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Thread Eighteen: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1198769/posts |
Posted on 08/10/2004 12:58:27 AM PDT by JustPiper
Credit: The Cabal The title refers to a daily report given to the president of the United States detailing the most serious terrorist threats against the country. To tackle those threats, the government has formed a top-notch task force to infiltrate the terror cells and cut off the danger. "Every morning, the president receives a list of the top ten terrorist threats - this list is known as the threat matrix." We here at FR are trying to be in conjunction with the daily reports around the world that involve threats. We try to provide a storehouse of information that takes hours of research. YOU be the Judge and get informed. "I will never cower before any master nor bend to any threat." Link to Thread Sixteen |
With the nation on high alert for al-Qaida terrorists, the Department of Homeland Security is putting its border officers through "etiquette" classes to soften their image and make them less threatening to arriving foreign immigrants, WorldNetDaily has learned. |
"God could not be everywhere and therefore he made mothers." -- Jewish proverb |
We are the "Stotters" who make ourselves aware of the enemy who wishes to do us harm. "What good are the color codes at all if we are suddenly hit with a bio or chem attack? There would be no warning and the danger would be instant." "Code Red Implications Code Red - Stay Home and Await Word." by MamaDearest |
Meet It! Greet It! Defeat It! |
Can't resist this --- it's almost as if they are in partnership with the pharmaceutical companies (mocking a look of shock)
Saw a pharmaceutical rep taking my own physician a basket of "samples" only yesterday.
25% of pharmaceuticals in China are fake
FDA Cracking down on fraudulent drugs
Prescription drugs - unscrupulous take advantage of desperate
'Third Terrorist' author on Farah show
Jayna Davis discusses Mideast connection to OKC bombing
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=39928
You can listen to "Joseph Farah's WorldNetDaily RadioActive" live on more than 80 stations from coast to coast or listen on a live-stream signal on the Internet. The program is broadcast daily from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. Eastern. It also is available via the Sirius satellite radio network on the Sirius Patriot channel from 5 to 6 p.m. and 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. Eastern.
If you would like to know the affiliates closest to your area, here's the e-mail address for inquiries: listeners@radioamerica.org
If you'd like to call in to the show, dial 1-800-510-TALK. Every day, callers who get through and contribute to the program are given free copies of WND Books including new books and some best sellers.
Recommendations for Bridge and Tunnel Security by the US Highway Department
IMHO, the system is working. Screw the pc police/aclu and the miffed swarthy types.
just some wind ... we're way south of that.
I nominate YOU to be the thread reporter for any national disaster!!!
Thank you for posting that, JP. We are all wishin' and a hopin'.
I keep thinking I'm going to figure out who Pooper is - but it doesn't happen. Can you tell us slow learners who he/she is?
Comment resulting from drug or alcohol induced / enhanced stupor?
bookmark
I think Pooper is Piper's Priority Person.
her hubby.
The prince of Persia
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=39933
This was forwarded to me by a lurker the other day, I did not recall hearing about this back in February but it is a very valid idea.
---
PETERSON AIR FORCE BASE, Colo., Feb. 20, 2004 -- A major hurricane, a nuclear accident and a nuclear detonation -- all simulated, and all occurring in Texas -- are among the challenges facing U.S. Northern Command forces during exercise Unified Defense '04.
Simulated events also include aircraft hijackings, threats from a fictitious country testing its strategic capabilities, and attacks on maritime and port security by domestic terrorists in Alaska.
Though the attacks are all simulated, the responses are "real-world," said Army Lt. Col. Tim Croft, a NORTHCOM exercise planner. He said some 50 different local, state and federal agencies in Texas, Alaska, Virginia, Colorado, and Washington, D.C., are participating in the Feb. 19-25 exercise. The exercise is testing homeland defense and homeland security efforts, along with NORTHCOM's ability to provide military assistance to civil authorities, he said.
North American Aerospace Defense Command also is participating in a scenario that poses aerospace defense challenges, said Air Force Lt. Col. Rob Peterson, a NORAD exercise planner.
In announcing the exercise Feb. 17, Texas Gov. Rick Perry said he hopes and prays that his state never faces a real disaster like the ones simulated. "But if these kinds of catastrophic events do occur, officials need to be prepared to respond," said Perry.
Although exercise participants were briefed in advance about the scenarios, they were not told every detail. For example, participants must determine if the nuclear incidents in Texas are the result of terrorist attacks or an accident, Croft said. The simulated hurricane is providing cover and diversion for a terrorist attack.
Kathy Walt, a spokeswoman for Perry's office who attended a pre-exercise briefing in Texas, raised one question facing homeland defense. She wondered whether terrorists would look for natural disasters likely to occur and then try to time events to coincide with a community or state's response to a natural disaster.
The nuclear detonation scenario simulated killing 300 people and affecting nearly 1,000 residents in a town of only 3,700 people. Croft said this is the first time the Homeland Security Department and NORTHCOM have included a nuclear detonation in an exercise.
Since most exercise activities are being simulated, residents in the exercise areas will not see troop movements, hear flying aircraft, or see and hear emergency vehicles responding to accident sites. The one exception will be in Alaska, where Coast Guard vessels will be visible in the water, but there won't be "any big bangs or anything like that," said Coast Guard Lt. Brad Wilson. He said the public would see little activity.
Military and state planners spent almost a year planning the $1.5 million exercise in which Texas and Alaska officials asked to be included, said Croft. He said the states wanted to test their emergency management functions.
Rod Swope, city manager for Juneau, Alaska, told local news reporters he expects his state to learn a lot from the exercise. "In the event something happens (in the future), we'll be prepared," said Swope.
Besides finding out how federal, state and local agencies will react to simultaneous emergencies, Unified Defense '04 also will allow NORTHCOM forces to get to know one another "and improve our success rate if there should be a real-world event," said Mike Perini, NORAD and NORTHCOM public affairs director. He said if it were possible, the command would conduct similar exercises in all U.S. states and territories.
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Feb2004/n02202004_200402204.html
Thanks, everyone is handy here. :)
lol. I'm not sure that is a good title to have. ;)
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1190443/posts
NBC News tries to stage hijacking
ping
Hotel Business Absolutely Booming in Vegas
Is this the kind of news Las Vegas hotels want to publicize in light of the terror threat? It tells me they still are not taking the threat seriously. Last time I was there (within last 2 years) the hotel was packed with lines of people checking in and who knows what in all those suitcases, some laying unattended in the lobby. I seriously doubt the procedure has changed at all.
~exhaling
Thanks JM
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