Showing posts with label camps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label camps. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Michelle Recalls Surviving American Death Camps

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Michelle Recalls Surviving American Death Camps

Saturday, March 1, 2014

Real Estate, Private Equity Industries Fighting Camp"s Tax Plan

“Disappointing.” That’s how both the National Association of Realtors and the Private Equity Growth Capital Council have described Rep. Dave Camp‘s (R-Mich.) proposal to overhaul the tax code.

DaveCampTax.jpgIn his quest to simplify the code for families, Camp, chairman of the powerful Ways and Means Committee, would trim some longstanding perks benefiting the real estate and private equity and investment industries: the mortgage interest and carried interest deductions. A tribe of lobbyists is pressing conservatives to snuff Camp’s proposal, threatening to withhold precious campaign dollars.



The mortgage interest deduction allows homeowners to reduce their tax obligation by subtracting the interest they’ve paid on their mortgage. Tampering with it could hurt home sales, and thus the bottom line of real estate agents and the many others who depend on the housing market for their livelihoods.

Cuts to the carried interest deduction, which allows private equity managers to pay a lower tax rate than other workers on about one-third of their income, would only affect a tiny — but generally very wealthy — proportion of the population.


In both instances, those who would feel the pain have long experience using cash and K Street to make themselves heard.


Private equity contributions skyrocketed to $ 70.8 million in 2012, up 143 percent from the previous presidential cycle.


Contributions private equity.pngThe industry gave to both parties, but favored Republicans at a two-to-one rate. PEGCC, the trade group of private equity firms, contributed $ 300,000, more evenly split between the parties.


The industry was exceptionally generous to outside spending groups in 2012. A number of the top donors to Restore Our Future, for instance — the super PAC backing Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney, who had been an executive at Bain Capital — came from private equity.


For their part, real estate interests contributed $ 155.2 million in the 2012 cycle, with 65 percent of it going to Republicans. The Realtors’ trade group covered all its bases, funneling money through a PAC, super PAC, and 501(c)(6) political nonprofit.


The Realtors also fielded an army of lobbyists, the second-most of any organization in 2013. That didn’t come cheap: $ 38.6 million, or about as much as two major corporations, Northrop Grumman and Comcast, spent combined. For its part, PEGCC spent close to $ 2.4 million on lobbying last year.


The disappointment voiced by the two industries’ trade groups may be particularly apt given how generous they’ve been to Camp over the years. He has taken in about $ 3.3 million in contributions from various interests that think his bill undercuts them — including securities and investment ($ 760,616), real estate ($ 396,775), commercial banks ($ 406,975),  insurance ($ 1.2 million) and lobbyists ($ 586,795).


Right after Camp revealed his proposal, Heritage Foundation economist Stephen Moore — who likes the plan — said it was about to be subjected to the “snake pit of special interest lobbyists.” Given how much is at stake for Republicans this year, they’re unlikely to want to get bitten.


Follow Emily on Twitter @emilyakopp


Image: Rep. Dave Camp (R-Mich.) speaks about tax reform at the Utah Valley University, August 31, 2011 (Flickr/Michael Jolly)




OpenSecrets Blog



Real Estate, Private Equity Industries Fighting Camp"s Tax Plan

Thursday, December 26, 2013

Obama explains the FEMA Camps

Featured Video: Conspiracy Theorist News and Updates –



Obama talks about the FEMA camps and explains there purposes. “Prolonged Detention” is the term being used. Please watch.
Video Rating: 4 / 5



Obama explains the FEMA Camps

Sunday, December 1, 2013

RED CROSS EXPOSES “JEWISH” HOLOCAUST HOAX: INTERNATIONAL RED CROSS (IRC) DOCUMENT CONFIRMS 271 THOUSAND NOT 6 MILLION DIED IN CONCENTRATION CAMPS

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RED CROSS EXPOSES “JEWISH” HOLOCAUST HOAX: INTERNATIONAL RED CROSS (IRC) DOCUMENT CONFIRMS 271 THOUSAND NOT 6 MILLION DIED IN CONCENTRATION CAMPS

