Originally Posted by
led0321
Bro...they have the manpower to investigate and arrest 55-70k people.
And keep it a secret
That's the point, it won't be secret. Hence the reason for direct comms.
Which by the way (may already be posted but I ain't reading all this crap to find the nuggets.) is why the postponement of the test.
https://www.fema.gov/news-release/20...erting-systems
I wondered if Trump would do it with the aftermath and cleanup of Florence going on. Good decision, he doesn't need the distraction when he does it.
This is exactly how timelines change in missions and ops. You can't predict events that can throw the timing off. Some call it Murphy's Law. Weather is one of the big reasons timelines change. It was the weather that changed D-Day to June 6, 1944. Eisenhower (my first president) had already postponed Operation Overlord (Allied invasion of northwest Europe) for a month to allow the 12 Allied forces Australia, Canada, Belgium, France, Czechoslovakia, Greece, New Zealand, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, the United Kingdom, and the United States) time to gather enough landing craft.
The actual operation was code named "Operation Neptune". D-Day had been used in military lingo for years to indicate the beginning day of any operation. In their published manuals the Army began to use the codes “H-hour" and “D-Day" during World War I, to indicate the time or date of an operation’s beginning. So the “D" may simply refer to the “day" of basically it meant "Go Day" or today "Git'sum Day".
Anyway, originally Eisenhower set the date of June 5, 1944 for D-Day but the weather forecast turned sour. On June 2, 1944 Eisenhower and his generals met with Churchill to discuss the weather forecast. The news was not good, D-Day, June 5, called for cloudy skies, rain, and heavy seas. 24 hours before the scheduled June 5th invasion Eisenhower met with his advisers again. The forecast indicated that the rain would stop and there would be breaks in the clouds by mid-afternoon on June 5. Eisenhower decided to change the date for D-Day to June 6.
All that, history lesson for some, to show that the weather and other often unknown factors can change the plans of mice and men. Murphy's Law in action.
The Elites don't fear the tall nails, government possesses both the will and the means to crush those folks. What the Elites do fear (or should fear) are the quiet men and women, with low profiles, hard hearts, long memories, and detailed target folders for action as they choose.
"I here repeat, & would willingly proclaim, my unmitigated hatred to Yankee rule—to all political, social and business connections with Yankees, & to the perfidious, malignant, & vile Yankee race."
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