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Canada doing mock terror drills with US terrorists. Getting you ready for Martial Law.

"They never stop thinking of new ways to harm our country... and neither do we" George Bush

Prison Planet | April 5, 2005 - Getting you used to seeing the nice men in bio-suits and their friendly quarantine procedures. They've been hyping the same scenarios via TV docu-dramas for years. When the terrorists strike, this is how you submit. This is how you find your nearest concentration camp....erm...I mean 'rest and relocation center.' Remember, the biggest suspects in the anthrax attack were the government itself . Bush and the White House were on cipro before the first anthrax letter was sent and Fort Detrick bio-weapons lab did test-runs on how to send weaponized anthrax through the mail before 9/11.

 

Nuclear fears remain By WILL LESTER - Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Though the Soviet Union is gone, the nuclear fears that fueled the Cold War haven’t disappeared. Most Americans think nuclear weapons are so dangerous that no country should have them, and a majority believe it’s likely that terrorists or a nation will use them within five years.

[Actually this is not a majority opinion at all; rather it is the blatant propaganda of the same CIA devils who trained and protected the terrorists who carried out the 911 attack. Opinion polls show only about TWO (2) percent of Americans and Canadians  consider the "threat of terrorism" to be a concern for them or their families - see poll taken just six months after September 11, 2001. ]

The Bush administration repeatedly warns about nuclear weapons and is using diplomacy — and force — to try to limit the threat.

 

["Repeatedly warns" about it because they NEED to increase the level of fear to "justify" their war against our unalienable Liberties, and get you prepared for the coming military police state. They are, however, the very people that provided these weapons to a majority of nations - INCLUDING NORTH KOREA'S NUKES! See Arming N. Korea.]

Still, North Korea claims it has nuclear weapons now and is making more. Iran is widely believed to be within five years of developing such weapons. And security for the nuclear material scattered across the countries of the old Soviet Union remains a major concern.

Lurking in the background is the threat that worries U.S. officials the most — terrorists’ desire to acquire nuclear weapons.

All that helps explain why 52 percent of Americans think a nuclear attack by one country against another is somewhat or very likely by 2010, according to an AP-Ipsos poll. Fifty-three percent think a nuclear attack by terrorists is at least somewhat likely.

[Note how the question shifts from "attack by one country... somewhat or very likely" to "attack by terrorists... at least somewhat likely" as the media scoundrels spin the numbers for you in 'promoting the need' for a military police state.]

Two-thirds of Americans say no nation should have nuclear weapons, including the U.S., and most of the others say no more countries should get them.

“I worry about Pakistan and India,” said Barbara Smith, who lives in a Philadelphia suburb. “I don’t know what’s going to happen with Iran, don’t know what’s going to happen with North Korea.”

Smith said she wants to see the spread of nuclear weapons stopped. “It’s too dangerous, too many things can go wrong,” she said.

About one-third of those in an ABC News-Washington Post poll in the mid-1980s — when the Cold War was hot — thought there would be a nuclear war in the next few years between the two superpowers.

The AP-Ipsos poll found 44 percent of those surveyed said they frequently or occasionally worry about a terrorist attack using nuclear weapons, while 55 percent said they rarely or never do.

“Terrorists are more likely to use a nuclear weapon because they are unpredictable,” said John Saint of Syracuse, N.Y., who works for a trucking company.

[Can you believe this garbage? Just for the record, the only terrorists to EVER use a nuclear weapon(s) in our human history is the US Military.

They are in fact a very poor choice for isolated "terrorist pocket cell groups" because too many "tells" are discernible by way of their very complex acquisition and deployment. Nations of wealth are the only groups who have the vast scientific resources and expertise required for construction, warehousing and deployment of such weapons.

Even so-called "suitcase nukes" are an invention of the US Pentagon, and COULD NOT not be secretly made or bought at the local K-Mart by people living in caves.

The same is mostly true for other weapons of mass destruction; so when they are used in North American or Europe, you will know who made them, and who the real terrorists are.

See the following link showing it was clearly the US government who spread weaponized anthrax shortly after 911. http://www.prisonplanet.com/gov_lying_anthrax.html]

Susan Winter of McLean, Va., says her awareness of the nuclear threat doesn’t cause her to fret constantly.

I’m concerned, but I don’t worry about it,” Winter said. “I’m not a nail biter. I don’t lose sleep over it.”

[This the CURRENT majority view - though clearly we need to be VERY concerned about  governments who use these weapons to: further police states; foment fear and anxiety among the people they are charged to protect; destabilize global communities for selfish monetary gain.  I.E. Bush makes tens of millions from his Carlyle investment group military weapons sales. Click this Link for more.]

Fears about the use of a nuclear weapon are pretty evenly spread across all age groups. But a generational divide emerges when Americans are asked whether they approve of the United States’ decision to drop atomic bombs on Japan in 1945.

Six in 10 Americans 65 and older approve of the use of the atomic bomb at the end of World War II, while six in 10 from 18 to 29 disapprove.

Albert Kauzmann, a 57-year-old resident of Norcross, Ga., said using the bomb in 1945 “was the best way they had of ending“ World War II.

Overall, 47 percent of those surveyed approved of dropping the bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki while 46 percent disapproved, according to the poll of 1,000 conducted by Ipsos-Public Affairs from March 21-23 with a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.

The United States, Britain, Russia, France and China have nuclear weapons, and Pakistan and India have also conducted nuclear tests. Many believe Israel has nuclear weapons, but that country has never acknowledged it. North Korea claimed in February that it had nuclear weapons.

