Concentration Camps Revisited: National Emergency Centers Establishment Act 2013
June 26, 2013
Infowars
On Tuesday, a caller to the Alex Jones Show brought up H.R.390, the National Emergency Centers Establishment Act, introduced in the House of Representatives on January 23 of this year by Florida Democrat Alcee L. Hastings.
The bill – submitted to the Subcommittee on Intelligence, Emerging
Threats & Capabilities – is a reformulation of an earlier bill going
by the same name, H.R. 645, introduced in 2009. That bill was referred to committee and subsequently died there.
If it had made it out of committee, the earlier legislation would direct the Secretary of Homeland Security to do the following:
(1) to provide temporary housing, medical, and humanitarian assistance to individuals and families dislocated due to an emergency or major disaster;
(2) to provide centralized locations for the purposes of training and ensuring the coordination of Federal, State, and local first responders;
(3) to provide centralized locations to improve the coordination of preparedness, response, and recovery efforts of government, private, and not-for-profit entities and faith-based organizations; and
(4) to meet other appropriate needs, as determined by the Secretary of Homeland Security.
H.R. 390 proposes to accomplish the same
objectives. It will “designate closed military installations as sites
whenever possible and to designate portions of existing military
installations as centers otherwise.”
Responding to the earlier bill, then Congressman Ron Paul
said the legislation would be used to incarcerate Americans following
the establishment of martial law. “Yeah, that’s their goal, they’re
setting up the stage for violence in this country, no doubt about it,”
Paul responded to a question about the House bill. “They’re putting
their back up against the wall and saying, if need be we’re going to
have martial law,” Paul added.
In December 2008, the Washington Post reported
on plans to station 20,000 more U.S. troops inside America for purposes
of “domestic security” from September 2011 onwards, an expansion of
Northcom’s militarization of the country in preparation for potential
civil unrest following a total economic collapse or a terror attack.
H.R. 645 followed up on a number of significant events, including the stationing of active duty military personnel inside the U.S. under Northcom, in part for the purpose of “crowd control.”
Prior to the introduction of the bill, U.S. troops returning from Iraq were assigned to conduct “homeland patrols” and part of that assignment was to deal with “civil unrest and crowd control.”
In the years leading up to FEMA
concentration camp legislation, the government prepared for the
eventuality of civil and political unrest. Rex 84, Operation Garden
Plot, Operation Cable Splicer, and a flurry of executive orders issued
over the years have established the framework for concentration camps.
Add to this the Pentagon’s Civilian Inmate Labor Program,
provided by Army Regulation 210-35, that establishes labor programs and
prison camps on Army installations. It was issued in 2005, well before
the current legislation of its predecessor. Signaling that the effort
was not sidelined or mothballed, in January 2006, Kellogg, Brown and
Root reported that they had received a contract from the Department of Homeland Security to expand these internment camps.
The government is determined to keep
information about its FEMA concentration camps as secret as possible.
This was demonstrated in December, 2010, when TruTV inexplicably pulled an episode of Jesse Ventura’s Conspiracy Theory dealing with FEMA camps and fusion centers.
It is not certain H.R.390 will make it
out of committee and become law. But its reintroduction earlier this
year reveals a sincere desire on the part of the establishment to put a
martial law detention infrastructure in place, especially now as the
economy continues its danse macabre and the prospect of revolution grows within the United States.
No comments:
Post a Comment