4 Mar ’12
well, I like Clark, always have. Not sure how we would determine who's supporting these groups within our own borders. and that's where the real problems begin. identifying the enemy.
as you know, some groups that like freedom within the US and appreciate what the bill of rights says, have been identified as domestic terrorists and put on a watch list. also, people who are prepping are on the list as well.
it's a slippery slope when you start putting people in camps. because the govt has different ideas on who is a terrorist within our borders.
and the fact that they refuse to close the borders and are letting in thousands doesnt help in slowing down the possible threats to the country....
4 Mar ’12
interesting article ....
http://occupycorpora.....errorists/
DHS & Local Police Trained to View Constitutionalists as Domestic Terrorists
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has defined Constitutional Americans are domestic terrorists. More than 300,000 US citizens have been termed a “non-violent terrorist” that is dangerous because they are “sovereigns, zealots who refuse to recognize government authority in virtually any form.”
The Federal Bureau of Investigations have called the sovereign movement members “paper terrorists” who fight foreclosure with demonstrations, “filing phony deed claims”, and “squat” in foreclosed homes.
Local police in North Carolina are being trained on how to deal with sovereign citizens because they are recognized as a “domestic terrorist movement.”
According to a highly-circulated video, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is training their agents that the Founding Fathers were terrorists who began a war against their British benefactors. The intimation is that those Americans today that agree with this mindset are potential terrorists.
DHS has released a paper, published by the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START), which outlines that this think-tank was “tasked by the Department of Homeland Security’s Science and Technology Directorate with using state-of-the-art theories, methods, and data from the social and behavioral sciences to improve understanding of the origins, dynamics, and social and psychological impacts of terrorism.”
According to the paper, “the importance of understanding terrorism in the United States assumed heightened prominence in the wake of 9-11 . . . surprisingly little is known about general patterns of terrorist attacks in the United States, including where attacks are most likely to occur.”
more at the link
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