Governor Proposes Martial Law Choppers For Chicago
Blagojevich wants National Guard helicopters to patrol gun control capital of America
Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet
Monday, July 21, 2008
The gun control capital of America - Chicago - where only the criminals are allowed to own firearms - has been hit by a fresh wave of crime and violence, prompting Governor Rod Blagojevich to call for National Guard helicopters to be used in law enforcement operations.
Blagojevich plans to form an “elite tactical team” to help the city fight crime, according to a speech he gave last week.
“Violent crime in the city of Chicago is out of control,” Blagojevich said at the bill signing ceremony. “I’m offering resources of the state to the city to work in a constructive way with Mayor Daley to do everything we can possibly do to help stop this violence,” said the governor.
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Citing the fact that a child has been shot nearly every day since the end of June, Blagojevich called for National Guard helicopters to be used in high crime areas.
However, as police department spokeswoman Monique Bond noted, the actual number of homicides in the city is significantly down.
“2008 may end with fewer than 500 homicides and that it is expected to be one of the least deadly years in the city in the last 40 years,” reports NBC5.com.
Following questions regarding the use of National Guard choppers in the city, Blagojevich’s office attempted to pour cold water over the issue by stating that National Guard troops would not enter the city.
“The only way the National Guard would be involved, if they are involved, is with the use of tactical helicopters that are currently used in narcotics operations,” spokesman Lucio Guerrero said in a prepared statement.
The precedent for National Guard units and military personnel to be used in domestic law enforcement has been a growing cancer for the last three decades.
Documentarian and radio talk show host Alex Jones has has attended numerous military urban warfare training drills across the U.S. where role players were used to simulate arresting American citizens, confiscating their weapons, and taking them to internment camps. Actors scream out that they have constitutional rights as they are handcuffed and hauled off to the detainment facility.
Legislation has already been passed that paves the way for the U.S. military to engage American citizens on home soil.
The John Warner Defense Authorization Act of 2007 allows the President to declare a “public emergency” and station troops anywhere in America and take control of state-based National Guard units without the consent of the governor or local authorities, in order to “suppress public disorder.”
Military-style drills involving unmarked black helicopters (the kind that the corporate media insists only exist inside the minds of conspiracy nutjobs) took place in Denver and Florida last month under the pretext of “terrorism training,” with choppers buzzing around downtown Denver and even causing damage to people’s property by flying well below legal altitudes.
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1 comment:
The Governor's plans to declare martial law came just days after he slashed funding for drug addiction treatment and prevention programs in half.
Over 1000 people rallied in downtown Chicago today. Here's what Rev. Fred Aigner had to say:
"The Governor’s budget cuts include $55 million to combat drug and alcohol addiction, the largest cause of violent crime in Illinois. Studies show that more than 80 percent of inmates in Illinois prisons have been locked up for crimes that can be traced directly back to drug and alcohol addiction.
Governor Blagojevich’s cuts also mean that Illinois will lose out on an additional $55 million in matching federal aid to combat drug addiction. The combined $110 million in cuts will force local non-profit organizations that provide prevention and treatment services to turn away tens of thousands of people who need and want help, and some treatment centers may be forced to close their doors.
The Governor’s attempt to balance the budget by cutting drug and alcohol addiction programs is shortsighted. If we don’t provide treatment, taxpayers pay for the after-effects: broken homes, unemployment, homelessness, emergency room treatment for overdoses, violent crime, prisons."
I wouldn't trust Rod with play-doh, let alone troops.
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