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

WAKE UP! These Are Warning Signs for God"s Judgment, Fema Camps, & Rapture



Prophetic vision from a prophet Kevin Mirasi regarding what is going to happen to United State of America. The America will be judged by God due to their sex…
Video Rating: 0 / 5



WAKE UP! These Are Warning Signs for God"s Judgment, Fema Camps, & Rapture

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Footage of Australia own FEMA Camps in Operation



The FEMA head came to Australia last year to give instructions (see P1) how to build the detention camps suitable to take Australians who reject the UN globa…
Video Rating: 4 / 5



Footage of Australia own FEMA Camps in Operation

Friday, October 25, 2013

Clock ticking for Camp"s tax reform


If 2013 is going to be the year to start tax reform, the window of opportunity is starting to close.


For nearly a year, House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dave Camp has vowed to move overhaul legislation through his panel by year’s end.







But there is growing worry among some members and staff about the timeline, even as Camp himself remains committed.


The Michigan Republican’s vow of moving bipartisan, revenue-neutral tax reform legislation that cuts tax rates before the end of 2013 was ambitious before the shutdown showdown.


Now he has just over two months to convince committee Democrats who feel alienated from the process and members of his own fractured party that a plan — that they still haven’t seen — has a chance.


In recent weeks Camp has been adamant about sticking to his pledge.


”This year, 2013,” Camp told reporters on Wednesday. “I know what the plan is.”


But aides to both Democrats and Republicans on the committee say the remaining time and political oxygen could be sucked up by a new panel tasked with crafting a budget framework by Dec. 13.


“I don’t see a bill by the end of the year if they have to do this [budget] conference,” said one Republican tax aide, who was not authorized to speak for attribution.


To be sure, many of the recent meetings on tax reform have been members only.


Most Washington observers forecast little chance of the Republican House and Democratic Senate passing tax reform legislation in 2014, but many had expected at least initial draft legislation from Camp.


Committee members are still tired and frustrated after slogging through more than two weeks of negotiations to end the government shutdown and raise the debt limit, according to another aide.


And they are barely scheduled to be in town in coming weeks.


This week was cut short as members headed to Florida for the funeral of Rep. Bill Young (R-Fla.). They are scheduled to return Monday evening before another Wednesday evening departure, and then are in recess until after Veterans Day on Nov. 11.


“I’m struggling to see the pathway,” said another Republican tax aide who asked to remain anonymous. “I just don’t see how they drop anything before Dec. 13.”


There has been speculation that Camp was close to releasing a draft but several committee members said that tax reform has been in a holding pattern since the shutdown began. Panel Republicans were just coming off of an intense period of daily meetings on reform and are still waiting for new data and scores from the Joint Committee on Taxation.


“We have to finalize what we’re going to do and make sure that we [Republicans] are all in agreement,” Rep. Charles Boustany (R-La.) told POLITICO. “That’s the first step, the second is to escalate the education process within the conference.”


Boustany said he expects the information to start rolling in over the next several weeks. Many members said they hope these cost estimates will help clarify what it will take to cut rates, and if it is even possible to get there.


Rep. Tom Price (R-Ga.) said the goal is still to set the top tax rate at 25 percent for individuals and corporations, but he has not yet seen any data on how they will get there.


“I haven’t seen any scores,” he said on his way into a weekly lunch for Republican members of the committee.


Many economists say it might will be impossible to get rates as low as 25 percent, without wiping out nearly every tax expenditure and delving into traditional cost-of-doing business provisions.


The current top individual tax rate is about 40 percent, and the top corporate rate is 35 percent.


House Democrats commissioned a JCT report in July that estimated it would cost about $ 5 trillion to get the rates that low. Republicans say that data is incomplete, but new detailed JCT scores are the only way to know if Camp has reached his goal.


A lack of detail may help preserve unified support among Republicans for tax reform — in concept.


