"Fusion
Center" Trained Firefighters Search for Thought Crimes
Truthnews | Nov. 24, 2007
By Kurt Nimmo
It's like a chapter
out of Orwell's 1984: the New York City fire department is working
closely with the Ministry of Homeland Security.
"The Homeland Security Department is testing a program with the New
York City fire department to share intelligence information so
firefighters are better prepared when they respond to emergency
calls. Homeland Security also trains the New York City fire service
how to identify material or behavior that may indicate terrorist
activities. If it is successful, the government intends to expand
the program to other major metropolitan areas," reports the
International Herald Tribune .
"They're really
doing technical inspections, and if perchance they find something
like, you know, a bunch of RPG (rocket-propelled grenade) rounds in
somebody's basement, I think it's a no-brainer," said Jack Tomarchio,
a senior official in Homeland Security's intelligence division. "The
police ought to know about that; the fire service ought to know
about that; and potentially maybe somebody in the intelligence
community should know about that."
It's a no-brainer there is a Constitution and a Bill of Rights and
the Fourth Amendment explicitly states: "The right of the people to
be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against
unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no
Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or
affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched,
and the persons or things to be seized."
Mr. Tomarchio, in order to make excuses for violating the
Constitution, throws out a worse case scenario: RPGs stashed in
somebody's basement. New York City is not Fallujah and New City fire
fighters are not members of the Army Rangers. But never mind. You
might be hiding Osama in the cellar.
It's not simply the remote possibility you may have a bundle of RPGs
or an M240 GPMG machine gun in the closet. It's also your attitude
toward the state:
Even before the federal program began, New York firefighters and
inspectors had been training to recognize materials and behavior the
government identifies as "signs of planning and support for
terrorism."
When going to private residences, for example, they are told to be
alert for a person who is hostile, uncooperative or expressing hate
or discontent with the United States; unusual chemicals or other
materials that seem out of place; ammunition, firearms or weapons
boxes; surveillance equipment; still and video cameras; night-vision
goggles; maps, photos, blueprints; police manuals, training manuals,
flight manuals; and little or no furniture other than a bed or
mattress.
No doubt there are people who are "hostile, uncooperative or
expressing hate or discontent with the United States." Once upon a
time, it was your right to be "uncooperative," even if your house
was on fire. However, since "everything changed," that is to say
since the false flag operation on September 11, 2001, "hate or
discontent with the United States" has been redefined as simply
disagreeing with the government.
Moreover, it is, or rather was, your right, under the Second
Amendment, to keep "firearms or weapons boxes," but this is now
proof positive you're with al-Qaeda. As well, owning "still and
video cameras," especially if you have problems with the government,
is now considered terrorism.
It's not simply New York where the Ministry and local firefighters
and emergency workers cooperate to decimate the Bill of Rights.
"Separately, the fire services in Washington, the nation's capital,
Phoenix, Arizona, and Atlanta, Georgia, also have received
terror-related intelligence training. Los Angeles County provides
intelligence training so firefighters and inspectors can spot
dangerous chemicals or other materials that could be used in bombs.
And the fire service is also represented in at least 13 state and
regional intelligence �fusion' centers across the country, where
local, state and federal agencies share information about terror and
other crimes."
Other crimes? You know, like smoking marijuana or pirating the local
cable signal. Obviously, you're with al-Qaeda.
"We can walk into your house. We don't need a search warrant," said
Larry Schultz , an assistant fire chief in charge of operations in
the District of Criminals. "If an ambulance team should show up at a
house and see detailed maps of the district's public transit system
on the wall, that is something the EMS provider would pass along, he
said."
Can't remember where the el-stop is? Need a map? You're with
al-Qaeda.
Violating the Fourth Amendment is considered "evolution of the fire
service," according to Bob Khan, the fire chief in Phoenix, "which
has created an information-sharing arrangement between the fire
service and law enforcement through terrorism liaison officers�.
Because firefighters are on the front lines, the fire service needs
to know about intelligence that could somehow affect what they do,
said Gregory Cade, who as head of the U.S. Fire Administration is
the nation's top fire chief."
Obviously, if you're "hostile, uncooperative or expressing hate or
discontent with the United States," this "could somehow affect" what
firefighters do, especially now that they are part of the new
"intelligence fusion centers," described as "a collaborative effort
of two or more agencies that provide resources, expertise, and/or
information to the center with the goal of maximizing the ability to
detect, prevent, apprehend, and respond to criminal and terrorist
activity."
As should be expected in a police state, mundane criminal
behavior�for instance, watering your lawn on Tuesday instead of
Thursday, or removing that tag on your mattress�is considered
terrorist activity. Naturally, the Ministry wants to know about this
and that's why they established the "fusion" centers.
I exaggerate. But only a little.
But let's get down to the nitty gritty here. Our rulers have
specific concerns in mind: "If, for example, Washington is hosting
an International Monetary Fund meeting where there will be a large
group of protesters and a truckload of gasoline has been stolen in
Baltimore, firefighters need to know about intelligence from
overseas that terrorists are trying to make explosive devices out of
gasoline, Schultz said."
In other words, people opposed to the loan sharking of the IMF are
likely to steal gas trucks and blow things up. In such an
environment, the Constitution is not only irrelevant, it is
dangerous.
"If in the conduct of doing their jobs they come across evidence of
a crime, of course they should report that to the police," said the
ACLU. "But you don't want them being intelligence agents."
I guess the ACLU is behind the curve.
In a police state, everybody doubles as an informer and snitch. As
Winston Smith knew all too well, one is "surrounded night and day by
informers" in a dictatorship. Your neighbors, even your own
children, might tell "intelligence agents" at the local "fusion"
center that you are "hostile, uncooperative or expressing hate or
discontent with the United States," especially if you have some Ron
Paul literature about or, in a worse case scenario, an Alex Jones
DVD on the coffee table when EMS responds after grandma has a heart
attack.
Finally, if the Ministry has its way, your local firefighters and
operatives at the local "fusion" center may soon be one in the same.
"At the height of the recent California wildfire disaster, Homeland
Security Department Secretary Michael Chertoff unveiled a plan to
reinforce the nation's multihazard fusion centers with expert
firefighters," reports Government Computer News .
Chertoff told the International Association of Fire Chiefs that in
the federal government, "we're trying to integrate fire operations
into the very fabric of DHS. Our National Operations Center now has
a Fire Desk."
Chertoff added that the center includes a fire service
representative who works alongside officials from organizations such
as the FBI, other law enforcement agencies and the intelligence
community.
Charlie Allen, DHS' assistant secretary for intelligence and
analysis, is spearheading a drive to add firefighting experts to
state and local fusion centers, Chertoff said.
He acknowledged in the speech that some might ask what role
firefighters would play at fusion centers dominated by police and
intelligence experts.
Answering his rhetorical question, Chertoff said that in many cases,
the first person to arrive at the scene of an explosion or fire is a
firefighter or other first responder. That person's observations and
conclusions might indicate that the source of the outbreak is not an
accident but a criminal or terrorist act.
Again, note the merging together of "criminal" and "terrorist," as
if the two are inseparable. Since it is now a crime to be "hostile,
uncooperative or expressing hate or discontent with the United
States," it might be a good idea to take that "Ron Paul 2008? bumper
sticker off your car, lest the neighborhood cop or firefighter
reports you to the local "fusion" center.
Remember, as the corporate media reminds us, Ron Paul supporters are
no different than Timothy McVeigh and the volunteer firefighter down
the street might be a Glenn Beck fan.
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