when my knight would quest, we would camp a lot, but would never punt on the cam a lot near camelot. camping is fun and it is interesting to learn about camps, and share what i learn using my quill. my knight tells me not to forget about sword practice today, but he agrees this is a good thing to learn about.
i have learned we like to put people we are afraid of in camps.
let me share a little bit about camps:
past
future
dr nass reminded me this morning of a future camp but first i want to share about some past camps.
past camps
franklin delano roosevelt was a president of the united states during world war ii.
some people call him by his initials, fdr.
he made an executive order*, number 9066, on february 19, 1942 because he and other americans were afraid of some of their fellow citizens.
here is a song about that by kishi bashi.
(*) i’ve learned the united states has a constitution that defines and restrains the three branches of its federal government. the president, in charge of one branch, can order the people that work in his branch, subject to the aforementioned restraints. i guess americans forgot about those restraints at that time, but some americans remember.
the description below the video says this:
Get on LP/CD/Digital: http://joyfulnoi.se/omoiyari "F Delano" by Kishi Bashi from the album 'Omoiyari' on Joyful Noise Recordings. Cover photo: carved and painted scrap-wood bird pins by artists Himeo Fukuhara and Kazuko Matsumoto reprinted from - “The Art of Gaman: Arts and Crafts from the Japanese American Internment Camps 1942-1946,” (2004, Ten Speed Press) with the permission of author Delphine Hirasuna, designer Kit Hinrichs, and photographer Terry Heffernan.
there were ten camps.
our government called them relocation centers.
here is a link from king arthur’s book of knowledge:
if you want to read the words of mr f delano’s executive order, the national archives preserves them for you. this link goes to the transcript part of the web page, and you can scroll up to read what your government says about it:
https://www.archives.gov/milestone-documents/executive-order-9066#transcript
citation: Executive Order 9066, February 19, 1942; General Records of the Unites States Government; Record Group 11; National Archives.
my knight and i once quested to colorado where we learned of this camp, one of the ten:
camping was nice in colorado, but i do not think the americans who were forced to camp in amache liked it very much.
future camps
our government during covid times liked to forget about its restraints. it did so many times and in many ways.
one very big way was planned out by the cdc. the cdc described their plan in a document on their web site. just because the document was taken down does not mean that they will not bring it back for the next time.
they would like to make camps again because they and some americans again are afraid of some citizens.
this time instead of putting japanese in camps they would put unvaccinated people in camps. they say unvaccinated, but that is not accurate. what they mean is people who chose not to be jabbed by an experimental injectable biologic that turns out was and is neither safe nor effective. at least that is what i have learned.
dr meryl nass reminded me this morning about this plan in her post here, where she provides jeffrey tucker’s essay from brownstone. thank you dr nass.
it is short.
i found it interesting reading. i think you will too.
it is time to put down my quill for some sword practice.
good wishes to all!
An timely reminder that our " betters" can always find an excuse to lock us away for " the public trust ". 🤬