“People want something positive to vote for, tax reform will be positive,” said Ways and Means Committee member Rep. Peter Roskam (R-Ill.) of his conversations with other Republicans.


House Chief Deputy Republican Whip Roskam will be a key salesman if the legislation moves out of the committee. He acknowledged that getting tax rates as low as 25 percent will mean painful cuts for some taxpayers, but said the focus within the party has been on tax reform that “on balance, is going to create more growth and be simpler.”


Many Republicans also see it as a chance to rally after the fight to reopen the government and raise the debt limit split the party, leaving a reinvigorated group of Democrats with an upper hand.


“I think the real danger here is that the Democrats may overplay their hand,” said Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.). “They may look at what happened last week and think, ‘We can force revenue and tax increases out of them.’ They’re not going to get tax increases.”


That’s just what some Democrats have been afraid of since the beginning of the process.


Early this year Camp convened working groups to delve into specific areas of the tax code. The process was touted as a chance for Democrats to play a role in crafting tax reform. Camp also held bipartisan meetings in July and August, but Democrats said they have been largely sidelined since the groups wrapped up in May.


Rep. Sander Levin (D-Mich.), the top Democrat on the committee, insists that Camp bring Democrats back into the negotiating fold before legislation is released.


“I think the last week shows that tax reform, like any other major effort, only works if it is done on a bipartisan basis,” Levin said on Wednesday. “It is up to the Republicans.”


All 16 Democrats on the committee signed a letter Thursday urging Camp to return to his bipartisan promise.


“We acknowledge that our approaches to tax reform have significant differences” though “it is essential to sit down and earnestly discuss tax policies that will strengthen American families,” they wrote.


While Democrats in the House are fighting to get back into the game, Camp keeps a close relationship with Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.), meeting or talking on the phone weekly.


For his part, Baucus told Bloomberg TV last week that his tax reform process is moving on a separate but parallel track with the budget conference.


The next step will be a set of discussion drafts that Sean Neary, a spokesman for Baucus, said the committee hopes to release in coming weeks.


Kim Dixon contributed to this report.




POLITICO – Congress



Clock ticking for Camp"s tax reform

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

AP PHOTOS: Egypt cracks down on pro-Morsi camps


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AP PHOTOS: Egypt cracks down on pro-Morsi camps

Egypt police storm 2 pro-Morsi camps in Cairo



(AP) — Egyptian security forces, backed by armored cars and bulldozers, swept in Wednesday to clear two sit-in camps of supporters of the country’s ousted President Mohammed Morsi, showering protesters with tear gas as the sound of gunfire rang out at both sites.


At least three members of the security forces were confirmed to have died in the morning’s crackdown in Cairo, while the Health Ministry said nine protesters were killed and over 80 were injured.


The political arm of Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood claimed that more than 500 protesters were killed and some 9,000 wounded in the two camps on opposite ends of the city, but there was no official confirmation of the Islamist group’s figures. There was nothing in the footage provided by the Associated Press or local TV networks that suggests such a high death toll.


Mohammed el-Beltagy, a senior Brotherhood leader, put the death toll at more than 300 and called on the police and army troops to mutiny against their commanders and on Egyptians to take to the streets to show their disapproval of Wednesday’s raids on the sit-ins.


“Oh, Egyptian people, your brothers are in the square … Are you going to remain silent until the genocide is completed?” said el-Beltagy, who is wanted by authorities to answer allegations of inciting violence.


The smaller of the two camps was cleared of protesters by late morning, with most of them taking refuge in the nearby Orman botanical gardens, inside the sprawling campus of Cairo University and the zoo.


An AP reporter at the scene said security forces were chasing the protesters in the zoo.


Security forces have stormed the larger camp in the eastern Cairo district of Nasr City and were closing in on a mosque that has served as the epicenter of vigil. Several leaders of Morsi’s Brotherhood are thought to have been staying inside the mosque.


