PDA

View Full Version : Smile & Wave! Fed pushes big bro drones despite public outcry in US



Cidersomerset
27th March 2013, 16:32
Smile & Wave! Fed pushes big bro drones despite public outcry in US

EKWi6aVV_EA


Published on 27 Mar 2013


It appears the sky is the limit for U.S. law enforcement, with aerial surveillance drones
set to be used domestically. But Capitol Hill has met some firm resistance to the plans.
RT's Gayane Chichyakyan reports on the attempts to fight back against the federal
project.



Maybe we should all start Mooning at them ..LOL!!

http://fakebernie.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/20100711-mooning-amtrak3.jpg

Sidney
27th March 2013, 17:40
They are just now telling us they are doing it. Which most likely really means they have been spying with drones for 10 years or more already. smile, or give them the bird. ; )

Snookie
27th March 2013, 18:33
They are just now telling us they are doing it. Which most likely really means they have been spying with drones for 10 years or more already. smile, or give them the bird. ; )

Exactly! I remember my Social Studies teacher telling our class in the late 70's that satellite technology could read your licence plate from space. I don't think this has anything to do with drones, they just want to make everyone think they are just now spying on us via the drones when they have been doing it for decades via satellite technology.

Watch the movie Eagle Eye, and you begin to get a concept of what they're doing.

Tesla_WTC_Solution
27th March 2013, 21:11
I love the picture and hope more people give the bird and the tilt of the kilt to the Fed

they are spending untold millions per drone at your expense, cutting social security at your expense, imagine if you were disabled, lose a limb in an auto accident or have a stroke, and you get like 800 a month... and a drone costs 250 million EACH UNIT

omfg

never leave out the R&D and maintenance contract costs

military is quite financially wasteful imo

Sidney
27th March 2013, 22:27
I love the picture and hope more people give the bird and the tilt of the kilt to the Fed

they are spending untold millions per drone at your expense, cutting social security at your expense, imagine if you were disabled, lose a limb in an auto accident or have a stroke, and you get like 800 a month... and a drone costs 250 million EACH UNIT

omfg

never leave out the R&D and maintenance contract costs

military is quite financially wasteful imo

For a while my STBX husband a I would go for walks out in the country, and many times we would get flyovers by low white unmarked planes, or black heli. Got tired of it and One day, we decided to give them the "moon" to go with the bird. : D

ghostrider
28th March 2013, 00:46
can we bug those who bug us, can we spy on them ??? can we label them terroist without a trial ??? they have gone to far, and sealed their fate ...I cast the first vote of no confidence in government ... they are fired ... they do not represent me... I wrote this knowing the NSA reads our forum ...hey you guys in spook world , go fax yourself ...

conk
28th March 2013, 18:39
Surely someone will start shooting at these unmanned aircraft. Could they detect a rifle shot from the middle of the woods?

Cidersomerset
28th March 2013, 18:54
ou9m09KreF0


Published on 27 Mar 2013


There's been a lot of criticism coming out about the U.S. drone program lately, both
from privacy advocates as well as lawmakers. But states aren't letting ethics get in
the way of their economic ambitions. Last month the Federal Aviation
Administration put out a call for drone test sites. The plan is to try to understand
how these UAV's interact with and share the airspace with commercial vehicles.
Some 50 bids from 37 states responded to that call, offering all types of incentives
to win one of the locations for the 12 proposed test sites. The advantages are
obvious: money, employment and bragging rights. But is the potential for profit
overruling the need for privacy? RT Correspondent Meghan Lopez reports