Not all health care bills are right. The Masachusetts Senate earlier this year passed unainmously the pandemic and disaster preparation bill or S. 2028. This has caused widespread criticism as citizens oppose it passage in the commonwealth's House of Representatives. Michael Adams from Natural News.com believes that Massachusetts becomes a medical police state under this bill. Adams said that the bill will violate the rights of the citizens of Massachusets and they are the property of the state if this bill becomes law. The bill does have controversail, unconstitutional, and alarming provisions. The bill mentions that in an emergency that is declared by the governor, the statue gives the health commissioner (and law enforcement medical personnel) broad authority to mobilize forces, vaccinate the population, enter private property with no warrants, and even quarantine people against their will. There are severe penalities in the legislation (which is $1,000 fine per day and possible jail time for not complying with state orders while also claiming to shield everyone involved from liability). It gives local health authorities the power to restrict or end end assemblages of persons. It gives the government via agent the power to: “arrest without a warrant any person whom the officer has probable cause to believe has violated an order” while using “reasonable diligence to enforce such order.” Also, law-enforcement authorities “shall assist” medical personnel in the “involuntary transportation” of people to “treatment centers.” People are given the right to refuse the vaccination, but the people who do it are isolated or quarantined.
The demonization of people who expose the New World order is nothing new. Now, psychology today is having their hit piece. This Magazine is now labeling conspiracy thinking as a psychotic illness. That's a lie of course. In an article entitled Dark Minds: When does incredulity become paranoia, Psychology Today writer John Gartner attempts to make the case that the concerns of “conspiracy theorists” are not based in reality but are a product of mental instability. Gartner believes in the myth that powerful men and government don't conspire to advance their power. Powerful people working with each other to centralize wealth is apart of human history. Psychology Today is angry especially about how Patriots are exposing the dangers of the H1N1 vaccination plan. Gartner ignores or denies John P. Holdren's eugenic proposals (like forced abortion, sterilization, and mass drugging of the public in our water supply). He dismisses one national seucrity memorandum as a bland policy report. That document is that National Security Study Memorandum 200, a 1974 geopolitical strategy document prepared by Rockefeller’s intimate friend and fellow Bilderberg member Henry Kissinger, which targeted thirteen countries for massive population reduction by means of creating food scarcity, sterilization and war. Mr. Gartner seems to not comprehend the document at all. NSSM 200 was only declassified in 1989. It wanted 13 countries to experience the proposals of the NSSM 200 (which are pro-eugenics and pro-population control). The document wants to use food as a weapon against the Third World for not submitting to the West's demands. This is a fact not conspiracy theory. Gartner promotes the myth that people learn about conspiracies to make order in the world. Political conspiracies have existed for a long time. To continue having different political views on issues alone as a sign of mental illness is a lie that has been used against innocent citizens. The Soviet Union dictatorship used insulin, torture, restraints, and other forms of violence against political dissidents in gulags. Anne Applebaum, author of Gulag: A History, indicates that at least 365 sane people were treated for “politically defined madness,” although she surmises there were many more. Hopefully, widescale actions like those which occured in the Soviet Union don't occur in America. Gartner's lies are nothing new. Quack psychologists like Gartner who define distrust of authorities and alternative explanations for the “official story” put out by governments who have repeatedly proven themselves to be liars as a form of psychosis are themselves as mentally unstable as their much vaunted peers (like Sigmund Freud and Nazi funder Alfred Kinsey). We will just peacefully refute Gartner like others before and after him.
The out going IAEA chief El Baradei said that the Iranian threat is "hyped," which is true. He said that there is no proof that the Islamic republic will soon have nuclear weapons. He said these words to the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists in an interview that was released on Tuesday. He admits that there are concerns about Iran's future intention and Iran needs to be more transparent with the IAEA plus the international community. Yet, he believed that Iran still doesn't have a nuclear weapon. According to government officials, the IAEA has another document which is a summary of everything the agency knows about Iran's nuclear program, which has remained classified. Israel is keen on getting that document released, but has limited leverage since it is not a member of the IAEA. ElBaradei doesn't agree with releasing the document and the decision to do so will be up to his successor named Yukiya Amano (who is from Japan). He will take office on December 1. Amano is seen as more neutral in the Iran controversy. Some in Israel want war in Iran, which doesn't make sense since Iran is no direct threat to Israel. Israel has hundreds of nuclear weapons and Iran has none. It would be stupid for Iran to attack Israel, because Israel will be more than willing to crush Iran shiftly. The best policy is an non-interventionalist policy and to let Iran handle its own affairs. Iran should be legitimately criticized when it does errors (like suppressing freedoms), but a preemptive strike agaisnt Iran isn't a feasible foreign policy solution in order to ease tensions in the Middle East.
