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View Full Version : Another WHISTLEBLOWER - BP contractor SPILLS the BEANS!



jackovesk
12th July 2010, 13:30
Former high-level BP contractor and Army Special Operations soldier Adam Dillon told a New Orleans television station that British Petroleum is not interested in cleaning up the oil spill because the company is run by “cutthroat individuals” who only care about money.

Dillon was fired by BP “after taking photos that he believes were related to the use of dispersants and to the cleanup of the oil.” Before his dismissal, Dillon was “confined and interrogated for almost an hour,” by BP officials.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=48pbsotMLbE&feature=player_embedded

tone3jaguar
12th July 2010, 16:47
That is the same guy from the Aussie 60 Min report isn't it?

norman
12th July 2010, 17:15
I think the plot is a bit thicker than just that. I've just heard, on the Alex Jones show, that the National Guard are preparing a 'martial law' lock down up to 50 miles inland from Texas City to Florida. Tents are ready for use in all sports stadiums etc.

Looks to me like this oil spill is the cover to launch the American lock down in the south. I'm a forgeiner but I think the south is where they would expect the greatest organization of resistance. Am I correct?

On the other hand, it could still be beta testing stage 2. From where I'm viewing it from, it sure looks like they want to stamp down their jack boots hard on the south first.

ascendingstarseed
13th July 2010, 03:20
I think the plot is a bit thicker than just that. ...Looks to me like this oil spill is the cover to launch the American lock down in the south. I'm a forgeiner but I think the south is where they would expect the greatest organization of resistance.... From where I'm viewing it from, it sure looks like they want to stamp down their jack boots hard on the south first.

Militia's are on the rise across the country, and are probably the highest around Gulf state areas. IMO another perspective is racial, the South also has the largest black populations and is also the region where most federal dollars go for welfare checks, food stamps and Florida also has a very large population of Senior citizens collecting money from social security. Illiteracy and poverty levels are some of the highest in the Southeast part of the country, so these people are most likely to believe what the mass media are telling them and the easiest to cull because they won't see it coming till it's too late.

Do you see many members from the South here on PA? There are very few....

unplugged
13th July 2010, 05:04
Illiteracy and poverty levels are some of the highest in the Southeast part of the country, so these people are most likely to believe what the mass media are telling them and the easiest to cull because they won't see it coming till it's too late.

Do you see many members from the South here on PA? There are very few....

I don't know how many members on PA are from the US South. However, I am, and I'm sure I'm not alone.

There is a gross misperception concerning Southerners and their level of gullibility regarding the government. On the one hand you say "militias are on the rise . . . and are probably highest in the South" and on the other you say "these people are most likely to believe what the mass media are telling them."

Er . . . no.

The South carries a genetic memory of the Civil War and is partial to very conservative politics, States Rights, minimal Federal government intrusion, and a distrust of the mass media that verges on paranoia. There are large pockets of poorly educated individuals who actually think for themselves and believe in the wisdom of gun ownership. There are other equally "uneducated" folk who are indeed gullible and willing to do what they are told IF they see a carrot and not a big stick heading their way.

The idea that the South would be the hardest territory to manage is certainly true but not only for the reasons you cite.

It would be hard to manage because:

1-People are used to extreme conditions and will not be easily persuaded that the "camp" over there is safer than the "fumes" down here. It would take a considerable die-off of locals before folk hop in a van to go elsewhere.

2-Distrust of "Big Brother," "Uncle Sam," "the folks up in Washington" is far more widespread than most imagine.

3-There are large population centers of highly educated citizenry living within that "50 mile" band who won't be volunteering to drink the koolaid or abandon their comfortable lives without more than some National Guard showing up at their doorstep demanding their relocation. They will demand court documents authorizing their relocation. They will hire lawyers and tie up the process if they believe they are being targeted for removal against their will IF there are no obvious signs of folk falling dead on the sidewalk.

4-Southern Governors tend to favor States Rights. The Texas governor has mentioned more than once the willingness of Texas to pull out of the Union. If the Federal relocation grab is overly obnoxious -- which it may well be -- it may very well fuel a backlash the Feds would rather not see.

5-That "large population of Seniors collecting money" you mention consists mostly of transplants from Northern states. They would more than likely opt to return to their family base in whatever Northern state they relocated from than take the Feds up on forced relocation to only God knows where.

That leaves the very poor, underprivileged lower class as the group most likely to be affected. That will appear on national television as being unsettlingly similar to Katrina -- a not very attractive picture for Big Bro in light of the NON-action taken by the gov't in areas of positive assistance -- e.g., sitting idly by while BP pumped the Corexit poison into the Gulf. Most will ask if the Gov't was so concerned about its citizens why didn't it do something to stop the lethal poisoning of the Gulf Stream when all that was required was a DEMAND that BP use less toxic dispersal agents. Stopping BP from poisoning the Gulf is certainly more helpful to folk in that 50-mile zone than uprooting one and all after the fact.

Ain't gonna happen without some coercion, and that's not a very pleasant thought at all.

-unplugged

(Fortunately, I'm not within that 50-mile band you mention -- thank God!)