posted on Dec, 8 2003 @ 10:37 PM
On the point of fences pointing inwards,
I work for a popular supermarket here in britain at on of its many warehouses. It has fences pointing inwards. the warehouse next to this is the same.
a Few Yards down the road is mistibushi electronics, its a office building it too has fences pointing inwards. To assume that every place that has
fences pointing inwards is a concentration camp, is stupid.
How to spot a "Concentration camp".
1. Guardtowers, tall structures with emplacements for weapons such as machine guns. A stadium would not make a very good camp as there is no where to
cover prisoners with weapons to stop possible escape attempts.
2. Moats, deep moats, not nessacerily filled with water but with sides steep enough not to be able to climb out of. (also Barbwire/razorwire on the
otherside of the moat)
3. Double Fencing, single fencing is easy to get thru with a pair of wire clippers, double fencing takes longer, thus giving guards time to capture
the subject.
4. Armed Guards and/or with dogs, this explains itself. Dogs being used to track the scent of any escapee, or alert the handler to some neferious
activity.
5. Main gate followed by a secondry gate. double gates work well, while one is closed the other opens, makes it more difficult for someone to "run
the gauntlet".
6.Huts with door shutters and window shutters, bars.
7. A barracks or guardroom for the guards.
8.Solitary confinement rooms.
9.Garage for transport of prisoners.
10.Railway sidings, with boxcars.
If you find all of these at a site you can safely say that this is a Con Camp, it could also be a prisoner of war camp. Such a place with one or more
of these things missing, does not make a very good camp even if it is guarded by armed personnel, when people are couped up the first thing they think
of is escape and you can be guranteed theres someone intelligent enough to find a way out.