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206 lines
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206 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
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FEMA's activation sets the stage for rule by decree
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By Kathleen Klenetsky
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"In the developed countries there will be a bitter struggle for
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the control of their diminished resources. This struggle will
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merely worsen a bad situation; it will somehow have to be
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stopped. If left unchecked, it would lead to anarchy and to a
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drastic reduction of the size of the population by civil war,
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famine, and pestilence, the historic reducers of populations that
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have outgrown their means of subsistence. Consequently in all
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developed countries, a new way of life -- a severely regimented
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way -- will have to be imposed by a ruthless authoritarian
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government."
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-- Arnorld Toynbee ("After the age of affluence," _The Skeptic_,
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July-Aug 1974)
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Of all the signs during early November that the Bush administration was
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lunging toward a cataclysmic conflict in the Persian Gulf, one of the most
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ominous was the five day, closed-door meeting with the Federal Emergency
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Management Agency (FEMA) convened in Atlanta during the week of November 5.
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Despite its innocuous-sounding name, FEMA serves as a framework for the
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anti-constitutional, authoritarian regime envisioned by British strategic
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games master Arnold Toynbee in the article quoted above. It is now
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mobilizing for precisely that purpose.
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Since Bush launched his "Operation Desert Shield" in August, preparations
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for a FEMA dictatorship, under the guise of a national security crisis
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induced by either an oil shortage or a war, have dominated
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behind-the-scenes planning at the National Security Council, which controls
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FEMA and it's activation.
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The process has been shrouded in secrecy. FEMA spokesmen adamantly refused
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to provide any information about the agency's Atlanta meeting, other than
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to confirm that it was taking place. However, enough information has leaked
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out to fuel speculation that Bush will soon utilize the vast array of
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stand-by emergency powers available to him.
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Over the last few weeks, FEMA has drafted new legislation that would expand
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its already formidable powers, allowing it, for example, to set up
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operations in any state or locality, without the prior permission of local
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or state authorities, as is currently required.
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'Emergency' fascism?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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WE are not arguing in this report that emergency preparedness or emergency
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measures are unnecessary and inappropriate under any and all circumstances.
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What we are saying is that the Bush administration is dead set on using the
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pretext of a national security crisis to carry out a set of policies which
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violate the U.S. constitution, and are inimical to the interests of the
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vast majority of the U.S. population. Bush is being impelled toward
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exercising emergency powers by the same circumstances that are behind his
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drive for war: the economic collapse of the Anglo-American financial
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superstructure. The principle reason that Bush wants a war with Iraq, is to
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set a precedent for reviving the savage colonialist policy of looting Third
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World countries.
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This is deemed necessary by the Anglo-American elite, because their failed
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policies of "post-industrialism" and speculation have made it impossible to
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pay Third World countries a just and fair price for their oil, minerals,
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and other commodities. Rather than change their own economic policies,
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Bush, Thatcher, and their elite controllers have opted for misery on a
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global scale.
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By the same token, Bush needs an excuse to wield emergency powers because
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of the economic depression in the United States. As exemplified by the
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budget wranglings of the past six months, the administration has decided to
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deal with the nation's economic woes not by stimulating investment in
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agriculture, manufacturing, and hi-tech industries, but by looting the
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living standard of the middle, and working class.
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But the depths of the depression the United States has entered will require
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austerity on a scale that cannot be accomplished within the framework of
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constitutional government -- at least not without risking a popular upsurge
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that could overturn the administration and its policies.
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Thus, the Iraq conflict -- which, as EIR has documented, was deliberately
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setup by the United States and Great Britain -- has provided Bush with the
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long-sought-for chance to ram austerity down the throats of Americans,
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while establishing a genocidal U.S. policy towards the nations of the Third
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World.
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FEMA's police state
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Should the American people resist, FEMA is prepared to step in with
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police-state measures. In its July 5, 1987 issue, the Miami Herald
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published a revealing expose on FEMA's plans to rip up the Constitution in
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the event of a national crisis.
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Written by Alfonso Chardy, the article reported that between 1982-1984,
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FEMA revised its contingency plans for dealing with "nuclear war,
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insurrection, or a massive mobilization." [See HERALD.TXT.]
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Chardy reported that National Security Council staffer LT. COL. Oliver
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North assisted FEMA in drawing up "a controversial plan to suspend the
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constitution in the event of a national crisis, such as nuclear war,
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violent and wide spread internal dissent or _national opposition to a U.S.
