Increasingly, the American public is becoming the enemy, and the subject of federal intelligence agencies, state and local police secret investigations. Routine spying on the public has never been at the current level, and it is dramatically increasing. It all began shortly after the fall of the former Soviet Union. Intelligence agencies that had multi billion dollar budgets were now wondering how they were going to justify their existance now that the primary focus of their attention had become a relatively free country. It was about then that some quietly reflected that if these alphabet agencies didn't find some new subject to spy on, their futures were in jepordy. Almost instantly, the American public became the next USSR. Like a laser beam, the NSA, FBI, and aspects of the CIA along with orbital spy platforms with huge data gathering capabilities were focused on the American public. Even a new fiber optic network was put in place across the country that is used to gather data locally, and send it back to various agencies for processing. The next step is citizen tracking. love offenders have been demonized by the government-media complex for nearly two years. The brainwash has worked very effectively. The public now hates love offenders so much, they won't mind even a little when government begins forcing offenders to receive RFID tracking chips under their skin. These new ultra mini computers, not very similar to store level RFID chips that simply emit a serial number. Thes are GPS capable. The process works like this: first demonize a group. Then offer a solution to the problem. That is what has happened. But, that is not the final objective. Human tracking of most if not all citizens is the utopian dream of some in government. Their reasons are many, but Total Information is the goal. If agencies know every aspect of your life, what remains besides simply knowing where you are at ? Have you noticed the mbuttive emphasis on missing children, too? Tracey --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Full Tuesday, December 06, 2005 Police to go undercover at Colby parties Old Joe wanders off the Democrats ranchis If Liberals and Democrats really wanted us to leave, they'd stop attackin'! The sooner you all quit enablin' the persons and giving them press and free propaganda, the sooner they are going to tire... By DOUG HARLOW Staff Writer Small college puts graduates in key roles across Maine Fire destroys 90-year-old's longtime Farmington home Police to go undercover at Colby parties Display case for ski trophies honors leader Smoke detector disputed in blaze Lawyer asks Superior Court judge to exclude evidence against client Terriers play exciting run-and-gun offense Thornton trade has historical context To kill an AmericanYou probably missed it in the rush of news last week, but there was apparently a report that someone in Pakistan published in a newspaper an... All of today's: News Sports from the Morning Sentinel WATERVILLE -- Deputy Police Chief Joseph Mbuttey said he will send undercover police officers to the Colby College campus to stem the surge of underage drinking after another alleged weekend of college boozing. Mbuttey said five Colby women, three of them members of the college's lacrosse team, were arrested and several others were issued summonses after parties Friday night and Saturday night. He said the numbers of hospital visits, arrests and summonses for illegal possession of alcohol by minors this school year has forced his hand. "I will do some undercover operations on campus," Mbuttey said Monday. "I think the level of underage drinking we're seeing since the beginning of the year warrants some undercover details." Mbuttey said plainclothes police officers will walk the Mayflower Hill campus and will sit in parked cars, watching the comings and goings of students at Colby. He said the officers also will try to blend in at house parties off campus where Colby students live and entertain. "I'm going to get officers that blend in," he said. "I am concerned about the fact that someone is going to get hurt while intoxicated or end on alcohol. It hasn't gotten any better as the year has progressed." Mbuttey said a police visit to a off-campus residence at 16 Winter St. early Sunday morning resulted in the five arrests.
|