Find the FEMA Concentration Camp Near You!
OR
Air Force Bases per State and Country
updated 3-21-08
If you live anywhere near one of these
camps and have seen it in person, let me know what you
observe there.
E-mail me at: Dee777@sbcglobal.net
Operation Cable Splicer and Garden Plot are the two sub programs which will be implemented once the Rex 84 program is initiated for its proper purpose. Garden Plot is the program to control the population. Cable Splicer is the program for an orderly takeover of the state and local governments by the federal government. FEMA is the executive arm of the coming police state and thus will head up all operations. The Presidential Executive Orders already listed on the Federal Register also are part of the legal framework for this operation
Executive Orders associated with FEMA that would suspend the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. These Executive Orders have been on record for nearly 30 years and could be enacted by the stroke of a Presidential pen:...
Unfortunately, upon further research by myself, they are not all sinister as purported to be. If you can follow the trail of Executive Orders, you are a better scholar than me. A constitution lawyer should be the one to track these Executive Orders
Dee
| EXECUTIVE ORDER
10990
John F Kennedy - 1962
|
allows the government to take over all modes of transportation and
control of highways and seaports.
The United States shares a 5,525 mile border with Canada and a 1,989 mile border with Mexico. Our maritime border includes 95,000 miles of shoreline and navigable waterways as well as a 3.4 million square mile exclusive economic zone. Executive Order 11612 is about the safety and security of Federal Employees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . |
| EXECUTIVE ORDER 10995 John F. Kennedy, 1962
|
allows the government to seize and control the communication media.
12472 - Assignment of national security and emergency preparedness telecommunications functions 13231 - Critical Infrastructure Protection in the Information Age 13446 - Continuance of Certain Federal Advisory Committees and Amendments to and Revocation of Other Executive Orders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . |
| EXECUTIVE ORDER 10997 John F. Kennedy, 1962 See the trail for 10990 |
allows the government to take over all electrical power, gas,
petroleum, fuels and minerals. |
| EXECUTIVE ORDER 10998 John F. Kennedy, 1962 |
allows the government to seize all means of transportation,
including personal cars, trucks or vehicles of any kind and total control
over all highways, seaports, and waterways. |
| EXECUTIVE ORDER 10999 John F. Kennedy, 1962 |
allows the government to take over all food resources and farms.
|
| EXECUTIVE ORDER 11000 John F. Kennedy, 1962 |
allows the government to mobilize civilians into work brigades
under government supervision. |
| EXECUTIVE ORDER 11001 John F. Kennedy, 1962 |
allows the government to take over all health, education and
welfare functions. |
| EXECUTIVE ORDER 11002 John F. Kennedy, 1962 |
designates the Postmaster General to operate a national
registration of all persons. |
| EXECUTIVE ORDER 11003 John F. Kennedy, 1962 |
allows the government to take over all airports and aircraft,
including commercial aircraft. |
| EXECUTIVE ORDER 11004 John F. Kennedy, 1962 |
allows the Housing and Finance Authority to relocate communities,
build new housing with public funds, designate areas to be abandoned, and
establish new locations for populations. |
| EXECUTIVE ORDER 11005 John F. Kennedy, 1962 |
allows the government to take over railroads, inland waterways and
public storage facilities. |
| EXECUTIVE ORDER 11051 by John F. Kennedy, 1962
|
specifies the responsibility of the Office of Emergency Planning
and gives authorization to put all Executive Orders into effect in times of increased international tensions and economic or financial crisis. 12919 - National defense industrial resources preparedness 13456 - Further amendment of Executive Order 11858 Concerning Foreign Investment in the United States Section 1. Policy. International investment in the United States promotes economic growth, productivity, competitiveness, and job creation. It is the policy of the United States to support unequivocally such investment, consistent with the protection of the national security.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . |
| EXECUTIVE ORDER 11310 by Lyndon Baines Johnson
Assigning emergency preparedness functions to the Attorney
General
|
grants authority to the Department of Justice to enforce the plans
set out in Executive Orders, to institute industrial support, to establish
judicial and legislative liaison, to control all aliens, to operate penal
and correctional institutions, and to advise and assist the President. 11490 - Assigning emergency preparedness functions to Federal departments and agencies 12656 - Assignment of emergency preparedness responsibilities
Executive Order 13228
Establishing the Office of Homeland Security and the Homeland Security Council
Executive Order 13286
Amendment of Executive Orders, and Other Actions, in Connection With the Transfer of Certain Functions to the Secretary of Homeland Security . . . . . . . . . . |
| EXECUTIVE ORDER 11049 by John F. Kennedy -
Executive Order 11049 -1962
Providing for the carrying out of the Public Works Acceleration Act
|
assigns emergency preparedness function to federal departments and
agencies, consolidating 21 operative Executive Orders issued over a
fifteen year period.
