WyoDutch wrote:...
If you've never read it, take a few moment to go over the Bill of Rights.
Bill of Rights
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[url=http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30093926link[/url]updated 5:03 p.m. CT, Tues., April 7, 2009
JACKSON, Miss. - Thanh Nguyen will soon give up the cramped travel trailer that's been her home for more than four years, pack her belongings into an old Toyota Corolla and rely on the kindness of others for a place to live. She has no choice: The government is taking back the trailer.
"I'm going to pack everything I have in a car and go to my friends' houses and move on and on until I find something I can afford," the Vietnamese immigrant said through a translator. "It's for however long they allow me to stay."
Children, shown in a 2008 photo, at the FEMA Diamond travel trailer park in Port Sulphur, La. Residents of FEMA housing face a May 1 deadline to evacuate.
vision-master wrote:Don't forget forced injections and micro clip implants either.
Oh, I forgot those GPS's on all motor vehicles too!
EndOfGrowth wrote:Preps for martial law and gun confiscation?
ian807 wrote:EndOfGrowth wrote:Preps for martial law and gun confiscation?
I think you're WAY overestimating FEMA. After hurricane Ike, they weren't on the scene until about a week after local authorities had most of the mess cleaned up. Their major function seemed to be handing out blue tarps for people's roofs (some of which are still there, even in my neighborhood) and writing small checks when large ones were needed. The fieldworkers worked out of trailers and were reported to be (ahem) not the sharpest knives in the drawer.
Seriously, there are things to fear, but I wouldn't put FEMA at the top of my list.
EndOfGrowth wrote:[So you have no problem being pushed around by foreign troops?
EndOfGrowth wrote:ian807 wrote:EndOfGrowth wrote:Preps for martial law and gun confiscation?
I think you're WAY overestimating FEMA. After hurricane Ike, they weren't on the scene until about a week after local authorities had most of the mess cleaned up. Their major function seemed to be handing out blue tarps for people's roofs (some of which are still there, even in my neighborhood) and writing small checks when large ones were needed. The fieldworkers worked out of trailers and were reported to be (ahem) not the sharpest knives in the drawer.
Seriously, there are things to fear, but I wouldn't put FEMA at the top of my list.
So you have no problem being pushed around by foreign troops?
Columbia SC has passed laws where being homeless is now illegal and the homeless are being sent to FEMA Homeless Camps. Several Church organizations that feed the homeless in Los Angeles noticed that they are disappearing at an alarming rate.
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