Wednesday’s attacks on the two pro-Morsi camps are the latest chapter in the turmoil that has roiled Egypt since the 2011 ouster of autocrat Hosni Mubarak and are likely to deepen the nation’s division between the camp of Islamists led by the Muslim Brotherhood on one side, and secularists, liberals, moderate Muslims and minority Christians on the other.


One of the security officials said a total of 200 protesters were arrested from both sites on Wednesday.


The pro-Morsi Anti-Coup alliance claimed that security forces used live ammunition, but the Interior Ministry, which is in charge of the police, said its forces only used tear gas and that they came under fire from the camp.


“The world cannot sit back and watch while innocent men, women and children are being indiscriminately slaughtered. The world must stand up to the military junta’s crime before it is too late,” said a statement by the Brotherhood’s media office in London emailed to the AP in Cairo.


Islam Tawfiq, a Brotherhood member at the Nasr city sit-in said the camp’s medical center was filled with dead bodies and that the injured included children.


“No one can leave and those who do are either arrested or beaten up,” he told the AP.


The Interior Ministry statement also warned that forces would deal firmly with protesters who were acting “irresponsibly,” suggesting that it would respond in kind if its men are fired upon. It said it would guarantee safe passage to all who want to leave the Nasr City site but would arrest those wanted for questioning by prosecutors.


The security officials said train services between the north and south of the country have been suspended in a bid to prevent supporters of the ousted Morsi from travelling to Cairo to reinforce fellow Islamists. Clashes erupted on a major road in Cairo’s upscale Mohandiseen district when poro-Morsi protesters opened fire on passing cars and pedestrians. Police used tear gas top chase them away.


The officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to talk to media.


Police also fired tear gas elsewhere in Cairo to disperse Morsi supporters who wanted to join the Nasr City camp after it came under attack. State TV also reported that a police captain had been abducted by pro-Morsi protesters near the Nasr City camp.


In the city of Bani Suef south of Cairo, protesters set three police cars on fire. Farther south in the city of Assiut, a stronghold of Islamists, police used tear gas to disperse thousands of Morsi supporters gathered in the city center.


Army troops did not take part in the two operations, but provided security at the locations. Police and army helicopters hovered over both sites as plumes of smoke rose over the city skyline hours after the police launched the simultaneous actions shortly after 7 a.m. (0500 GMT).


Regional television networks were showing images of collapsed tents and burning tires at both sites, with ambulances on standby. They were also showing protesters being arrested and led away by black-clad policemen.


At one point, some dozen protesters, mostly men with beards in the traditional Islamist garb, were seen cuffed and sitting on a sidewalk under guard outside the Cairo University campus. The private ONTV network showed firearms and rounds of ammunition seized from protesters there.


At least 250 people have died in clashes in Egypt following Morsi’s ouster in a military coup on July 3 that followed days of mass protests by millions of Egyptians calling for his removal.


Supporters of the Islamist president want him reinstated and are boycotting the military-sponsored political process which includes amending the Islamist-backed constitution adopted last year and holding parliamentary and presidential elections early next year.


Morsi, Egypt’s first freely elected president, had just completed one year in office when he was toppled. He has been held at an undisclosed location since July 3, but was visited by the European Union’s foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and a team of African statesmen. Ashton reported that he was well and had access to television and newspapers.


Several bids by the United States, the EU and Gulf Arab states to reconcile the two sides in Egypt in an inclusive political process have failed, with the Brotherhood insisting that Morsi must first be freed along with several of the group’s leaders who have been detained in connection with incitement of violence.


The trial of the Brotherhood’s leader, Mohammed Badie, and his powerful deputy Khairat el-Shater on charges of conspiring to kill protesters is due to start later this month. Badie is on the run, but el-Shater is in detention. Four others are standing trial with them on the same charges.


___


Associated Press reporter Tony G. Gabriel contributed to this report.


