Monday, January 23, 2012
New Police Precrime Technique - Light Based Intervention System p
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1punjkon-hU
Uploaded by PigMine3 on Jan 20, 2012
From: http://www.youtube.com/user/AssociatedPress[ PigMine is on FaceBook, please Like here: http://www.facebook.com/PigMineNews ]
January 20, 2011 - The police department in the city of East Orange, New Jersey is installing red spotlights to remotely shine on those police believe are about to commit a crime. (Jan. 20)
Labels: big brother, New Jersey, police, precrime, surveillance
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
Alt-Market.com
There is nothing more disgusting or detestable than a citizen informant. Without citizen informants, tyrants could never retain the kind of power they wield. In fact, without citizen informants, totalitarian movements would never gain traction. This is why EVERY functional oligarchy throughout history has implemented programs designed to encourage the development of common spies, using the promise of monetary reward, or collective recognition.
Sadly, there are many in our society that would gladly sell out their closest friends and family to the tortures of authoritarian bureaucracy for nothing more than a firm pat on the head and a few fiat dollars. If there was ever a more degraded lot of bottom feeding opportunist scum, the citizen informant is the very epitome.
With the implementation of the “See Something, Say Something” program, and the increasing drive by the White House to institute community watch efforts to route out “extremists”, showcased quite clearly in strategic outlines like the ‘Empowering Local Partners To Prevent Violent Extremism In The United States’:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/empowering_local_partners.pdf
The issue of informant networking has come to the forefront in America. My personal view is that these nauseating and diseased people should be treated as treasonous as any globalist, regardless of stated intention. That said, in an environment rife with extraneous poverty, informancy cannot be avoided. Plenty of men and women, stricken with empty wallets and bellies, are extraordinarily prone to betrayal, regardless of their inherent morality. This is the kind of world we will soon be living in, and this is the kind of environment that corrupt officials like those in New Jersey are prone to exploit. Pathetic, weak, cowardly, but ultimately dangerous sheep unknowingly serving the very men who would seek to enslave them.In terms of 2nd Amendment rights, I find the very idea of debate rather pointless. The logic is undeniable. If you cannot defend yourself, you are a victim. Period. You become food for predators and parasites. Any state government or national government which actively seeks to disarm its citizens is suspect. I couldn’t care less about their stated rationalizations or rhetoric. In New Jersey, in Chicago, in Washington D.C., or anywhere else for that matter, an innocent man who is disarmed by law will always be victimized by an outlaw who armed through criminality. The concept of reduced crime through gun confiscation is so naïve it warrants considerable analysis. Through such efforts, good men are left defenseless, while evil men are free to wreak havoc.
The 2nd Amendment is not a negotiable or debatable pillar of the Constitution. It is absolute in its protection. Every American, regardless of the temporary circumstances of the times, is free to arm and defend himself from ANY enemy, from average criminals, to government thugs. The gun confiscation program featured in the video below, and instituted by officials in New Jersey, should not be taken lightly. The pure idiocy inherent in its premise cannot be ignored. New Jersey’s willingness to pay off potential informants could very well be a petri dish test for much more expansive programs across the country in the future. If we cannot stop the corruption and anti-constitutionalism of a pathetic state like New Jersey, then how can we expect to disrupt the same brand of corruption throughout the U.S.?...[Full Article]
Labels: 2nd amendment, gun buyback, informants, New Jersey
Monday, November 28, 2011
NJ.com
STATEWIDE— The number of New Jersey residents receiving food stamps has doubled in the past four years and is at its highest level in more than a decade as the nation’s still sputtering economy continues to take its toll on the poorest residents of the Garden State, state and federal data show.
As of September, the most recent data released by the state Department of Human Services, more than 400,000 households and nearly 822,000 people were enrolled in the food stamp program, meaning nearly one out of every 10 residents in New Jersey receives assistance...[Full Article]
Labels: food stamps, New Jersey, poverty
Sunday, September 18, 2011
Alexander Higgins Blog

Kindergarten and 1st grade students are now required by law to participate in monthly terrorism drills, including active shooter, bomb threat and evacuation drills.
I recently received my 1st grade students back to school paperwork. Going through the packet I found a letter serving notification that my son is now required by law to participate in monthly anti-terrorism drills.
In fact, after doing more research, I learned that all NJ schools which provide services to children from Kindergarten and up are now required by law to participate in monthly drills...[Full Article]
Labels: Alexander Higgins, New Jersey, terror drills
Monday, February 14, 2011
(Reuters) - A federal security officer at Newark Liberty International Airport pleaded guilty on Monday to accepting bribes and kickbacks from a colleague who regularly stole money from passengers during security screenings, authorities said.
The Transportation Security Administration officer, Michael Arato, 41, admitted in U.S. District Court in Newark he took kickbacks from a subordinate officer, whom he permitted to steal between $10,000 and $30,000 in cash from travelers over the course of a year ending in October 2010, the U.S. Attorney's office said.