More information is comign out in dealing with the Oklahoma City bombing. One key witness to it was linked to the CIA. This informaiton on the OKC bombing was disclosed in Salt Late City attorney Jesse Trentadue's lawsuit against the government. Trentadue filed FOIA requests as apart of an investigation in his brother's death while in federal custody. After the FOIA request, the CIA filed what is known as Vaughn Index, which is a summary of whithheld classified information. The index revealed a CIA connection to the events after the April 19, 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in downtown Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. The indiex proved that a potential witness in the Oklahoma City bombing trial was associated with the CIA. The Vaughn Index describes contacts between the CIA and the potential witness. According to Intelwire, it has informaiton on the location of a covert CIA facility. There is a cable sent on the day of the OKC bombing mention of the covert CIA facility. The document mentions a CIA cyptogram, CIA Intelligence limitations and capabilities (including CIA records) that relate to Timothy Mcveigh and Terry Nichols. The index found that U.S. citizens attending the Popular Arabic Islamic conference in Sudan allegedly. It was a nexus for Islamic terrorist leaders like al-Qaeda. There were unconfirmed reports of Arabic people at the scene with Timothy McVeigh. The survellience tapes are revealed because of national security. Days after the attack, the federal government via the FBI collectively dmeonized the militia movement (under the guise of revenge of what occured in Waco and Ruby Ridge). Some like Intelwire published information that claimed an al-Qaeda link to the OKC bombing (in recruiting America). Berger claims John Doe 2 may have been Jose Padilla, the Hispanic American supposedly recruited as an al-Qaeda operative in early 1993 and subsequently arrested an accused of plotting a dirty bomb attack. The reality is that al-Qaeda is a proven CIA asset that worked with the Pakistani ISI. Not to mention that Jesse Trentadue found FBI involvement in the OKC Bombing. That means that proof exists of FBI informants faciliting the attack in OKC (with their agents in Elohim City). One example is how an FBI informant told his superiors that an attack in the Alfred P. Murrah building was scouted and McVeigh visited Elohim City. In 2004, a declassified FBI memo obtained by an Oklahoma newspaper revealed the existence of a Southern Poverty Law Center informant connected to the Elohim City operation. The SPLC is known to work with the FBI and demonize even sincere conservatives plus libertarians. Additional FOIA documents establish the fact the FBI was working with the SPLC. An unclassified copy of a memorandum marked “From the Director of the FBI” contains several references to an FBI undercover operation at Elohim City before the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building and also mentions the SPLC informant. “If I told you what we were doing there, I would have to kill you,” Morris Dees of the Southern Poverty Law Center told reporters. The SPLC have spied on people as well domestically in other ways (like the CIA have done in Operation CHOAS domestically in the 1960's. That's illegal since the CIA's charter says that they can't domestically work overtly in American society). The CIA connection to the OKC trial is an interesting link to investigate further.
By Timothy
1 comment:
December 6, 2008 - AntiWar Radio
Scott Horton of Anti War Radio interviews Jesse Trentadue
http://www.radiodujour.com/people/trentadue_jesse/mp3/20081206_scotthorton_jessetrentadue.mp3
Jesse Trentadue discusses (with Scott Horton of Antiwar Radio) the events surrounding the 1995 murder of his brother while in federal custody in Oklahoma City and the connection to the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building, the Elohim City paramilitary camp sting operation run by the FBI and Southern Poverty Law Center, foreknowledge of FBI agents and complicity of FBI informants in the bombing, the ongoing court battles with the U.S. government over FOIA requests and civil lawsuits and the involvement of Obama’s appointed attorney general Eric Holder in the coverup of Kenny’s murder.
Post a Comment