[Getting the idea of how hard these weapons are to obtain? Even countries find it difficult, if not impossible, without the direct aid of the US government. See Arming N. Korea  and How to Deal With a Psychopath: Give Him Nuclear Bombs]

The threat from nuclear terrorism is greatest, analysts say, because terrorists with nuclear weapons would feel little or no hesitance about using them. That’s why those who monitor nuclear proliferation are so concerned about securing weapons stockpiles and dismantling weapons as quickly as possible.

“We’re in the race of our lives,” said Joe Cirincione of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, “and we’re not running fast enough.”

[These last two paragraphs serve two purposes: They spread fear, AND they attempt to draw attention away from the fact that these weapons, if they are obtained by terrorists, will have come from the government themselves. Please don't let them make a fool of you - again!]

http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Features/2005/03/30/977041.html

 

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Outside links shows government orchestrated fear..... Drills always precede the real thing!

http://www.fathers.ca/canada_to_do_mock_attacks_using_terrorism.htm

Thousands of Missiles Fired by Russian and American Forces over Earths Arctic Regions

http://www.fathers.ca/star_wars_scam.htm

Secret Trials in Canada...

http://www.fathers.ca/secret_trials_in_canada.htm

Trying to kill the world with Bio Terrorism

http://www.fathers.ca/small-pox_scare_is_it_real.htm

Bush Cites Military Takeover In Case Of Flu Outbreak

http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/october2005/041005militarytakeover.htm

Box of condoms leads to evacuation
Associated Press | April 29, 2007
ANKENY, Iowa - Several classrooms at Des Moines Area Community College were evacuated

after college officials became nervous about a suspicious package.

College officials called police and postal inspectors after the box was delivered Thursday. What

they found inside wasn't a bomb — it was a box containing 500 condoms.

 

 

Victoria Police call in globalist money changer to stage mock bomb scare

 

Bomb scare brings downtown to standstill
Streets blocked off, crowds form after man on roof threatens destruction
Louise Dickson and Judith Lavoie, Times Colonist - September 29, 2008

A man claiming to have a bomb brought downtown Victoria to a grinding halt yesterday afternoon after he climbed onto a Fort Street rooftop and started shouting at pedestrians through a bullhorn.


Streets were blocked off and the downtown core was behind police tape for more than four hours after the man, wearing a hard hat and a reflective vest, appeared on the flat roof of the Custom House Building at 517 Fort St.


The 36-year-old man is a disgruntled former employee of Custom House Ltd., confirmed Peter Gustavson, the company's chairman and CEO. The man worked at the global currency exchange until 2 1/2 years ago.


Sharpshooters from the Greater Victoria Emergency Response Team, hiding on nearby rooftops, trained their rifles on the man.


"If he had an incendiary device and decided to kill or injure someone, we'd have to take him out," said Victoria police Const. Brent Burger.


The crowds that began to form were held back behind yellow police lines. "The more audience he had, the more it fuelled him," Burger said.


After talking with negotiators from Saanich and Victoria police departments, the man eventually threw his arms in the air, walked to the back of the building and climbed down the stairs.


He left piles of supplies on the roof, including a cooler of beer, a lawn chair, a sleeping bag and a tarp with a website address written on it. The website linked to pages alleging financial wrongdoing on a global scale. Earlier, he had thrown the tarp with the message over the side of the building.


The man surrendered to police shortly after 3.30 p.m. and was taken into custody. He is expected to appear in Victoria provincial court this morning on mischief charges. Further charges could be laid if he is found to have explosives. The bomb disposal unit from Vancouver was still searching the Custom House building at 9 p.m.


Hundreds of cars remained stuck behind police lines as a final search was made for anything resembling a bomb. The Fort Street area remained closed into the evening.


The incident began at 12:14 p.m. when police received 9-1-1 calls from people who watched a man toss an old computer monitor and a box of cheques off the north side of the building.


"He kind of looked like a worker. He was screaming at people, nonsensical stuff. 'There's a bomb, clear the area,' " Burger said.


"It's sad," said Gustavson, standing behind yellow police tape on Langley Street with his son David.


Business in the company's Asia-Pacific region was not disrupted during the incident because it was able to operate from one of its other locations.


As crowds watched, the man drank beer from his cooler, smoked, paced up and down the roofline, sat in a lawn chair reading a book on the life of Martin Luther King Jr. and, occasionally, went to the back of the building to urinate. At one point, he stood on the edge of the roof and tied his shoes.


He then complained to negotiators they were rushing him and said, "I need time to reflect. You're talking too much. You're making my head spin."


Custom House employee Sava Ruljic said the man had recently split with his fiancée. Ruljic was trying to get into work early but was warned of the bomb threat by a colleague who was already in the building.


"I don't know the story behind him being let go from Custom House. He used to manage one of the departments," Ruljic said.


While businesses in the 500-block of Fort Street were closed down, some found the standoff was good for business.


"People can smell the cooking, and over they come," said Fred Picard, a street vendor selling gourmet hot dogs and smokies on Government Street.


It was a frustrating afternoon for hundreds of people whose vehicles were stuck behind police tape in the parking lot off Wharf Street.


Ryan Weldon and his daughter paced the parking lot off Wharf Street. "The police asked us to let them in the building for rooftop access because we are the property managers, and now they won't let us go," Weldon said.


The website referred to by the man on the roof contains an explicit YouTube video about financial crimes.


With an image of a mushroom cloud it says, "Good night to Custom House" and "You tried to intimidate me for obeying the law."
 

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