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Originally posted by TheMindWar
Welcome to the NWO freind.
Originally posted by Wrabbit2000
reply to post by technologicalsingularity
It's the first one conducted across ALL broadcast stations of ALL kinds, across ALL media at the same time and initiated from a single point in the executive branch of the government. It's that focus of power, across ALL of this at once, that is getting everyone's attention. This is a first in U.S. history for centralization of communications, even for emergency broadcast.
Originally posted by Vandalour
Asteroid 2005 YU55 going to crash into our faces or near it..
FEMA test just in case it should crash into face
Originally posted by eywadevotee
It's only a test.... because they are going to start WW-III on 11/11/11 and need to make sure the EAS is working properly... Hope you have balls of steel cause it's going to get ugly.
Originally posted by Druid42
reply to post by Xcellante
You'll just have to calculate the time from your zone. It will be VERY interesting to see ALL cable and television channels (how many thousands of them are there?) showing a test message for thirty seconds on the 9th. Here in the US, we already have EBS, but it's mostly local, you know, for tornadoes and storm warnings. This is to notify the ENTIRE USA of an emergency.....Therefore, it can't just for a weather related warning. Seems to me to be much bigger than that. There are no nationwide natural occurrences, unless, of course, you account for asteroids. Seems to me to be oriented toward an economic collapse, and restoring order/control afterwards. I'm speculating, of course.
Dear Comcast Customer:
On Wednesday, November 9 at 2 p.m. (Eastern Standard Time), FEMA and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) will conduct the nation's first ever Emergency Alert System (EAS) test.
The purpose of this test is to help determine if the national-level system will work as designed, should officials ever need to send a national alert.
This test will last approximately three minutes and will be seen on all local, cable, and satellite TV stations across the country, as well as radio.