Internment Camps? Who is building them?

greenspun.com : LUSENET : TimeBomb 2000 (Y2000) : One Thread

This says it all.

http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Realm/9485/index.html

-- Bob (seeing@believing.com), October 30, 1999

Answers

Link? Please!

-- Z. Z (z@z.zet), October 30, 1999.

IRS. Gotta man the manual contingency plan

-- leech (IRS@sucks.everybody), October 30, 1999.

I went to this site and it looked full of interesting stuff but I was unable to get into any article. I kept getting "The page cannot be displayed" message. Any ideas? I would have loved to read some of the articles. Thanks

-- a mom (why@not.com), October 30, 1999.

Try a better site New World Alliance http://216.71.97.38/index2.html



-- Ray (ray@abc.com), October 30, 1999.

I went to that site, couldn't get past the main page either, but did see the three pictures of towers, etc. My husband, a retired warrent officer and Korean War vet, said that the towers are for watchguards, but they are for the guards that protect the base. They are old news. Towers just like that have been common on every base at least for the last 50 years. And the concertina, that rolled fence? The captions on the pages invite you to look how the concertina is on the inside. Well, if you look closely, you see that the concertina is laid out between two lines of a fence. You cannot get in. Protecting the base from outside intrusion is a really big thing in the military. Remember the days of the cold war, etc? At one time we had 350 missile installations around the country, many of them nuclear warhead equipped. It was essential to protect the base from enemies coming into it. Maybe researching the history of the structures that you see might bring some comfort.

-- Mary (CAgdma@nobodyhome.com), October 30, 1999.


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