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Overunity Machines Forum



Martial Law

Started by frog, December 29, 2008, 06:03:47 PM

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0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Cap-Z-ro


Wow, great...when does the off base "training" start ?

Regards...


frog


For my friends in Canada:

New eyes on border; A U. S. drone delivered to North Dakota will soon begin northern patrols
Matthew Coutts, National Post
Published: Thursday, December 11, 2008


Related Topics

John Michel
Juan Munoz-Torres
Border Control and Customs
Remotely Operated and Robotic Vehicles
North Dakota Air Force Base



Gary Williams/Getty Images/AFPCrew members taxi the new MQ-9 Predator B, an unmanned surveillance aircraft system unveiled by the US Customs and Border Protection (CBP), at Libby Army Airfield at Ft. in Sierra Vista, Arizona.
Sitting on the tarmac at a North Dakota Air Force Base is the future of U. S. northern border security: an unmanned patrol airplane similar to ready-to-fire aircraft used in Afghanistan, identical to drones scouting above the U. S. border with Mexico and the first of its kind ready to fly along the Canadian border, in search of drug runners, illegal immigrants and terrorists heading south.

The Predator B Unmanned Aircraft System, a plane with a thin, cylindrical body, three wheels and no cockpit, was delivered to Grand Forks by U. S. Customs and Border Protection authorities last weekend and will be launched on patrol missions above the western Prairie landscape early next year. The US$10-million, remote-controlled craft is equipped with video equipment and heat sensors capable of spotting people crossing the border illegally by avoiding ports of entry.

Once heralded as the world's longest undefended border, the thin line of security between Canada and the United States is now viewed by many Americans as a sieve, capable of being exploited by terrorists, and a major concern for national defence in the post-9/11 world.

In recent years, U. S. Customs and Border Protection and the Department of Home-land Security have upgraded security measures making documents such as passports mandatory for visitors from Canada, increasing the number of agents and screening measures at border ports and installing extra cameras and motion detectors along undefended portions of the line.

The idea of a physical security fence running along the Canadian border, similar to one found along the Mexican border, is still an option being endorsed by some state governors.

The use of unmanned aerial vehicles were first proposed in the 2005 Secure Border Initiative as part of a "virtual fence" that also includes fixed towers and mobile radars. The aircraft went into action along the U. S.-Mexico border immediately, but this will be the first one will take flight along the United States's northern border.

According to a statement from border protection's air and marine assistant commissioner, the aerial patrol with help "identify and intercept potential terrorist or illegal cross-border activity" while supporting Canadian and U. S. law enforcement agencies.

Border patrol officials say they make about 4,000 arrests and intercept about 18,000 kilograms of illegal drugs each year along the Canadian border.

Juan Munoz-Torres, a spokesman for border protection's air and marine operations, said the Canada-U. S. border poses significant security concerns because of the distance between checkpoints and a geography which is often hard to reach by land. Aerial patrols will help close those gaps while answering questions about how many people are slipping into the country between checkpoints.

"We don't know what we don't know so I can't tell you what we will find or what we won't find. As we begin operations, we will see what type of activity is taking place and we will then start working in order to stop that activity," he said. Three more Predators are expected to join the patrol along Canada's nearly 9,000-kilometre border. For now, Federal Aviation Administration authority will only allow the aerial patrol along a 480-kilometre stretch along North Dakota and Minnesota.

Senator Kent Conrad, a North Dakota Democrat who has been working for four years to shore up security along the Canada-U. S. border, said the Predator's arrival is the beginning of a secure border.

"It is vital to America's security that we protect our borders, particularly the northern border," Sen. Conrad said.

"The Grand Forks Air Branch plays an essential role in helping shut the door on terrorists who want to sneak across remote border points to strike on U. S. soil."

Colonel John E. Michel, commander of Grand Forks Air Force Base, told the Grand Forks Herald the base will eventually house more than 20 unmanned aerial vehicles, at least six of which will be used for surveillance.

Similar aircraft have patrolled the country's southwestern border since 2005, leading to the confiscation of more than 8,000 kilograms of marijuana and the arrest of 4,000 illegal immigrants flowing from Mexico.

Similar versions of the unmanned aircraft, equipped with missiles, are being used in reconnaissance missions in Afghanistan and Iraq. Those to fly along Canada's border will be unarmed, equipped instead with Raytheon electro-optical sensors and a synthetic aperture radar that can help document natural changes to the area.

The Predator is 20 metres long and weighs more than 4,500 kilograms. It will patrol at an altitude of 15,000 metres. It can fly 418 kilometres per hour and stay aloft for 18 hours before landing to refuel. With its cameras and sensors, it can detect a moving person from 11 kilometres away.

FYI- the other 14 are ARMED FOR COMBAT.


*
"When you change the way you look
at things, the things you look at change."

Cap-Z-ro


One thing in our favor though...'if man can make it, man can break it'.

Someone will see to it that the technical "antidote" for their surveillance tactics will leak out...blowing the lid off the game.

Don't forget, the criminally insane are first and foremost loony.

The lack of judgment which is part and parcel of lunacy is their Achilles heel...and will ultimately lead to their downfall.

Regards...


Pirate88179

Hey, someone asked in the beginning of this topic somewhere if anyone noticed any unusual military activity in their area.  OK, I answered no for here in KY.  But now, I saw a small article in the paper that says the Kentucky National Guard will do a full, real time emergency deployment statewide sometime in the next month.  They said it was to prepare for a "Statewide Emergency" like that caused if the New Madrid fault line (which runs to our north west border along the Miss. river) creates a massive earthquake.

So, I just want to correct my earlier post by saying that yes, I would consider this "unusual" activity.  By itself, I would think, no big deal.  But, in reading the stories and reports from other states, why all of the "practice" for "emergencies" all of a sudden?  I mean, it is always good to be prepared for any emergency situation but, I find the coordination of these many state's activities to be very curious.  Especially since they all claim different reasons for the practice, all at about the same time period.

Bill
See the Joule thief Circuit Diagrams, etc. topic here:
http://www.overunity.com/index.php?topic=6942.0;topicseen

Cap-Z-ro


Too many "coincidences" are never a coincidence.

This whole thing has familiar smell...like human flesh...ours.

Regards...