Associated Press



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Top Headlines

Egypt police storm 2 pro-Morsi camps in Cairo

Bloodshed as Cairo camps cleared






























The BBC’s Bethany Bell says security forces are searching for Muslim Brotherhood supporters – some of whom may be hiding in a nearby zoo



At least 15 people are reported to have been killed as Egyptian security forces moved in to clear two protest camps occupied by supporters of deposed president Mohammed Morsi in Cairo.


But the Muslim Brotherhood, which backs the protests, put the number of casualties much higher.


Bursts of gunfire were heard and armoured bulldozers moved in. Security forces fired tear gas.


Authorities say the Nahda Square camp in western Cairo has been cleared.


The interior ministry said a mopping up operation in the surrounding streets was under way. Pro-Morsi activists were chased into the nearby zoo and Cairo University, Nile TV said.


Witnesses spoke of seeing at least 15 bodies on the ground, but the Muslim Brotherhood, describing the security forces’ intervention as a massacre, put the number of those killed at more than 100.


At least two member of the security forces were among the dead and nine were injured, officials say.


Supporters of Mr Morsi have been occupying Nahda Square and the site outside the Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque in the north-east of the city since he was ousted on 3 July. They want him reinstated.


Earlier, the interior ministry issued a statement saying security forces were taking “necessary measures” against the protest camps.


The statement said a safe exit would be provided for protesters and they would not be pursued, “except those who are wanted by the prosecution”.


The interior ministry is keen “not to shed any Egyptian blood”, the statement went on.


Large plumes of smoke rose over parts of the city as the operation to clear the camps began.


Muslim Brotherhood TV called for people to send cars to the sit-ins to take casualties to hospital.


An armoured bulldozer was used to breach brick walls erected by the protesters outside the Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque, the BBC’s James Reynolds says.


Live firing was heard as the security forces moved in, our correspondent says, and police are now patrolling the nearby streets.


More than 250 people have been killed in clashes with the security forces in the six weeks since Mr Morsi’s overthrow.


On Tuesday, one person was killed in a confrontation between supporters and opponents of Mr Morsi in Giza after people marched from Nahda Square to a nearby complex of government buildings to protest against the appointment of several military officers as provincial governors.


Speaking to the BBC on Monday, Egypt’s Foreign Minister Nabil Fahmy said the sit-ins could not continue “endlessly”.


He said the authorities had been trying to seek an agreement through dialogue.


“If the police force take their procedures, they will do that in accordance with the law by court order and in accordance to the basic norms on which these things are done.”



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BBC News – Home

Bloodshed as Cairo camps cleared

Egypt police storm 2 pro-Morsi camps in Cairo








Egyptian security forces clear a sit-in by supporters of ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi in the eastern Nasr City district of Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2013. Egyptian security forces, backed by armored cars and bulldozers, moved on Wednesday to clear two sit-in camps by supporters of the country’s ousted President Mohammed Morsi, showering protesters with tear gas as the sound of gunfire rang out at both sites. (AP Photo/Ahmed Gomaa)





Egyptian security forces clear a sit-in by supporters of ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi in the eastern Nasr City district of Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2013. Egyptian security forces, backed by armored cars and bulldozers, moved on Wednesday to clear two sit-in camps by supporters of the country’s ousted President Mohammed Morsi, showering protesters with tear gas as the sound of gunfire rang out at both sites. (AP Photo/Ahmed Gomaa)





Egyptian security forces clear a sit-in by supporters of ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi in the eastern Nasr City district of Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2013. Egyptian security forces, backed by armored cars and bulldozers, moved on Wednesday to clear two sit-in camps by supporters of the country’s ousted President Mohammed Morsi, showering protesters with tear gas as the sound of gunfire rang out at both sites. (AP Photo/Ahmed Gomaa)





Fires burn as Egyptian security forces clear a sit-in by supporters of ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi in the eastern Nasr City district of Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2013. Egyptian security forces, backed by armored cars and bulldozers, moved on Wednesday to clear two sit-in camps by supporters of the country’s ousted President Mohammed Morsi, showering protesters with tear gas as the sound of gunfire rang out at both sites. (AP Photo/Ahmed Gomaa)