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military invasion abroad_" (Emphasis added). The last eventuality is of
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special significance under the present circumstances of growing domestic
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opposition to Bush's war plans in the Gulf.
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The Plan "also advocated the roundup and transfer to 'assembly centers or
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relocation camps' of at least 21 million" black Americans. In 1984, FEMA
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ran its "Rex 84" exercise (one of many such exercises, almost all of them
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classifies, which FEMA regularly carries out in conjunction with the
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Defense Department), to test its upgraded capabilities and powers. The
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"Rex 84" scenario was based on a superpower confrontation over Central
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America which would lead to a nuclear war. Included in the scenario was a
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roundup of Central American refugees who had poured over the boarders into
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the United States, and who were placed in detention camps located on U.S.
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military bases. The scenario also called for the imposition of martial law
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in the United States, to quell an anti-war movement.
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Substitute Middle East for Central America, and war with Iraq for a
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superpower confrontation, and you've got the Bush Administration -- FEMA
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script for suppressing any opposition to U.S. participation in the Gulf
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conflict. A still-secret National Security Directive decision (No. 52),
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issued by President Reagan in August 1982, pertains to the "Use of National
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Guard Troops to Quell Disturbances."
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Bush: The American Mussolini
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Bush is the perfect candidate to be the American Mussolini. His patrician
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background and intimate ties to the U.S. Intelligence community (he served
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as the director of the CIA in the mid-1970s), have inculcated in him a
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contempt for constitutional and representational government. That has been
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nowhere more evident than in his recent response from pleadings from
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Capital Hill that he consult with Congress on the Gulf conflict. In
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defiance of the constitutions provision that only Congress has the right to
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declare war, Bush has refused.
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During the Reagan years, Bush insinuated himself into the heart of the
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administration's vast crisis-planning apparatus, getting himself appointed
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the head of Special Situations Group, which effectively placed him in
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charge of all crisis management.
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Bush signaled his intention to use crisis management as the means of
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imposing emergency police-state rule just a week after the election. One
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of his first acts after winning the presidency was to persuade Ronald
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Reagan to issue Executive Order 12656, which we excerpted at length in the
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_Documentation_ section -- a chilling blueprint for an emergency
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dictatorship with FEMA at the helm.
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Blank check for crisis management
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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If Bush does decide to use the Gulf crisis as an excuse to declare a
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national emergency, he has a virtual blank check to do what he pleases
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period. "The President has a broad range of emergency powers available to
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him in a crisis," a White House spokesman confirmed. According to Harold
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Relyea, a specialist at the Congressional Research Service, the powers
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available to the President under conditions of a national security crisis
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are "wide open. . . there is probably not a whole lot circumscribing the
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Presidents's authority to use certain statutes, some of which require a
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declaration of national emergency, some of which don't."
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These powers are based on a huge body of executive orders, national
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security directives, and legislation that has evolved since WWII. In
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addition to the various executive orders and national security directives
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described elsewhere in the report, some of the most important of these
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include:
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* the National Security Act of 1947, under which FEMA draws its authority,
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among other things, to effect the strategic relocation of industries,
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services, government, and other essential activities, and to rationalize the
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requirements for manpower, resources, and productive facilities.
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* the 1950 Defense Production Act, which gives the president sweeping
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powers over all aspects of the economy;
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* the Act of August 29, 1916, which authorizes the Secretary of the Army,
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in time of war, to take possession of any transportation system for
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transportation of troops, materiel, or any other purpose related to the
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emergency;
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* the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which enables the
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President to seize the property of a Foreign capital or national.
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In addition, numerous measures exist that are specifically designed to be
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invoked in event of a cutoff of U.S. energy supplies, which would likely
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occur should fighting break out in the Gulf.
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These include: the Energy Policy and Conservation Act, which establishes
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the Strategic Petroleum Reserve and establishes separate energy priorities
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and allocation authority to be coordinated with the national defense
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authorities and allocations system set up by the Defense Production Act;
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the Energy Security Act of 1980; the Naval Petroleum Reserve Act, which
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establishes the naval petroleum and oil shale reserve and authorizes the
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Navy to seize or acquire transportation pipelines to transport the
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petroleum; the Export Administration Act and the Trade Expansion Act, which
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authorize the President to control exports and imports; and the Energy
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Emergency Preparedness Act of 1982.
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EIR, Nov 23, 1990, (pg.20)
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