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I see an economic diasater coming...

Started by the_big_m_in_ok, September 03, 2009, 01:05:30 AM

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Do you think the American economy will ever improve?

Yes, definitely
Possibly, in the long run
No, it will worsen
Undecided

triffid

I was just told that Americans could be sent overseas to foreign prisons to save money.They could pay those guards less.triffid

the_big_m_in_ok

Quote from: triffid on November 01, 2011, 07:56:19 PM
Big lee check your PM.There may be concentration camps ahead for Americans???I know we had them for the japanese Americans back in World War Two.They had the face of the enemy.
triffid,
Take a look at these:
http://claireevans.hubpages.com/hub/auschwitzinamerica
http://claireevans.hubpages.com/hub/Auschwitz-in-America-Pt2
Quote
But the German Americans were not rounded up.Because????? They were white and looked like US!!!!
It was the Italians, too.   Too many---especially the Germans---and too white.   100,000,000 Germans and my Mom was one.   She worked as an Engineering Aide in Civil Service until she met my Dad after the War.   She would have been a better engineer than my Dad.   She was even smarter than he was; and he was pretty smart himself.
Quote
Sooooo which Americans will be placed in concentration Camps this time???Now a third of Americans???
That's what conspiracy theorists say.   I don't know, though.   Crowd control and logistics may be difficult.
Quote
With the japanese americans they rounded up about 300,000?And within months were running short on supplies.So bring all the boys home and put up roadblocks every hundred miles or so.Search all the cars for guns maybe?Grab the guns?Grab the people too?triffid
As I said, logistics.  That would be a big undertaking.   Absolutely perfectly executed organizational planning would be paramount.

--Lee
"Truth comes from wisdom and wisdom comes from experience."
--Valdemar Valerian from the Matrix book series

I'm merely a theoretical electronics engineer/technician for now, since I have no extra money for experimentation, but I was a professional electronics/computer technician in the past.
As a result, I have a lot of ideas, but no hard test results to back them up---for now.  That could change if I get a job locally in the Bay Area of California.

triffid

An example of the detention centres in the United States was the incarceration of Japanese Americans in the light of the attack of PearlHarbour in 1941. After the attacks, American government and military officials began to suspect that every Japanese American would sympathise and support Japan against the United States. They were accused of being spies after the Americans intercepted encrypted messages from Japanese officials which were completely unfounded. Even if there were, it was very few and definitely didn’t warrant the detention of an entire ethnic group. Government and military officials, like J Edgar Hoover, didn’t believe the Japanese Americans constituted a threat but various administration officials at the Department of War (now Department of Defense) disagreed. Finally, fuelled by false reports of espionage and the demands of white farmers in California who saw the Japanese American farmers as threats, President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066.
The rights of Japanese Americans were revoked, even those who were American citizens which made up the majority, and they were rounded up and detained in prison camps across nine states. It destroyed their emotional well-being, self identify and their culture. Instead of being independent, they had to rely on the government for their basic needs. Many of these camps were placed on Native American property which the Native Americans never consented to. They were never compensated for this. They initially thought they’d benefit from improvements made on their land but that was not to be. After the war, the buildings and gardens were destroyed or sold by the government.

Every Japanese American prisoner had to show their loyalty for the United States by answering two questions: 1) whether or not they would be willing to be drafted to fight in the war or volunteer as a nurse and (2) whether they would swear to obey all the laws of the U.S. and not interfere with the war effort, despite the fact that their rights had been revoked. The majority answered yes to both questions.

On January 2, 1945, the Executive Order was revoked and the Japanese American prisoners were allowed to leave despite the fact that the Japanese had not surrendered yet during the war and the worst was to come. This proves how unfounded the “fears” that the Japanese American detainees were spies. Therefore, they could never have been a security threat.

Ominously enough, in 2006, Congress sent former President Bush a bill that establishes a $38 million program of National Park Service grants to preserve Japanese POW internment camps across several states. Is this in the name of historical preservation or preparation for what is to come?


triffid

Strangely enough those who tried to return home after the war found their former homes and businesses taken over by other people and were never paid for their losses.Many had been forced to sell at a great loss or risk receiving nothing for their property.Right before the buses started coming for them.I knew a japanese girl whose parents had met in such a camp.So she was one good thing to come out of it.On the worst day of my life babies were born.I met one such women.It was about sept,4th 1978.At Lunch at work one day I told how that day was the worst day of my life and she popped up with thats the day I was born!Just a reminder that the Sun has been shining everyday since its fusion fires first started no matter how dark our day seems.triffid

triffid

This shall be a sign that martial law is here or nearly upon us :The anonymous pastor said the authorities don’t like referring to these facilities as detention camps. Rather they are “community centres” or “relocation centres”. The term I most commonly come across is residential centre. He was informed of the plan when a bio-terrorist attack or pandemic occurred. There would be mass vaccinations and forced drugging. There’s a program for this called “Pills in People’s Palms in 48 Hours” and Walmart is the designated place for this procedure.

These pastors see nothing ominous about this. They are unaware of the true conspiracy behind. They get lured into this by being promised preferential treatment and access to vaccines and food during emergencies. Who knows when the time comes if they will actually receive what they are promised?