Executive Order 12553
Revocation of Various Executive Orders
|
|
allows the Federal Emergency Preparedness Agency to develop plans
to establish control over the mechanisms of production and distribution,
of energy sources, wages, salaries, credit and the flow of money in U.S.
financial institution in any undefined national emergency. It also
provides that when a state of emergency is declared by the President,
Congress cannot review the action for six months. The Federal Emergency
Management Agency has broad powers in every aspect of the nation. General
Frank Salzedo, chief of FEMA's Civil Security Division stated in a 1983
conference that he saw FEMA's role as a "new frontier in the protection of
individual and governmental leaders from assassination, and of civil and military installations from sabotage and/or attack, as well as prevention of dissident groups from gaining access to U.S. opinion, or a global audience in times of crisis." FEMA's powers were consolidated by President Carter
Executive Order 13226
by George W. Bush - 2001 President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology
|
Federal Regions
REGION I: Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont Regional Capitol: Boston
REGION II: New York, New Jersey, Puerto Rico, Virgin Island Regional Capitol: New York City
REGION III: Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia, District of Columbia. Regional Capitol: Philadelphia
REGION IV: Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, Tennessee Regional Capitol: Atlanta
REGION V: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin Regional Capitol: Chicago
REGION VI: Arkansas, Lonisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas Regional Capitol: Dallas-Fort Worth
REGION VII: Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska Regional Capitol: Kansas City
REGION VIII: Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wyoming Regional Capitol: Denver
REGION IX: Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada Regional Capitol: San Francisco
REGION X: Alaska, Oregon, Washington, Idaho Regional Capitol: Seattle
UNDER THE STATE DESIGNATIONS ARE LISTED BASES THAT INCLUDE NUCLEAR WEAPONS
| Redstone Arsenal | Huntsville | 38,000 |
ALASKA
| ALASKA | ||
| Clear AFS | Anderson | ? |
| Eareckson AS | Shemya Island | 7,200 |
| Eielson AFB | Fairbanks | 63,195 |
| Elmendorf AFB | Anchorage | 13,130 |
| Naval Air Station Adak | Adak Island | 65,000 |
Wilderness - East of Anchorage. No roads, Air &
Railroad access only. Estimated capacity of 500,000
Elmendorf AFB - Northeast
area of Anchorage - far end of base. Garden Plot facility.
Eielson AFB -
Southeast of Fairbanks. Operation Garden Plot facility.
Ft. Wainwright - East
of Fairbanks
ARIZONA
| Davis-Monthan AFB | Tucson | 11,000 |
Ft. Huachuca - 20 miles from Mexican border, 30
miles from Nogales Rex ´84 facility.
Pinal County - on the Gila River -
WWII Japanese detention camp. May be renovated.
Yuma County - Colorado
River - Site of former Japanese detention camp (near proving grounds).
This
site was completely removed in 1990 according to some reports.
Phoenix -
Federal Prison Satellite Camp. Main federal facility expanded.
Florence -
WWII prison camp NOW RENOVATED, OPERATIONAL with staff & 400 prisoners,
operational capacity of 3,500.
Wickenburg - Airport is ready for conversion;
total capacity unknown.
Davis-Monthan AFB (Tucson) - Fully staffed and
presently holding prisoners!!
