U.S.’s History Of Prison Camps
Greg Reese reports that from the massive round up of Native Americans in the 1830s to detaining Japanese Americans and indigenous Alaskan Aleuts during both world wars, the United States has a long and dark history of prison camps.
Later on, Reese says, the Subversive Activities Control Act of 1950 led to the construction of concentration camps meant to hold American dissidents. And in 1961, the U.S. used the legislation to force 8 million South Vietnamese civilians into the camps to deprive the Viet Cong of any potential support.
Reese says that beginning in the late 1990s, Infowars Alex Jones has released films warning that people are being conditioned to accept seeing their neighbors rounded up and thrown into prison camps, which FEMA has built and maintained for the last 20 years to incarcerate tens of millions of Americans. Could we continue to see this scenario unfold in the chaotic months leading up to the presidential election? Here’s more with Reese.


