
|
|
put the President and FEMA directly in charge of the U.S.
|
|
planning for martial rule. Under this state, the executive
|
|
would take upon itself powers far beyond those necessary to
|
|
address national emergency contingencies.[5]
|
|
Bush's "anything goes" anti-drug strategy, announced
|
|
on September 6, 1989, suggested that executive emergency
|
|
powers be used: to oust those suspected of associating
|
|
with drug users or sellers from public and private housing;
|
|
to mobilize the National Guard and U.S. military to fight
|
|
drugs in the continental U.S.; to confiscate private
|
|
property belonging to drug users, and to incarcerate first
|
|
time offenders in work camps.[6]
|
|
The record of Bush's fast and loose approach to
|
|
constitutionally guaranteed civil rights is a history of
|
|
the erosion of liberty and the consolidation of an imperial
|
|
executive.
|
|
|
|
1. Executive Order 11921, "Emergency preparedness Functions,
|
|
June 11, 1976. Federal Register, vol. 41, no. 116. The
|
|
report was attacked by such notables as Ray Cline, the
|
|
CIA's former Deputy Director, retired CIA intelligence
|
|
analyst Arthur Macy Cox, and the former head of the U.S.
|
|
Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, Paul Warnke for
|
|
blatantly manipulating CIA intelligence to achieve the
|
|
political ends of Team B's rightwing members. See Cline,
|
|
quoted in "Carter to Inherit Intense Dispute on Soviet
|
|
Intentions," Mary Marder, "Washington Post," January 2,
|
|
1977; Arthur Macy Cox, "Why the U.S. Since 1977 Has
|
|
Been Mis-perceiving Soviet Military Strength," "New York
|
|
Times," October 20, 1980; Paul Warnke, "George Bush and
|
|
Team B," "New York Times," September 24, 1988.
|
|
|
|
2. George Bush, "Public Report of the Vice President's Task
|
|
Force On Combatting Terrorism" (Washington, D.C.: U.S.
|
|
Government Printing Office), February 1986.
|
|
|
|
3. Robert J. Walsh, Assistant Commissioner, Investigations
|
|
Division, Immigration and Naturalization Service, "Alien
|
|
Border Control Committee" (Washington, DC), October 1,
|
|
1988.
|
|
|
|
4. Steven Emerson, "America's Doomsday Project," "U.S. News
|
|
& World Report," August 7, 1989.
|
|
|
|
5. See: Diana Reynolds, "FEMA and the NSC: The Rise of the
|
|
National Security State," "CAIB," Number 33 (Winter 1990);
|
|
Keenan Peck, "The Take-Charge Gang," "The Progressive,"
|
|
May 1985; Jack Anderson, "FEMA Wants to Lead Economic
|
|
War," "Washington Post," January 10, 1985.
|
|
|
|
6. These Presidential powers were authorized by the Anti-
|
|
Drug Abuse Act of 1988, Public Law 100-690: 100th
|
|
Congress. See also: Diana Reynolds, "The Golden Lie,"
|
|
"The Humanist," September/October 1990; Michael Isikoff,
|
|
"Is This Determination or Using a Howitzer to Kill a
|
|
Fly?" "Washington Post National Weekly," August 27-,
|
|
September 2, 1990; Bernard Weintraub, "Bush Considers
|
|
Calling Guard To Fight Drug Violence in Capital," "New
|
|
York Times," March 21, 1989.
|
|
|
|
<div></conspiracyFile> |