Sedona - site of possible UN
base.
ARKANSAS
| ARKANSAS | ||
| Ira Eaker AFB | Blytheville | 3,931 |
| Little Rock AFB | Little Rock | 11,373 |
Ft. Chaffee (near Fort Smith, Arkansas) - Has new
runway for aircraft, new camp facility with cap of 40,000
prisoners
Pine
Bluff Arsenal - This location also is the repository for B-Z nerve
agent, which causes sleepiness,
dizziness, stupor; admitted use is
for civilian control.
Jerome - Chicot/Drew Counties - site of WWII Japanese camps
Rohwer - Descha County - site of WWII Japanese
camps
Blythville AFB - Closed airbase now being used as camp. New
wooden barracks have been constructed
at this location. Classic decorations
- guard towers, barbed wire, high fences.
Berryville - FEMA
facility
located east of Eureka Springs off Hwy. 62. Omaha - Northeast
of Berryville near Missouri state line,
on Hwy 65 south of old
wood processing plant. Possible crematory
facility.
CALIFORNIA
| CALIFORNIA | ||
| NAS Alameda | San Francisco | 2,720 |
| Beale AFB | Marysville | 22,944 |
| Camp Roberts | Paso Robles | ? |
| Castle AFB | Atwater | 3,200 |
| China Lake Naval Air Warfare Center Weapons Division | Ridgecrest | 1,122,177 |
| Concord Naval Weapons Station | Concord | 12,000 |
| Edwards AFB | Edwards | 301,000 |
| Energy Technology Engineering Center | Santa Susana | 2,700 |
| Fleet Numerical Meteorology and Oceanography Center | Monterey | ? |
| Fort Ord | Seaside | ? |
| + Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory | Livermore | 7,321 |
| Los Angeles Air Force Base | Los Angeles | 239 |
| March ARB | Riverside | 6,846 |
| Mare Island Naval Shipyard | Vallejo | 4,400 |
| Mather AFB | Sacramento | 5,800 |
| NAS Moffett Field | Mountain View | 13 |
| NAS North Island | Coronado | 2,500 |
| Onizuka AFS | Sunnyvale | 20 |
| Point Mugu (Pacific Missile Test Center) | Oxnard | 63,081 |
| Point Loma Naval Weapons Station | San Diego | ? |
| Sandia National Laboratories | Livermore | 413 |
| Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station | Seal Beach | ? |
| Sierra Army Depot | Herlong | ? |
| Travis AFB | Fairfield | 6,258 |
| Vandenberg AFB | Lompoc | 98,400 |
Camp Roberts, CA - Report from a reader: 12-30-07
My local friends there report that the base is being used for “peace time” meetings…groups of people have been coming to decide what to do with the base. I think HopeDance has reported on this activity.
There is a base above Camp Roberts that has a mission on it. I use to hike around there. My fellow hikers tell me this is the location of remote control airplane bombing of Iraq and soon Iran . The base has signs in both English and the Iraqi language, as they have brought so many from that country.
The base is small and has few buildings, so the capacity has to be small.
Vandenburg AFB - Rex 84 facility, located near
Lompoc & Santa Maria. Internment facility is located near
the oceanside,
close to Space Launch Complex #6, also called "Slick Six". The launch site
has had "a
flawless failure record" and is rarely used.
Norton AFB - (closed base) now staffed with UN according to some sources.
Tule Lake -
area of "wildlife refuge", accessible by unpaved road, just inside Modoc
County. Fort Ord -
Closed in 1994, this facility is now an urban warfare
training center for US and foreign troops, and may
have some "P.O.W. - C.I."
enclosures.
Twenty nine Palms Marine Base - Birthplace of the infamous "Would
you shoot American citizens?" Quiz.
New camps being built on "back 40".
Oakdale - Rex 84 camp capable of holding at least 20,000 people.
90 mi. East
of San Francisco. (Used currently for prison facilities for low-level risk
problem men)
Terminal Island - (Long Beach) located next to naval
shipyards operated by ChiCom shipping interests.
Federal prison
facility located here. Possible deportation point.
