Filed under: 1984, 2008 olympics, beijing, Big Brother, Checkpoints, China, civil liberties, civil rights, cloud seeding, Communism, Control Grid, Dalai Lama, Dictatorship, Dissent, Empire, Fascism, free speech, hong kong, human rights, Military, Military Industrial Complex, mongolia, nanny state, Nazi, olympics, Oppression, Police State, Protest, racial profiling, Racism, stasi, stasi tactics, Surveillance, tibet, tibet protests, war on drugs, War On Terror, weather control, weather modification
China To Enlist Beijing Residents To Fight Terror
Reuters
July 18, 2008
China will have nearly 100,000 commandos, police and members of the military on standby up to and during Beijing Olympics to handle potential terrorist attacks, state media reported.
Having deployed surface-to-air missiles, readied a 100,000-strong anti-terrorism force and instituted a series of security checkpoints, Beijing is adding Chinese residents as another layer in its shield to protect Olympics venues against possible attack.
Security officials are publishing a new “anti-terrorism manual” to educate Chinese about possible threats and instructing them how to respond in the event they are captured or encounter a threat, according to a Xinhua news agency report on Friday.
“When you notice something suspicious, you need to check it first, then listen, then smell, but try to avoid touching it,” the manual says, according to Xinhua.
It said the manual describes 39 different potential terrorism threats, including explosions, arson, shootings, hijacking and even chemical, biological, or nuclear attacks.
The security-obsessed government has identified a possible terrorist attack as the biggest potential threat to the successful hosting of the Games, which run from August 8-24, and it has widely publicized its security preparations.
“You also have to hide your mobile phones if kidnapped by terrorists,” an excerpt of the manual says, according to Xinhua.
It was not clear how many copies of the manual would be published or when and how it might be distributed.
China, eager to use the Games to showcase its rise as a modern economic power, has said that homegrown threats top security worries, including from Uighur militants campaigning for independence for Xinjiang in China’s far northwest and from Tibetan independence groups.
Officials said security forces had foiled five “terrorism groups” planning to attack the Beijing Olympics, with police detaining 82 people in Xinjiang.
But rights groups say that China is using Olympic security as an excuse to crack down on internal dissent.
Fears of a ‘no-fun’ Olympics in Beijing
The Age
July 18, 2008
FEARS of a “no fun Olympics” are growing as security restrictions increase and become more bizarre with less than 20 days to go until the opening ceremony.
Beijing police have been visiting bar owners in the popular Sanlitun area and asking them to sign pledges agreeing to not serve black people or Mongolians and ban activities including dancing.
Bar owners said that police have been clamping down on black people and Mongolians, who are sometimes implicated in drug dealing and prostitution, as part of an Olympic clean-up campaign that they and locals fear will make for a secure but sterile Games.
Maggies, Beijing’s most notorious expatriate bar, referred to as the “Mongolian embassy” because of its popularity with Mongolian prostitutes and Western men, was shut suddenly about two months ago after a reported murder.
The gay bar Destination has also been ordered to shut down its dance bar until further notice.
And in a separate move, the Ministry of Public Security announced at the start of the month that from October 1, discos, karaoke bars and other entertainment venues must install transparent partitions in previously private rooms, and ensure staff dress more modestly as part of an effort to crack down on prostitution and drugs.
The Minister of Culture announced on Thursday that all overseas entertainers who have ever attended activities that “threaten national sovereignty” will be banned. This follows an outburst by Icelandic singer Bjork at a Shanghai concert on March 2, which sparked an official investigation.
Bjork shouted out, “Tibet, Tibet,” after performing her song Declare Independence.
A notice on the Ministry’s website on Thursday said that entertainers who “threaten national unity”, “whip up ethnic hatred”, “violate religious policy or cultural norms” or “advocate obscenity or feudalism and superstition” will be banned. “Feudalism and superstition” are often code words used by the Chinese Government to refer to Tibetans loyal to the Dalai Lama. The move follows the detention of several prominent Tibetan singers.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-d..5/AR2008071500579_pf.html
Olympics 2008: ‘Ring of steel’ security surrounds Beijing
http://www.telegraph.c..7-security-surrounds-Beijing.html
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-07/15/content_8550739.htm
Filed under: Air Force, Alex Jones, Bio Weapons, biochemicals, chemtrails, cloud seeding, EPA, Eugenics, Global Warming, health and environment, Military, mlitary industrial complex, navy, NSA, Russia, Science and technology, Soviet Union, War On Terror, weather control, weather modification
Danger In The Sky – The Chemtrail Phenomenon
http://www.reuters.com/article/to..topNews&rpc=22&sp=true
Filed under: 2008 olympics, chemtrails, China, cloud seeding, Cold War, Military, Military Industrial Complex, navy, olympics, Russia, Science and technology, Soviet Union, super weapons, Vietnam, weather manipulation, weather modification
Man-Made Droughts/Floods To Disrupt Economies
Wired
February 11, 2008
A recently-unearthed U.S. Navy research project calls for creating man-made floods and droughts to “disrupt [the] economy” of an enemy state.
“Weather modification was used successfully in Viet Nam to (among other things) hinder and impede the movement of personnel and material from North Viet Nam to South Viet Nam,” notes a Naval Air Warfare Weapons Division – China Lake research proposal, released last month through the Freedom of Information Act. But “since that time military research on Weather Modification has dwindled in the United States.”
The proposal suggests a study of the latest weather manipulation techniques, to “give the U.S. military a viable, state-of-the-art weather modification capability again.” With that in hand, American forces would be able…
To impede or deny the movement of personnel and material because of rains-floods, snow-blizzards, etc.
(2) To disrupt economy due to the effect of floods, droughts, etc.
The proposal is undated. But it’s pretty clearly from the Cold War. Not only is “the Soviet Union (Russia)” mentioned. The money is also relatively small, by today’s standards — less than a half-million dollars, over two years.
A military in-house newspaper calls “weather modification” an “area of China Lake preeminence. Between 1949 and 1978, China Lake developed concepts, techniques, and hardware that were successfully used in hurricane abatement, fog control, and drought relief. Military application of this technology was demonstrated in 1966 when Project Popeye was conducted to enhance rainfall to help interdict traffic on the Ho Chi Minh Trail.” (Here’s a picture of China Lake’s “Cold Cloud Modification System.”
In 1980, the United States ratified a treaty banning military weather manipulation. But every once in a while, someone in the armed forces floats the idea of doing it again. “Our vision is that by 2025 the military could influence the weather on a mesoscale [theater-wide] or microscale [immediate local area] to achieve operational capabilities,” a 1996 Air Force-commissioned study reads.
Today, Chinese officials are trying to figure out ways to keep it from raining over Beiing, during this summer’s Olympics.