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Show Notes: Best Laid Plans of FEMA and the Elites

By The Mighty Humanzee

We get an update from Grammy Pam in North Carolina as we see the abject failure of FEMA which is a far greater disaster.  Plus we’ll see how FOIA’s are off the table for Michigan parents and the latest on election fraud.

Election Fraud With Overseas Ballots?

There are many way that our elections are at risk.  Once a mail-in or absentee ballot is tended and the identity not verified, it is next to impossible to determine a vote cast by a fake voter or a legitimate vote.  And you will note that because these are anonymous they have an excuse for leaving the faux votes in with the remaining legitimate ones.

We have talked about the fact that the registrations are the key.  Once a fake registration is entered into the system, it is easy to pass in a fake vote.  Depending on your state and the condition of your voter rolls, you may have an excess pool of invalid voters who can magically cast a vote.

Overseas Absentee Ballot requests have skyrocketed since 2020.

 

 

Michigan Election Fraud 2024

Some good news first.  SoS Benson lost lawsuit over her instructions to county clerks to include absentee ballots without identifying numerical tabs that tie the ballot to a submitted envelope.

Michigan Parents, Your Kid’s Teacher Has Authority

A parent requested curriculum in Rochester Hills Michigan, and the school system denied Carol Beth Litkouhi’s request.  Now in a bizarre ruling that documents not in the public body of documents are not subject to FOIA, Michigan may have lost the ability to request FOIAs period.

https://www.michigancapitolconfidential.com/news/school-curricula-to-stay-hidden-from-parents-high-court-rules

Michigan Supreme Court denies appeal of parent seeking school documents.  

Michigan parents can’t request some school curricula under public record acts after the Michigan Supreme Court chose not to hear an appeal from a lower court.  In February, the Michigan Court of Appeals ruled in favor of the school district, stating that only records possessed by a public body itself — not its employees — are subject to FOIA. This decision will restrict the information available to taxpayers.

On Sept. 25, the state’s top court denied an appeal filed by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy on behalf of a Rochester parent who requested the curriculum for a class held in the Rochester Public Schools district.

“This isn’t just about a single class in one school district,” said Steve Delie, director of transparency and open government at the Mackinac Center. “The implications of this decision are enormous. It means that records held by local government employees across the state — whether they be teachers, police officers or township workers — are likely exempt from public disclosure, making it much harder for citizens to hold their local governments accountable.”

 

FEMA – Changing the Mission From Disaster Relief to Climate Change Resiliency

FEMA can reject Disaster Recovery Plans if they do not cover climate change measures.

https://www.nrdc.org/stories/fema-gets-real-about-climate-change

In March 2015, however, all that changed. After a three-year campaign by NRDC, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA, announced that states would be required to factor climate change into their hazard-mitigation plans. In order for individual plans to be approved by FEMA—and in order for states to be eligible for federal funding related to pre-disaster mitigation projects—these plans must now also be approved by the state’s highest elected officials. In other words, state governments must begin acknowledging “that future hazards may not follow the same pattern as the disasters the state has experienced in the past,” says Becky Hammer, an attorney with NRDC’s Water program.

Biden White House Shifted Climate Change Emphasis With Executive Order 14008

EO 14008 underscores the Biden Administration’s commitment to addressing climate change as a central element of U.S. foreign policy, national security planning, and domestic policy.  

  • Climate Considerations in Foreign Policy and National Security
  • Government-Wide Approach to the Climate Crisis
  • Federal Government’s Sustainability Efforts
  • Environmental Justice
  • Conservation Efforts – order emphasizes the significance of conservation in tackling the climate crisis. It sets a goal of conserving at least 30% of U.S. lands and waters by 2030

This below link is now blocked.

https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2021/05/24/fact-sheet-biden-administration-invests-1-billion-to-protect-communities-families-and-businesses-before-disaster-strikes/

https://www.fema.gov/about/strategic-plan/goal-1

Disasters impact people and communities differently. Every disaster occurs within a unique context based on a community’s geographic, demographic, political, historical, and cultural characteristics.

https://www.fema.gov/about/strategic-plan/goal-2

Through close collaboration with federal, state, local, tribal, and territory governments, community-based organizations, and the private sector, FEMA will take a people first approach to increase climate literacy, develop tools, and allocate resources informed by future risk estimates to target investments to create a more equitable and resilient nation. The agency will demonstrate its commitment to climate change mitigation strategies within its facilities.

Executive Order 12898 Hinders FEMA Action

https://www.fema.gov/fact-sheet/executive-order-12898-environmental-justice#:~:text=FEMA%20considers%20environmental%20justice%20(EJ,low%2Dincome%20and%20minority%20populations.

FEMA considers environmental justice (EJ) impacts as required by Executive Order 12898. The executive order directs federal agencies to identify and address disproportionately high and adverse human health or environmental effects on low-income and minority populations. Federal agencies must conduct their programs, policies, and activities that may substantially affect human health or the environment to avoid excluding persons or populations or subjecting persons or populations to discrimination because of their race, color, or national origin.

Common FEMA-Funded Project Types that Can Have Environmental Justice Concerns

Table 1 provides examples of common project types funded by FEMA that may trigger environmental justice considerations in project design to minimize, mitigate, or avoid disproportionately high and adverse effects on low income and minority communities. All direct, indirect, and cumulative effects from a proposed project must be considered, including those occurring directly at the project site and those that may be further removed. 

Previous Helene Intel From Pam

Show Notes: Helene and UN Digital Cooperation

Why Are Helicopters Disrupting Private Relief Efforts?

 

A Snapshot of Recovery

Marshall Does It On Its Own

872 citizens, no FEMA

Bat Cave North Carolina

20 Sheriffs for Swannanona 

 

General Flynn’s Assessment of Resource Deployment

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