www.armstrongeconomics.com
We have certainly embarked down the road of a police state. Federal
agencies are tracking people who travel on trains or in the air. If
someone buys a ticket for cash, they government is notified. They are
looking for the slightest thing. I went to the airport to pick up a
friend who comes over to the States maybe four times a year. I ended up
waiting for nearly 3 hours. They took the person and searched
everything. The agent then handed them to someone else and said “see if
you can find something! I found nothing.” Finally, they escorted them
out to me and then began interrogating me saying that frequent trips set
off a “red flag” and then asked what I did simply because I was there
to pick them up. I am not easily intimidated and can hold my ground. So
they backed off and released them.
I was flying back to the States from Europe over the July 4th
holiday. My ticket was originally booked for JFK in New York. I then
remembered the travel would be horrific so I switched to Philadelphia.
When I landed, I was met by two IRS agents. Apparently there was sting
they set up at JFK looking for American coming home for holidays who do
not pay taxes here. I said you can check I pay my taxes here and do not
live overseas. That was not good enough. They though I was tipped off to
their sting in NYC and sent two agents to intercept me in Philadelphia
simply because I switched planes.
I took the train from Brussels to London after meetings there with
government so I was dressed in a suit and tie. Everyone else on the
train were tourists. I was the only called aside by British customs.
They asked how much money did I have on me. I showed them my US
passport. That was NOT enough. They wanted to see my ticket where I
bought it and how I paid.
When I returned from our Berlin Conference last year, I dressed
casual in jeans. But traveling alone I was again singled out. Again they
wanted to know how much cash I had on me. The hunt for money is getting
really bad. You cannot train on a train in Europe without them looking
for money. In Italy, they confiscated a stack of bonds from a passenger
on the train to Switzerland. A staff member left Switzerland on the
train for a meeting in Lichtenstein which goes through France. The train
was stopped in France and police search bags looking for cash.
In the USA, now even the DEA is searching all travel records
on trains and in the air. They target people who buy one-way tickets or
pay cash for a ticket. We should just legalize drugs and that would end
the crime and the confiscation of citizens. Now everyone is a suspect
for the slightest thing.
沒有留言:
張貼留言