You Heard It here first (Megiddo followup)

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As I have said before, we have a little radio station near here that gets heard (mostly by computer) all over the country. They sometimes get the news first. I wrote about three weeks ago that David Bresnahan had been on talking about Project Megiddo. At that time he mentioned that right wing people would be picked up and offered a chance to be released if they would have a chip implanted so they could be tracked by satellite. The chip is real and has been used to track American military men going on Black Ops missions. However, it seems unlikely that it will be used at this time in any quantity on civilians. David's articles appeared today in World Net Daily:

Megiddo warns of millenial violence

FBI spy 'fronts' Expert: Megiddo is domestic espionage network run amuck

Once again on the radio tonight David said that this is an attempt to smear all Christians by using linkage. That is, making something benign seem evil by associating it in people's minds with something evil. ie. right-wing militia groups, fundamental Christians, KKK, homeschoolers, Aryan Nations. . . A Denver FBI agent was interviewed on the same radio station a week or so ago. The transcript of that interview can be read at:

http://www.americanewsnet.com/front/front05.htm

David also said that it is very difficult to get a copy of the Megiddo report as passed out to police chiefs (they don't want to cross the FBI) but that it is 8 pages longer than the Web version. It lists a lot of names. A California police chief is on record as saying if he runs across anyone on the list (as in picked up on a minor traffic violation) he will put them in jail until after the first of the year. It looks like something is likely to happen even if all the computers are purring smoothly. I guess that is my point: The computers don't have to fail for things to go bad.

-- Tin(foil) Lizzie (par@noia.asylum), December 10, 1999

Answers

In the interview with the FBI agent, there was a significantly long pause when he was asked if he were a Christian before he answered Yes. It was the only time he wasn't glib in his answers and presentations.

-- Gypsy (GypsiGold@aol.com), December 10, 1999.

Is David Bresnahan the brother of Rush Limbaugh? I believe that he has a brother that work's for WWD.

-- Texas Terri (Deepinthe Heart@Texas.com), December 10, 1999.

God help us.

-- Hokie (nn@va.com), December 10, 1999.

I meant WND not WWD...

-- Texas Terri (DeepintheHeart@Texas.com), December 10, 1999.

Texas, No relation that I know of. David B. lives in Utah.

-- Gypsy (GypsiGold@aol.com), December 10, 1999.


As I have said before, we have a little radio station near here that gets heard (mostly by computer) all over the country. They sometimes get the news first. I wrote about three weeks ago that David Bresnahan had been on talking about Project Megiddo. At that time he mentioned that right wing people would be picked up and offered a chance to be released if they would have a chip implanted so they could be tracked by satellite. The chip is real and has been used to track American military men going on Black Ops missions. However, it seems unlikely that it will be used at this time in any quantity on civilians. David's articles appeared today in World Net Daily:

What radio station are you referring to, and how can I pick it up on RealAudio?

Thanks ActionBill

-- ActionBill (StopNWO@aol.com), December 11, 1999.


Bill, Go to the link given above for the FBI agent's interview. Real audio is in the upper left-hand corner. Or access it from their home page

KHNC



-- Gypsy (GypsiGold@aol.com), December 11, 1999.

I'd really, really seriously question the specific premis of that article about embedded chips......

The rest, I've seen evidence the fundemental assumptions are correct. But the embedded chip part is not justified .... other than to discredit those who see real information in the foundation....which is a known ploy among consiracy zealots and is a well-known spy technique and "disinformation" method...discredit a true rumor by adding patently false information in the actual data.

-- Robert A. Cook, PE (Marietta, GA) (cook.r@csaatl.com), December 12, 1999.


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