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Welcome to Call to Decision
Subject: NWOdor at your door!
Date: Thu, 26 Apr 2007 10:41:05 -0400
Read the below WALMART article after my rant!
The beast system is coming on like a freight train.
Yesterday, I talked to a very good friend of mine,
Canadian-George
Bothwell. He was a featured speaker at the first seminar I did
titled "They Preached Liberty". He has been fighting
the Canadian
Biometric Driver's License for 10 years and has lost in their
kangaroo court system after spending 6 figures income. He
recently
finalized a business deal with a very reputable European
company
involving a $125,000 sale from his farm produce. Turns out,
after
more than a month of bank transfer delays, he will not be able
to
receive payment because he refuses to take the biometric mark
of the
beast.
For anyone who thinks this isn't coming to your life if you
resist,
think again. Many banks are already refusing to do any
business with
customers that they have had for over 20 years if they cannot
produce the ACCEPTED BIOMETRIC M.O.T.B. DRIVER'S LICENSE.
Remember a
license is permission to do what would otherwise be illegal.
As George says, the banking MONEY CHANGERS are the prime mover
and
Christ had to throw the MONEY CHANGERS OUT OF THE TEMPLE.
Nothing
new under the sun, is there?
Incidentally, George came to defend me at a BOE meeting as he
heard
about my battle in Canada. Basil Legg wasn't able to make me
chose
as to whether my battle was political or religious in my
firing
hearing, much to his chagrin. The NWOdor is both a physical
and
spiritual battle. Souls more than lives, hang in the balance.
Whom do you serve unto death?
As Goldwater titled his NWOdor revealing book, "With No
Apologies!"
Phil
By MARCUS KABEL
BENTONVILLE, Ark.
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. has been recruiting former military and
government intelligence officers for a branch of its global
security
office aimed at identifying threats to the world's largest
retailer,
including from "suspect individuals and groups".
Wal-Mart's interest in intelligence operatives comes at a time
when
the retailer is defending itself against allegations by a
fired
security employee that it ran surveillance operations against
targets including critics, dissident shareholders, employees
and
suppliers. Wal-Mart has denied any wrongdoing.
Wal-Mart posted ads in March on its own web site and sites for
security professionals, including the bulletin of the
Association of
Former Intelligence Officers, for "global threat
analysts" with a
background in government or military intelligence work.
The jobs were listed with the Analytical Research Center, part
of
Wal-Mart's Global Security division, which is headed by former
senior CIA and FBI senior officer Kenneth Senser. The
analytical
unit was created over the past year and half, according to
published
comments by its head, Army Special Operations veteran David
Harrison.
The job description includes collecting information from
"professional contacts" and public data to
anticipate and assess
threats stemming from "world events, regional/national
security
climates, and suspect individuals and groups."
"Familiarity with a broad spectrum of information
resources and
data-mining techniques" is listed among the skills
sought, along
with a foreign language, preferably Chinese or Spanish.
A Wal-Mart spokesman declined to comment on the Analytical
Research
Center for this story or to make any security executives
available
for interviews.
Many corporations hire law enforcement officers for their
security
departments.
But Steven Aftergood, who runs the government secrecy project
for
the Washington-based Federation of American Scientists, said
Wal-Mart's efforts appear to go beyond what most companies are
doing, raising questions about corporate intelligence work
outside
of the oversight process in place for government spying.
"It's a troubling new departure in corporate security.
We're not
just talking about security, we're talking about intelligence
operations," Aftergood said.
Harrison told a meeting of security professionals last year
that
Wal-Mart was learning to defend itself by using the vast
information
it routinely collects about its employees, shoppers and
suppliers.
The only public comment to date on the work of the Analystical
Research Center, the speech was reported on by the trade
magazine
Government Security News. Wal-Mart did not dispute the report
when
contacted by The Associated Press this week.
Harrison told the meeting that Wal-Mart tracks customers
including
those who use its pharmacies, buy propane tanks and anyone
making
"bulk purchases" of prepaid cell phones, which some
law enforcement
officials have tied in the past to terrorist or criminal
activities.
Harrison did not elaborate on how that information could be
better
used, except to say the data could be shared with law
enforcement.
Wal-Mart's union-backed critics said culling customer data for
intelligence was disturbing.
"The idea that Wal-Mart is creating its own personal CIA
should make
every American -- Wal-Mart customer or not -- nervous about
whether
Wal-Mart is invading their privacy or could do so in the
future,"
said Chris Kofinis, spokesman for WakeUpWalMart dot com.
_________________________________________________________________
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