An Egyptian security force carries another as they clear a sit-in camp set up by supporters of ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi in Nasr City district, Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2013. Egyptian security forces, backed by armored cars and bulldozers, moved on Wednesday to clear two sit-in camps by supporters of the country’s ousted President Mohammed Morsi, showering protesters with tear gas as the sound of gunfire rang out at both sites. (AP Photo/Ahmed Gomaa)





Egyptian security forces clear a sit-in by supporters of ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi in the eastern Nasr City district of Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2013. Egyptian security forces, backed by armored cars and bulldozers, moved on Wednesday to clear two sit-in camps by supporters of the country’s ousted President Mohammed Morsi, showering protesters with tear gas as the sound of gunfire rang out at both sites. (AP Photo/Ahmed Gomaa)













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(AP) — Egyptian security forces, backed by armored cars and bulldozers, swept in Wednesday to clear two sit-in camps of supporters of the country’s ousted President Mohammed Morsi, showering protesters with tear gas as the sound of gunfire rang out at both sites.


At least three members of the security forces were confirmed to have died in the morning’s crackdown in Cairo, while the Health Ministry said nine protesters were killed and over 80 were injured.


The political arm of Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood claimed that more than 500 protesters were killed and some 9,000 wounded in the two camps on opposite ends of the city, but there was no official confirmation of the Islamist group’s figures. There was nothing in the footage provided by the Associated Press or local TV networks that suggests such a high death toll.


Mohammed el-Beltagy, a senior Brotherhood leader, put the death toll at more than 300 and called on the police and army troops to mutiny against their commanders and on Egyptians to take to the streets to show their disapproval of Wednesday’s raids on the sit-ins.


“Oh, Egyptian people, your brothers are in the square … Are you going to remain silent until the genocide is completed?” said el-Beltagy, who is wanted by authorities to answer allegations of inciting violence.


The smaller of the two camps was cleared of protesters by late morning, with most of them taking refuge in the nearby Orman botanical gardens, inside the sprawling campus of Cairo University and the zoo.


An AP reporter at the scene said security forces were chasing the protesters in the zoo.


Security forces have stormed the larger camp in the eastern Cairo district of Nasr City and were closing in on a mosque that has served as the epicenter of vigil. Several leaders of Morsi’s Brotherhood are thought to have been staying inside the mosque.


Wednesday’s attacks on the two pro-Morsi camps are the latest chapter in the turmoil that has roiled Egypt since the 2011 ouster of autocrat Hosni Mubarak and are likely to deepen the nation’s division between the camp of Islamists led by the Muslim Brotherhood on one side, and secularists, liberals, moderate Muslims and minority Christians on the other.


One of the security officials said a total of 200 protesters were arrested from both sites on Wednesday.


The pro-Morsi Anti-Coup alliance claimed that security forces used live ammunition, but the Interior Ministry, which is in charge of the police, said its forces only used tear gas and that they came under fire from the camp.


“The world cannot sit back and watch while innocent men, women and children are being indiscriminately slaughtered. The world must stand up to the military junta’s crime before it is too late,” said a statement by the Brotherhood’s media office in London emailed to the AP in Cairo.


Islam Tawfiq, a Brotherhood member at the Nasr city sit-in said the camp’s medical center was filled with dead bodies and that the injured included children.


“No one can leave and those who do are either arrested or beaten up,” he told the AP.


The Interior Ministry statement also warned that forces would deal firmly with protesters who were acting “irresponsibly,” suggesting that it would respond in kind if its men are fired upon. It said it would guarantee safe passage to all who want to leave the Nasr City site but would arrest those wanted for questioning by prosecutors.


The security officials said train services between the north and south of the country have been suspended in a bid to prevent supporters of the ousted Morsi from travelling to Cairo to reinforce fellow Islamists. Clashes erupted on a major road in Cairo’s upscale Mohandiseen district when poro-Morsi protesters opened fire on passing cars and pedestrians. Police used tear gas top chase them away.


The officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to talk to media.


Police also fired tear gas elsewhere in Cairo to disperse Morsi supporters who wanted to join the Nasr City camp after it came under attack. State TV also reported that a police captain had been abducted by pro-Morsi protesters near the Nasr City camp.


In the city of Bani Suef south of Cairo, protesters set three police cars on fire. Farther south in the city of Assiut, a stronghold of Islamists, police used tear gas to disperse thousands of Morsi supporters gathered in the city center.


Army troops did not take part in the two operations, but provided security at the locations. Police and army helicopters hovered over both sites as plumes of smoke rose over the city skyline hours after the police launched the simultaneous actions shortly after 7 a.m. (0500 GMT).


Regional television networks were showing images of collapsed tents and burning tires at both sites, with ambulances on standby. They were also showing protesters being arrested and led away by black-clad policemen.


At one point, some dozen protesters, mostly men with beards in the traditional Islamist garb, were seen cuffed and sitting on a sidewalk under guard outside the Cairo University campus. The private ONTV network showed firearms and rounds of ammunition seized from protesters there.


At least 250 people have died in clashes in Egypt following Morsi’s ouster in a military coup on July 3 that followed days of mass protests by millions of Egyptians calling for his removal.


Supporters of the Islamist president want him reinstated and are boycotting the military-sponsored political process which includes amending the Islamist-backed constitution adopted last year and holding parliamentary and presidential elections early next year.


Morsi, Egypt’s first freely elected president, had just completed one year in office when he was toppled. He has been held at an undisclosed location since July 3, but was visited by the European Union’s foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and a team of African statesmen. Ashton reported that he was well and had access to television and newspapers.


Several bids by the United States, the EU and Gulf Arab states to reconcile the two sides in Egypt in an inclusive political process have failed, with the Brotherhood insisting that Morsi must first be freed along with several of the group’s leaders who have been detained in connection with incitement of violence.


The trial of the Brotherhood’s leader, Mohammed Badie, and his powerful deputy Khairat el-Shater on charges of conspiring to kill protesters is due to start later this month. Badie is on the run, but el-Shater is in detention. Four others are standing trial with them on the same charges.


___


Associated Press reporter Tony G. Gabriel contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Egypt police storm 2 pro-Morsi camps in Cairo

Monday, August 12, 2013

Egypt police fail to start operation to disperse pro-Mursi camps

CAIRO (Reuters) – Egyptian security forces held off on Monday from launching operations to disperse Islamist supporters of deposed President Mohamed Mursi that officials had said would start at dawn.



Reuters: Top News



Egypt police fail to start operation to disperse pro-Mursi camps

Sunday, July 14, 2013

Pakistan Taliban set up camps in Syria, join anti-Assad war




A Free Syrian Army fighter (2nd R) reads the Koran as his fellow fighter monitors the area through a hole in a wall in Deir al-Zor July 13, 2013. REUTERS/Khalil Ashawi


1 of 6. A Free Syrian Army fighter (2nd R) reads the Koran as his fellow fighter monitors the area through a hole in a wall in Deir al-Zor July 13, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Khalil Ashawi






ISLAMABAD/PESHAWAR, Pakistan | Sun Jul 14, 2013 6:46am EDT



ISLAMABAD/PESHAWAR, Pakistan (Reuters) – The Pakistani Taliban have set up camps and sent hundreds of men to Syria to fight alongside rebels opposed to President Bashar al-Assad, militants said on Sunday, in a strategy aimed at cementing ties with al Qaeda’s central leadership.


More than two years since the start of the anti-Assad rebellion, Syria has become a magnet for foreign Sunni fighters who have flocked to the Middle Eastern nation to join what they see as a holy war against Shi’ite oppressors.


Operating alongside militant groups such as the al Nusra Front, described by the United States as a branch of al Qaeda, they mainly come from nearby countries such as Libya and Tunisia riven by similar conflict as a result of the Arab Spring.


