Conspiracy: United States Are Making Concentration Camps The United States have withheld information to the public all the way back to the founding fathers. There are camps that the United States have created called FEMA camps otherwise known as Federal Emergency Management Agency that are similar to the ones used in World War II. The government has passed a law called Martial law where they can impose the law for a temporary period to maintain order, security, and power to the central government (APFN). The Martial Law will make the highest-ranking military officer to be above the judicial branch, executive branch, and legislative branch where he is in complete control over the citizens of United States. He will place U.S citizen in the FEMA Camps where they are forced to live inside the camp for an unknown period of time. There are enough evidences to support that the United States of America are making concentration camps. The FEMA camps are facilities funded by the U.S government. There are over 600 FEMA camps in United States that are unmarked, but they have been discovered by the citizens who live around the area (Freedom Files). They are all staffed and even surrounded by full-time guards, and they have start relocating people to these facilities. The government has been secretly funding these camps since April 1, 1979 by President Carter (Global Research). This all start in Columbia City, Indiana, when they anonymously approved the plan, creating special patrol units where homeless people have the option to go to jail, or live inside a FEMA camp (Beforeitsnew). The largest FEMA camp is in Fairbanks, Alaska, where has the capacity to hold over two million people (Info Bomber). The government has allowed this FEMA camps ... ... middle of paper ... ...e Orders. Friends of Liberty, 2012. Web. 24 May 2014. "Humans Are Free." FEMA Camp Round Up Has Begun: The Homeless First!Ed. Control Articles. Beforeitsnews, 8 Oct. 2013. Web. 24 May 2014. Moniter, Geopolitical. "US FEMA Camps." Global Research. Global Research, 20 Sept. 2007. Web. 24 May 2014. Owner, Website. "FEMA Concentration and Internment Camps." FEMA Concentration and Internment Camps. Freedom Files, 5 June 2012. Web. 23 May 2014. Owner, Website. "U.S. Concentration Camps - FEMA and The Rex84 Program."U.S. Concentration Camps - FEMA and The Rex84 Program. AlienExistence, n.d. Web. 24 May 2014. Spytfyre. "Citizens Guide to FEMA Camps." Citizens Guide to FEMA Camps. Info Bomber, 7 May 2009. Web. 24 May 2014 Vardon, Ken. "Read the Chilling Proposition from Teper Et." AMERICAN CONCENTRATION CAMPS. APFN, 5 Feb. 2014. Web. 24 May 2014. Works Cited
On February 19, 1942, Franklin Delano Roosevelt issued the infamous Executive Order 9066, which resulted in the internment of 110,000 Japanese Aliens and Japanese Americans in concentration camps because of the so-called "military threat," they posed. In 1945, poet Lawson Fusao Inada wrote the following poem, titled "Concentration Constellation," which refers to the various relocation camps that were used to contain these people: In this earthly configuration. We have, not points of light. but prominent barbs of dark.
Royer, Jordan. “Hurricane Sandy and the importance of being FEMA”, Crosscut.com, Crosscut.com, Web. 1 Nov 2012, 3 May 2014.
Shields, Jacqueline. "Concentration Camps: The Sonderkommando ." 2014. Jewish Virtual Library. 20 March 2014 .
World War II was a grave event in the twentieth century that affected millions. Two main concepts World War II is remembered for are the concentration camps and the marches. These marches and camps were deadly to many yet powerful to others. However, to most citizens near camps or marches, they were insignificant and often ignored. In The Book Thief, author Markus Zusak introduces marches and camps similar to Dachau to demonstrate how citizens of nearby communities were oblivious to the suffering in those camps during the Holocaust.
Prisoners and concentration camps A. The Gestapo and the Thought Police B. Disappearance and re-education of people C. Concentration and extermination camps
Following the beginning of the Second World War, Adolf Hitler’s Nazi Germany and Joseph Stalin’s Soviet Union would start what would become two of the worst genocides in world history. These totalitarian governments would “welcome” people all across Europe into a new domain. A domain in which they would learn, in the utmost tragic manner, the astonishing capabilities that mankind possesses. Nazis and Soviets gradually acquired the ability to wipe millions of people from the face of the Earth. Throughout the war they would continue to kill millions of people, from both their home country and Europe. This was an effort to rid the Earth of people seen as unfit to live in their ideal society. These atrocities often went unacknowledged and forgotten by the rest of the world, leaving little hope for those who suffered. Yet optimism was not completely dead in the hearts of the few and the strong. Reading Man is Wolf to Man: Surviving the Gulag by Janusz Bardach and Survival in Auschwitz by Primo Levi help one capture this vivid sense of resistance toward the brutality of the German concentration and Soviet work camps. Both Bardach and Levi provide a commendable account of their long nightmarish experience including the impact it had on their lives and the lives of others. The willingness to survive was what drove these two men to achieve their goals and prevent their oppressors from achieving theirs. Even after surviving the camps, their mission continued on in hopes of spreading their story and preventing any future occurrence of such tragic events. “To have endurance to survive what left millions dead and millions more shattered in spirit is heroic enough. To gather the strength from that experience for a life devoted to caring for oth...
"Who Is Homeless?" Nationalhomeless. National Coalition for the Homeless, July 2009. Web. 3 May 2014. .
The internment camps were permanent detention camps that held internees from March, 1942 until their closing in 1945 and 1946. Although the camps held captive people of many different origins, the majority of the prisoners were Japanese-Americans. There were ten different relocation centers located across the United States during the war. These Japanese Americans, half of whom were children, were incarcerated for up to 4 years, without due process of law or any factual basis, in bleak, remote camps surrounded by barbed wire and armed guards.
In human history, the most famous prison camp is the Auschwitz concentration camp where millions of human beings spent the last of their days. The most notorious group from Auschwitz being the Jews who lost the greatest number of its people and also the most remembered from the concentration camp. A prison camp is defined as “a camp for the confinement of war or political prisoners” (“Prison camps,” Dictionary.com). Prison camps found in the Democratic People’s Republic of North Korea (DPNK) have been found to treat its prisoners little more than beasts. The atrocities done in North Korea are unknown but the severity of the camps have left great scars on the people of North Korea. If left unknown, the prison camps in North Korea can mirror Auschwitz’s mass genocide on millions of people.
Shah, Anup (2005, November 13). Hurricane Katrina. Global Issues. Retrieved from mhtml:file://F:Hurricane Katrina—Global Issues. mht
The Europeans had bad concentration camps. They would barely feed the prisoners, and would work them to the bone. “Before being sent to a camp, a captured prisoner of
A survivor of the Holocaust, named Mr. Greenbaum, tells his experience to visitors of the Holocaust Museum. “Germans herded his family and other local Jews in 1940 to the Starachowice ghetto in his hometown of Poland when he was only 12. Next he was transported to a slave labor camp where he and his sister were moved while the rest of the family was sent to die at Treblinka. By the age of 17 he had been enslaved in five camps in five years, and was on his way to a sixth, when American soldiers freed him in 1945”. Researchers have recorded about 42,500 Nazi ghettos and camps throughout Europe. “We knew before how horrible life in the campus and ghettos was” said Hartmut Bergoff, director of the German Historical Institute, “but the numbers are unbelievable.
Goldhagen, Daniel Jonah. Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust. New York: Vintage, 1997. Print.
Primo Levi: Survival in Auschwitz: The Nazi Assault on Humanity (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996) [first published as If This Is a Man], p. 62.
Suicide and Threatening Behaviors. Suicides in Nazi Concentration Camps? John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 31 Dec. 2010. Web. The Web.