*No We Don't Want Drones Flying Over America*

chesswarsnow

"SASQUATCH IS WATCHING"
Dec 9, 2007
10,551
3,872
295
Fort Worth, Texas
Sorry bout that,


1. Fuck No!!!!!
2. Unless there are riots, or some stupid islamic uprising!
3. Otherwise, No we don't want drones flying over USA airspace!
4. This is just stupid!
5. Do I want the Feds poking their fingers up my ass searching me colon, before I step on a plane, Hell No!!!:badgrin:
LINK:» Almost Half Of All Americans Support Domestic Surveillance Drones Alex Jones' Infowars: There's a war on for your mind!


"Close to half of Americans say they are in favour of police departments deploying surveillance drones domestically.

According to a survey conducted by The Associated Press and The National Constitution Center, 44 percent support the idea of police using unmanned aerial vehicles to track suspects and carry out investigations.

Only 36 percent said that they “strongly oppose” or “somewhat oppose” police use of drones, according to the survey.

The poll also found that only one third of Americans say they are significantly concerned about their privacy being eroded by the adoption of drones by police forces throughout the country.

Thrity-five percent of respondents said they were “extremely concerned” or “very concerned” when asked if they believed that police departments’ use of drones for surveillance would impact their privacy.

Almost exactly the same number, 36 percent, noted that they were “not too concerned” or “not concerned at all”, while twenty-four percent were neutral on the issue, saying they were only “somewhat concerned” about a potential loss of privacy."


Regards,
SirJamesofTexas
 
Spreading drone technology threatens new arms race...
:eek:
A dangerous new world of drones
Mon October 1, 2012 - A decade ago, the United States had a virtual monopoly on drones.
Not anymore. According to data compiled by the New America Foundation, more than 70 countries now own some type of drone, though just a small number of those nations possess armed drone aircraft. The explosion in drone technology promises to change the way nations conduct war and threatens to begin a new arms race as governments scramble to counterbalance their adversaries. Late last month, China announced that it would use surveillance drones to monitor a group of uninhabited islands in the South China Sea that are controlled by Japan but claimed by China and Taiwan.

In August 2010, Iran unveiled what it claimed was its first armed drone. And on Tuesday, the country's military chief, Gen. Amir Ali Hajizadeh, disclosed details of a new long-range drone that he said can fly 2,000 kilometers (1,250 miles), which puts Tel Aviv easily in range. But without an international framework governing the use of drone attacks, the United States is setting a dangerous precedent for other nations with its aggressive and secretive drone programs in Pakistan and Yemen, which are aimed at suspected members of al Qaeda and their allies.

Just as the U.S. government justifies its drone strikes with the argument that it is at war with al Qaeda and its affiliates, one could imagine that India in the not too distant future might launch such attacks against suspected terrorists in Kashmir, or China might strike Uighur separatists in western China, or Iran might attack Baluchi nationalists along its border with Pakistan. This moment may almost be here. China took the United States by surprise in November 2010 at the Zhuhai Air Show, where it unveiled 25 drone models, some of which were outfitted with the capability to fire missiles. It remains unclear just how many of China's drones are operational and how many of them are still in development, but China is intent on catching up with the United States' rapidly expanding drone arsenal.

When President George W. Bush declared a "War on Terror" 11 years ago, the Pentagon had fewer than 50 drones. Now, it has around 7,500. As Bush embarked on that war, the United States had never used armed drones in combat. The first U.S. armed drone attack, which appears to be the first such strike ever, took place in mid-November 2001 and killed the military commander of al Qaeda, Mohammed Atef, in Afghanistan. Since then, the CIA has used drones equipped with bombs and missiles hundreds of times to target suspected militants in Pakistan and Yemen.

More A dangerous new world of drones - CNN.com
 
I got no problem with drones taking out right-wing and left-wing extremists groups.

Take out their gun stashes.

Take out the KKK and Anarchists.

Take our country back from the crazy fringes.
 
Hazlnt you know you're on the list right? First the Gov't takes out unpopular Minority groups then it moves to the Majority.

That's how it's always been done throughout History.
 
Drones are probably the most potent method for Obama to ensure domestic tranquility after this election as well as ensure that he hears not a single discouraging word as he travels the highways and byways of his newly created fiefdom coast to coast, basking in the adoration and adulation on the East from folks like "Pinch" Sulzberger, Elizabeth Warren, Deval Patrick, Michael Bloomberg, and Maureen Dowd and on the West from people like Steven Spielberg, Jeffrey Katzenbaum, Tom Hanks and Jerry Brown. If you're a conservative and have a tunnel from your place of residence to a defillade far removed from where the drones are orbiting you might have a few extra days left on this rock after the election.
I can just imagine an Obama version of the "Night Of The Long Knives" with 'Bam on the telly giving a mandatory listening for all nationwide speech, from the teleprompter of course, urging all Americans to put their angers, hatreds, and divisions of the past few weeks down and come together in unity for the good of the country after the election while the nightime skies outside people's home are red from the fires and explosions of Hellfire missiles released by drones targeting the homes of Obama's most prolific and vocal opponents during the elections. Mitt Romney's home, like Robert E Lee's Virginia estate, will become the final resting place of honor for the victims of the 9/12 Benghazi Embassy massacre, resting alongside the body of the martyred Osama bin Laden, of course.
 
Drones are probably the most potent method for Obama to ensure domestic tranquility after this election as well as ensure that he hears not a single discouraging word as he travels the highways and byways of his newly created fiefdom coast to coast, basking in the adoration and adulation on the East from folks like "Pinch" Sulzberger, Elizabeth Warren, Deval Patrick, Michael Bloomberg, and Maureen Dowd and on the West from people like Steven Spielberg, Jeffrey Katzenbaum, Tom Hanks and Jerry Brown. If you're a conservative and have a tunnel from your place of residence to a defillade far removed from where the drones are orbiting you might have a few extra days left on this rock after the election.
I can just imagine an Obama version of the "Night Of The Long Knives" with 'Bam on the telly giving a mandatory listening for all nationwide speech, from the teleprompter of course, urging all Americans to put their angers, hatreds, and divisions of the past few weeks down and come together in unity for the good of the country after the election while the nightime skies outside people's home are red from the fires and explosions of Hellfire missiles released by drones targeting the homes of Obama's most prolific and vocal opponents during the elections. Mitt Romney's home, like Robert E Lee's Virginia estate, will become the final resting place of honor for the victims of the 9/12 Benghazi Embassy massacre, resting alongside the body of the martyred Osama bin Laden, of course.

Now just take the nice pretty little pills that the nice nurse has for you, and toddle off to your padded room.
 

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