Obama armed the bureaucracy to deter
US citizens from dethroning him.
The Enemy is Us, By Peter Gemma,
American Thinker, 8/24/16, Attached hereto is a PDF of the report by American
Transparency which is cited in the 3rd paragraph of this article. The Enemy Is
Us
Your government is on red alert: between 2006 and 2014, the
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS), an agency of the Department
of Agriculture, spent nearly $4.8 million to purchase shotguns, propane
cannons, liquid explosives, pyro supplies, drones, thermal imaging cameras, and
more. APHIS describes itself as “a multi-faceted Agency with a broad mission
area that includes protecting and promoting U.S. agricultural health,
administering the Animal Welfare Act, and carrying out wildlife damage
management activities.” Liquid explosives and shotguns are apparently necessary
to carry out its “broad mission”. This is one of many revelations found in
a new investigative report titled “The Militarization of America:
Non-Military Federal Agencies Purchases of Guns, Ammo, and Military-style
Equipment” published by American Transparency, a nonpartisan watchdog group.
Former U.S. Senator Tom Coburn (R-OK), chairman of the
organization, points out that, “In the nine years until 2014, we found 67
agencies unaffiliated with the Defense Department bought $1.48 billion in weapons and ammunition.
Of this total, $335.1 million was spent by agencies
traditionally viewed as regulatory or administrative, such as the Smithsonian
Institution and the US Mint.”
The Department of Veterans Affairs -- which is responsible
for a number of fatalities due to medical care incompetence -has acquired
nearly $11.7 million in defensive weaponry.
The report also notes that, “The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) spent $3.1 million on guns, ammunition, and military-style
equipment. The EPA has spent $715 million on its ‘Criminal Enforcement
Division’ from FY2005 to present even as the agency has come under fire for
failing to perform its basic functions.”
Military supplies have reinforced the basic functions of the
Bureau of Public Debt in the amount of $2,792,060; the Energy Department
amassed an armory worth $15,625,114 for its dangerous work; and the Office
of Policy, Budget, and Administration strengthened its mission with $25,849,568
in firearms and military gear.
The report makes for scary reading: from 2006-2014, the
Internal Revenue Service, with its 2,316 special agents, secured over $85,000
worth of guns, ammunition, and military supplies every single month -- for 108
months straight -- accumulating an armory worth more than $11 million.
Regulatory and administrative federal agencies that have
firearm-and-arrest authority include the Small Business Administration, Social
Security Administration, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
Department of Education, and the National Institute of Standards and
Technology. The National Institute of Standards and Technology can arrest me --
at gunpoint?
Transferring unused military equipment to local governments
and federal agencies began in 1997, when Congress established something
innocuously termed the “1033 Program.” Essentially it is a shopping service,
with lists of military accouterments. Since 9/11, business has been very good.
According to a September 14, 2012 USA
Today story, “Roughly 12,000 police organizations are able to procure
excess military merchandise – firearms, computers, helicopters, and hundreds of
other products.
In fiscal 2011, they acquired nearly $500 million worth of
items.” Not to be outclassed, the Department of Homeland Security awarded
more than $2.2 billion in grants to local police in 2014-15:
Military aid to Barry County, Michigan, population 59,173,
includes 30 assault rifles, five grenade launchers, four armored vehicles, and
a mine-resistant truck.
For its protection, Granite City, Illinois, population
29,375, needs 25 M16 and M14 rifles, a military-armored truck, and a robot for
explosive ordinance disposal.
Rising Star, Texas has a population of 835 and one full-time
policeman. From 2002-2011, there were no reported murders and the town recorded
eight assaults. Rising Star stockpiled $3.2 million in munitions over a
14-month period.
On a positive note, the Los Angeles Unified School District
announced that it would return the three grenade launchers it had required from
the Defense Department -- but keep its armored personnel carrier and 61 assault
rifles, thank you.
American Transparency’s report observes, “One could argue
the federal government itself has become a gun show that never adjourns with
dozens of agencies continually shopping for new firearms.” Gas masks, bayonets,
truncheons, and armored trucks complete with rotating turrets are heady stuff
for rank-and-file cops.
Police look and act like combat-ready troops ready to
suppress and control. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) released
a study in 2014 (“War Comes Home: the Excessive Militarization of
American Policing”) that describes the impact of military subsidies and
training on local law enforcement:
“Our analysis shows that the militarization of American
policing is evident in the training that police officers receive, which
encourages them to adapt a ‘warrior’ mentality and think of the people they are
supposed to serve as enemies, as well as in the equipment they use, such as
battering rams, flash-bang grenades, and armored personnel carriers.” The ACLU
report states, “American policing has become unnecessarily and dangerously
militarized, in large part through federal programs that have armed state and
local law enforcement agencies with the weapons and tactics of war, with almost
no public discussion or oversight.
”In creating an Executive Order prohibiting the transfer of
some military items to local police departments starting in 2016, President
Obama said “We’ve seen how militarized gear can sometimes get people the
feeling like there’s an occupying force – as opposed to a force that’s part of
the community that’s protecting them and serving them.”
Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) agrees: “When you couple this
militarization of law enforcement within erosion of civil liberties and due
process that allows the police to become judge and jury -- no knock searches,
broad general warrants, pre-conviction forfeiture -- we begin to have a very
serious problem on our hands.” In a police state, the police become an
army and an army needs an enemy.
The Feds think they have met the enemy and they’re
convincing local police departments the enemy is us. Correction made: The 1033
Program was established by Congress, not the Defense Department.
Peter Gemma is a freelance writer whose articles have
appeared in TheDailyCaller.com, the Washington Examiner, and Military
History. Articles: The Enemy Is Us
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