During a three-week period ending on October 5, video surveillance showed Arato pocketing some $3,100 in kickbacks from the scheme, mostly in $100 bills, authorities said.
He also admitted he regularly stole from passengers at his own checkpoint at the airport's Terminal B...
Labels: New Jersey, Newark, Transportation Security Administration, TSA
Friday, December 3, 2010
CAMDEN, NJ (CBS) – Camden City Council, as expected, voted Thursday to lay off almost 400 workers, half of them police officers and firefighters, to bridge a $26.5 million deficit.
That’s about a quarter of the city’s entire work force...
[Full Article]Labels: Camden, layoffs, New Jersey
Monday, November 1, 2010
Bergen County, N.J., has dealt with one particular dilemma for years: The Department of Human Services (DHS) needs to estimate how many homeless individuals receive services, such as food, medicine and shelter. But many people served by the department don’t have accurate forms of identification, and without a precise tracking system, the DHS might have erroneously counted one person who visits the shelter 10 times, for example, as 10 different people visiting once.
And when it comes time to properly fill out grant applications to receive funding support, accuracy counts for the DHS.
“It’s not like you can do a head count,” said Susan Nottingham, the department’s Homeless Management Information System administrator. “We could sit down and say, ‘Can we talk to you for 45 minutes?’ But we didn’t want them to turn around and say, ‘We’re not that hungry.’”
Now with biometrics technology, Bergen County has implemented a solution that helps the DHS keep an accurate count of the homeless people who receive social services. In September, the DHS unveiled a fingerprint identification system developed by Fulcrum Biometrics, a San Antonio-based company...
[Full Article]
[Webmaster - Track...Trace...and Database... One step closer to the New World Order. They always start with the weak, the vulnerable, and the outcasts. Someday everyone will be required to do this.]
Labels: biometrics, fingerprints, homeless, New Jersey
Saturday, August 7, 2010
CAMDEN, N.J. - New Jersey's most impoverished city will close all three branches of its public library at year's end unless a rescue can be pulled off.
Camden's library board says the libraries won't be able to afford to stay open past Dec. 31 because of budget cuts from the city government. The city had its subsidy from the state cut.
The library board president says the library system, which opened in 1904, is preparing to donate, sell or destroy its collections, including 187,000 books...
[Full Article]Labels: Camden, library, New Jersey, poverty
[NBCNewYork.com]
Full body scanners that have stirred controversy for producing virtually naked images of airline passengers are coming to airports near you next month.
The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey announced that the hotly debated machines will be installed at Newark Liberty, John F. Kennedy and LaGuardia international airports in September. TSA officials contend that the technology allows security screeners to see non-metal weapons like explosives that go undetected by existing metal detectors.
In March 2010, the agency started sending out 450 machines, which were bought with funds from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. Forty-one airports across the country already have the imaging technology installed at security checkpoints, according to the Transportation Security Administration.
While the TSA calls the technology less invasive than a pat-down, the Washington-based Electronic Privacy Information Center is suing the Department of Homeland Security to stop the use of the machines, charging that the scanners are unconstitutional.
“Body scanners produce detailed, three-dimensional images of individuals,” the group states on its Web site. “Security experts have described whole body scanners as the equivalent of ‘a physically invasive strip-search.’”
Only passengers that are flagged for extra security screenings are asked to go stand in the machines for imaging.
The TSA has tried to allay the public’s privacy concerns by stating that the scanners cannot store naked images of travelers, but through a Freedom of Information Act request EPIC found that one of these machines at a courthouse in Florida had stored 35,314 images.
Acting director of the TSA, Gale Rossides, said in a letter to EPIC, “It seems that though the machines at airports are manufactured with the capability to store images, that capability is used in ‘testing mode’ only – and not at airports."
Labels: airport, body scanners, JFK, LaGuardia, New Jersey, New York, Newark, Transportation Security Administration, TSA
Sunday, June 6, 2010
Kurt Nimmo
Infowars.com
June 6, 2010
More patsies were arrested on Saturday and immediately fed into the fake terror propaganda machine. “Two New Jersey men who were bound for Somalia to join an Islamic extremist group and to kill American troops were arrested at Kennedy International Airport late Saturday, federal and local authorities announced on Sunday,” the New York Times reports today.
It is said Mohamed Haoud Alessa and Carlos Eduardo Almonte wanted to join al-Shabaab, a shadowy terror group accused of working with al-Qaeda, the CIA database that morphed into a scary mirage after everything changed on September 11, 2001. “They were charged in a criminal complaint with conspiring to kill, maim and kidnap people outside the United States and were expected to be arraigned in federal court in Newark on Monday, according to the officials.”
