Thursday, August 6, 2009

Don't take me to the FEMA camps! Could be a hit country song...




http://www.freedomsphoenix.com/News/054501-2009-07-31-army-national-guard-advertises-for-internment-specialists.htm

http://jobsearch.money.cnn.com/a/all-jobs/list/q-Corrections+Officer+Internment/Resettlement+Specialist/c-Army+National+Guard


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u_242OjWTuE

The first two links lead you to a job description for a guard at a FEMA camp or so it seems...
The third link is a big guy with a sweet Cadillac explaining his concern...

http://www.infowars.com/army-national-guard-advertises-for-internment-specialists/

Ole Alex Jones chimes in on the above link...Here are some quotes from his article:

"The term “rehabilitative programs” is key. Glenn Beck and the corporate media may attempt to discredit the fact there are FEMA camps, but military documents demonstrate the government plans to herd people into internment camps. Army Regulation 210-35, entitled “Civilian Inmate Labor Program,” provides “guidance for establishing and managing civilian inmate labor programs on Army installations. It provides guidance on establishing prison camps on Army installations.”"

http://www.wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=106304


"HR 645 the National Emergency Centers Establishment Act is a proposed bill in the U.S. House of Representatives that would authorize FEMA to build no less than six National Emergency Centers throughout the U.S. on closed or open military facilities. These facilities are to be designed to house large numbers of people. Why would emergency centers need to be built on closed or open military facilities unless there was a need to keep people from coming in and out of them?

KBR was granted a government contract a few years ago to build facilities to house illegal immigrants. Now with illegal immigration becoming less of a problem with the U.S. economy in the toilet, these facilities can now be used for other purposes."

"At the Examiner, a commentator wrote, "Correctional/internment facilities? I have to admit that the U.S. government is good at one thing: creating fluffy names for evil acts. During WW2, of course, the U.S. didn't have concentration camps, we had 'relocation centers' for hundreds of thousands of innocent Japanese citizens."

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