police state
'You'd think we were in a war zone'
Institutionalized Spying on Americans
Welcome To The Technocratic Dark Age Or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying and Love The Police State
- 1984
- Big Brother
- Biometrics
- CCTV
- Commentary
- control grid
- Crimestop
- Doublethink
- elite
- Enslavement
- Homeland Security
- incubus
- Industrial Revolution
- Knowledge is Power
- Manufactured Terrorism
- military industrial complex
- Ministry of Love
- Ministry of Peace
- Neocons
- New York
- Our Government At Work
- police state
- Privacy Concerns
- Real ID
- Spotlight
- Storm Troops
- Technocratic Dark Age
- Technology
- Terror Industrial Complex
- TheProles
- Thought Crime
- War Machine
- zbigniew brzezinski
Fortress North America: A Vast Gated Community
- 1984
- 9/11
- A vast gated community
- America
- American Union
- Automated Targeting System
- Big Brother
- Biometrics
- border towns
- clearance
- Commentary
- DHS
- Enslavement
- FEMA
- Fortress North America
- Globalism
- Homeland Security
- Homeland Security
- Illegal Aliens
- Illegal Aliens
- long range RFID
- Martial Law
- melting pot
- Ministry of Love
- Ministry of Peace
- National Sovereignty
- Nazi
- Our Government At Work
- police state
- RFID
- Storm Troops
- TheProles
- Wal-Mart
- War Machine
- World News
Britain To Expand Police State Apparatus and ID All Subjects by 2009
The Instruments of Tyranny
Impeach Now or face the consequences!
Bush administration pushes for expansion and deepening of police state
As written by Mike Ruppert in Crossing the Rubicon, “American fascism is something different now. It’s not just private, elite control over the legal system, nor private evasion of the rule of law. It’s a crisis-induced transition from a society with a deeply compromised legal system to a society where force and surveillance completely supplant the system.”
Police hold almost 80,000 people's DNA
Biometric device used to pay for meals
ROME, Ga. -- It takes more than a lunch lady to run today's public school cafeterias. It takes a logistics expert.
Take Rome's West End Elementary, where two classrooms of students charge into the lunchroom every five minutes, load their trays up with corn dogs, steak nuggets and fresh fruit and pile into cashier Lydia Galego's line.
Galego, though, has a new tool to help handle the rush. Each student stops at a computer in front of Galego and presses an index finger up to a reader before trotting off to a table. The student's names flash across Galego's monitor, and each of their prepaid accounts are automatically debited $1.10.

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