The latest carnival sideshow follows a familiar pattern. The patsies were “under scrutiny” by the FBI since 2006. In other words, they were played by the FBI and turned in devil incarnates as no shortage of previous patsies have been over the last few years. “Beginning in 2009, an undercover officer from the New York Police Department’s Intelligence Division recorded numerous meetings and conversations with them, during which they discussed their plans,” reports the Times. Translation: the dim-wits were encouraged to say bad things about the United States and align themselves with the Islamic network contrived by intelligence agencies around the world since the CIA began spending billions in Afghanistan beginning in 1979 during the Carter administration.
“They talked about what they said was their obligation to wage violent jihad and at times expressed a willingness to commit acts of violence in the United States” under the tutelage of the FBI.
It appears, however, the two men merely wanted to get the hell out of the Bizarro Sates of America. “I leave this time, God willing, I never come back. I’ll never see this crap hole,” Mr. Alessa told his FBI controllers. Alessa said he would come back, however, if instructed to do so by his CIA handler.
Mr. Almonte apparently has more than two brain cells to rub together. He said that there would soon be United States troops in Somalia and he looked forward to killing U.S. soldiers.
In fact, the U.S. military is already operating in Somalia. In 2006, another CIA patsy, Saleh Ali Nabhan, was killed in Somalia by U.S. Special Forces in a region controlled by al-Shabab. The Pentagon’s Special Operations Command has been involved in Somalia as part of Operation Provide Relief and Unified Task Force supposedly under the aegis of the globalist lapdog the United Nations.
“A report last week revealed that the top US commander in the Middle East had signed an order last September authorizing a big expansion of clandestine military missions in the region, and also in Iran, Saudi Arabia and Somalia,” the Times Online reported last week. “The dramatic expansion in the use of special forces, which in their global span go far beyond the covert missions authorized by George W. Bush, reflects how aggressively the President is pursuing al-Qaeda behind his public rhetoric of global engagement and diplomacy.”
The New Jersey arrests are the latest effort by the government to convince you homegrown terrorism is on the rise and you should waive more of your inalienable rights and accept naked body scanners, CCTV camera everywhere, and 24/7 NSA surveillance of all communications.
“Investigators say they’re also among many U.S. terrorism suspects to have been inspired by two well-known U.S. citizens who have recruited terrorists through the Internet: Adam Gadahn, an al-Qaida spokesman in Pakistan, and Anwar al-Awlaki, a radical al-Qaida cleric hiding in Yemen who is believed to have helped inspire recent attacks including the Fort Hood shooting, the Times Square bombing attempt and the failed Christmas Day airline bombing,” reports Forbes.
Get ready for more patsies and dim bulbs who think usually transparent FBI agents are al-Qaeda. It looks like we are working our way toward another false flag. In the lead-up a number of patsies will be paraded before the American people who have already signaled they are not finished surrendering their rights to the state.
Labels: FBI, Federal Bureau of Investigation, home-grown, Kurt Nimmo, New Jersey, terrorism
NEWARK, N.J. – Two New Jersey men who allegedly intended to kill American troops were arrested Saturday at a New York City airport before boarding flights on their way to join a jihadist group in Somalia, a newspaper reported.
Mohamed Hamoud Alessa, 20, and Carlos Eduardo Almonte, 26, were arrested at John F. Kennedy International Airport before they could board separate flights to Egypt and then continue on to Somalia, The Star-Ledger of Newark reported. The newspaper cited officials familiar with the details of the arrests who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the investigation publicly.
Alessa, of North Bergen, and Almonte, of Elmwood Park, were charged with conspiring to commit an act of international terrorism through al-Shabaab, a violent extremist group based in Somalia and connected to al-Qaida, the officials told the newspaper. Al-Shabaab was designated by the U.S. as a terrorist group in 2008...
Labels: Al Qaeda, New Jersey
Friday, April 16, 2010
CAMDEN, N.J. (AP) ―Homeless people who built a community of campground tents just a few blocks from downtown Camden got a reprieve Thursday, allowing them to remain, at least for now, at the self-governing settlement in one of the nation's poorest cities.
Both the residents and social service agencies were nervous about Thursday's deadline from a Camden County official to shut down the community. They feared adequate housing would not be found by the deadline, forcing the 30 or so remaining homeless people to move out of a relatively safe environment and into the streets.
Gino Lewis, the official who wanted to close the enclave, arrived there Thursday morning to tell community founder Lorenzo "Jamaica" Banks that Tent City would not be closed yet -- and that efforts would continue to find housing.
Lewis says that the residents have formed a real community over the years. But he said the settlement, wedged in the woods between a highway off-ramp and train tracks, is unsafe and unsanitary.
"They've done a great job," Lewis said. "The problem is, right now we need to take the next step for them and help them."
But he won't force them out now.
Labels: Camden, homeless, New Jersey, tent city
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