| numonex said: http://blog.foreignpolicyjournal.com/2010/09/03/the-phantom-of-terrorism-and-the-rise-of-the-police-state/
"After burning down the German parliament building, the Reichstag and blaming it on “communist terrorists,” Hitler then passed the Enabling Act, which eradicated the German Constitution. Many years later, the Americans passed the USA Patriot Act, an Anti-Terror legislation in response to 9/11 that took away the civil liberties of the American people. As Hitler had argued the necessity of creating the Gestapo, the elite at the top of the pyramid justified its actions by virtually the same rhetoric: “An evil exists that threatens every man, woman and child of this great nation. We must take steps to ensure our domestic security and protect our homeland.” Whether George W. Bush borrowed from Adolf Hitler or not is of little significance. The use of the same phrase signifies something deeper than simple plagiarism; it means that both men operated on similar principles....
...Nicholas Rockefeller, revealed the real plan behind the war on terror: “By having this war on terror, you can never win it … so you can always keep on taking people’s liberties away. The media can convince everybody that it’s real.” Mr. Rockefeller’s ultimate goal is “to get everybody in this world chipped with an RFID chip.” The chip, an essential element of control, will allow the manipulators to identify and eliminate potential opposition to their unlimited power over the world. The “fear campaign” will make the act of chipping seem necessary, thus enabling a voluntary mass chipping of the population. “The last thing the power establishment wants is a conscious, informed public, capable of critical thinking.” Useful methods of preventing this are mass entertainment, drugs, alcohol, and above all, declining educational standards. The elite does not want the public to question, to demand accountability, to think." |
*sigh* Godwin's Law.
The Nazis dragged people from their homes and killed them. They banned all opposing political parties. In the end, they destroyed democracy itself. There was a huge fear of the SS and the Gestapo in every man, woman and child. People would turn their best friends in because they thought the Gestapo would get them anyway. It was illegal to oppose the Nazi Party in any way.
Now can you please explain to me the relation between that and having your baggage and shoes checked at an airport.