Ft. Irwin - FEMA
facility near Barstow. Base is designated inactive but has staffed
camp.
McClellan AFB - facility capable for 30,000 - 35,000 Sacramento
- Army Depot -
Mather AFB - Road to
facility is blocked off by cement barriers and a stop sign. Sign states area
is restricted;
as of 1997 there were barbed wire fences pointing inward, a
row of stadium lights pointed toward an empty field,
etc. Black boxes on
poles may have been cameras.
NOTE; A
person named Terry Kings wrote an article on his discoveries of camps
located in southern California. His findings are as follows:
Over the last couple months several of us have investigated three soon-to-be
prison
camps in the Southern California area. We had heard about these sites and
wanted
to see them for ourselves.
The first one we observed was in Palmdale, California. It is not operating as a
prison
at the moment but is masquerading as part of a water facility. Now why
would there
be a facility of this nature out in the middle of nowhere with
absolutely no prisoners?
The fences that run for miles around this large
facility all point inward, and there are
large mounds of dirt and dry moat
surrounding the central area so the inside area is
not visible from the road.
There are 3 large loading docks facing the entrance that can
be observed from
the road. What are these massive docks going to be loading?
We observed white vans patrolling the area and one came out and greeted us with
a
friendly wave and followed us until we had driven safely beyond the area. What
would
have happened had we decided to enter the open gate or ask questions?
This facility is across the street from the Palmdale Water Department. The area
around
the Water Department has fences pointing outward, to keep people out of
this dangerous
area so as not to drown. Yet, across the street, the fences all
point inward. Why?
To keep people in? What people? Who are going to be it’s
occupants?
There are also signs posted every 50 feet stating: State of California
Trespassing
Loitering Forbidden By Law Section 555 California Penal Code.
The sign at the entrance says: Pearblossom Operations and Maintenance Subcenter
Receiving Department, 34534 116th Street East. There is also a guard shack
located
at the entrance.
We didn’t venture into this facility, but did circle around it to see if there
was anything
else visible from the road. We saw miles of fences with the top
points all directed inward.
There is a railroad track that runs next to the
perimeter of this fenced area. The loading
docks are large enough to hold
railroad cars.
I wonder what they are planning for this facility? They could easily fit 100,000
people in
this area. And who would the occupants be?
Another site is located in Brand Park in Glendale. There are newly constructed
fences
(all outfitted with new wiring that point inward). The fences surround a
dry reservoir.
There are also new buildings situated in the area. We questioned
the idea that there
were four armed military personnel walking the park. Since
when does a public park
need armed guards?
A third site visited was in the San Fernando Valley, adjacent to the Water
District.
Again, the area around the actual Water District had fences logically
pointing out
(to keep people out of the dangerous area). And the rest of the
adjacent area which
went on for several miles was ringed with fences and barbed
wire facing inward
(to keep what or who in?) Also, interesting was the fact that
the addition to the tops
of the fences were fairly new as to not even contain
any sign of rust on them. Within
the grounds was a huge building that the guard
said was a training range for policemen.
There were newly constructed roads, new
gray military looking buildings, and a landing
strip. For what? Police cars were
constantly patrolling the several mile perimeter of the
area.
From the parking lot of the Odyssey Restaurant a better view could be taken of
the area
that was hidden from site from the highway. There was an area that
contained about
100 black boxes that looked like railroad cars. We had heard
that loads of railroad cars
have been manufactured in Oregon outfitted with
shackles. Would these be of that
nature? From our position it was hard to
determine.
COLORADO
| COLORADO | ||
| Aurora AFB (formerly Buckley ANGB) | Aurora | 3,832 |
| Fort Carson | Colorado Springs | ? |
| Lowry AFB | Denver | ? |
|
North American
Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD)
Cheyenne
Mountain Complex IT IS SAID THAT NORAD MOVED IN 2007 |
Colorado Springs | 451 |
| Peterson AFB | Colorado Springs | 1,277 |
|
* Portion of F.E.
Warren AFB
(138 W62/Minuteman III warheads) |
||