On Sunday, Taliban commanders in Pakistan said they had also decided to join the cause, saying hundreds of fighters had gone to Syria to fight alongside their “Mujahedeen friends”.


“When our brothers needed our help, we sent hundreds of fighters along with our Arab friends,” one senior commander told Reuters, adding that the group would soon issue videos of what he described as their victories in Syria.


The announcement further complicates the picture on the ground in Syria, where rivalries have already been on the boil between the Free Syrian Army and the Islamists.


Islamists operate a smaller, more effective force which now controls most of the rebel-held parts of northern Syria. Tensions erupted again on Thursday when an al-Qaeda linked militant group assassinated one of Free Syrian Army’s top commanders after a dispute in the port city of Latakia.


It also comes at a time when Assad’s forces, with backing from Shi’ite fighters from Hezbollah and Iran, have been making gains on the Syrian battlefield.


Another Taliban commander in Pakistan, who also spoke on condition of anonymity, said the decision to send fighters to Syria came at the request of “Arab friends”.


“Since our Arab brothers have come here for our support, we are bound to help them in their respective countries and that is what we did in Syria,” he told Reuters.


“We have established our own camps in Syria. Some of our people go and then return after spending some time fighting there.”


AL QAEDA LOYALTIES


Known as the Tehreek-e-Taliban, the Pakistani Taliban operate mainly from Pakistan’s insurgency-plagued ethnic Pashtun areas along the Afghan border – a long-standing stronghold for militants including the Taliban and their al Qaeda allies.


Taliban militants in Pakistan, who are linked to their Afghan counterparts, are mainly fighting to topple Pakistan’s government and to impose their radical version of Islam, targeting the military, security forces and civilians.


But they also enjoy close ties with al Qaeda and other jihadist groups who have, in turn, deployed their own fighters to Pakistan’s volatile tribal region on the Afghan border known as the Federally Administered Tribal Areas, or FATA.


In the latest sign of this trend, at least two suspected foreign militants were killed in a drone attack in North Waziristan, local security officials said.


Ahmed Rashid, a prominent Pakistani author and expert on the Taliban, said sending Taliban fighters to Syria was likely to be appreciated as an act of loyalty towards their al Qaeda allies.


“The Pakistani Taliban have remained a sort surrogate of al Qaeda. We’ve got all these foreigners up there in FATA who are being looked after or trained by the Pakistani Taliban,” said Rashid, who is based in the Pakistani city of Lahore.


“They are acting like global jihadists, precisely with the agenda that al Qaeda has got. This is a way, I suppose, to cement relationships with the Syrian militant groups … and to enlarge their sphere of influence.”


(Additional reporting by Mariam Karouny in Beirut; Writing by Maria Golovnina in Islamabad; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)





Reuters: Top News



Pakistan Taliban set up camps in Syria, join anti-Assad war

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Concentration Camps Revisited: National Emergency Centers Establishment Act 2013


Infowars.com
June 25, 2013



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 is danse macabre and the prospect of revolution grows within the United States.


This article was posted: Tuesday, June 25, 2013 at 1:37 pm


Tags: big brother, constitution, domestic news, police state









Infowars



Concentration Camps Revisited: National Emergency Centers Establishment Act 2013

Concentration Camps Revisited: National Emergency Centers Establishment Act 2013


Infowars.com
June 25, 2013



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 is danse macabre and the prospect of revolution grows within the United States.


This article was posted: Tuesday, June 25, 2013 at 1:37 pm


Tags: big brother, constitution, domestic news, police state









Infowars



Concentration Camps Revisited: National Emergency Centers Establishment Act 2013

Monday, June 17, 2013

BANNED Jesse Ventura"s Conspiracy Theory - Fema Camps (1 of 3)



Tru Tv gets all credit. I just wanted to repost this episode because the TV network has pulled it from ever being aired again. Jesse Ventura discovers that t…



BANNED Jesse Ventura"s Conspiracy Theory - Fema Camps (1 of 3)