Coast To Coast AM - Mar 10 2013 National Emergencies C2CAM
Date: 03-10-13
Host: Ian Punnett
Guests: Brian Tuohy
Citing
directly from official US govt. documents, author Brian Tuohy joined
Ian Punnett (Twitter) to divulge how a set of laws and procedures are
waiting to spring into action when a national emergency is declared.
Without congressional approval, the President can issue an "executive
order" to enact a variety of extreme measures, including the rationing
of energy, food and water, the control of the airwaves and
transportation outlets, as well as the possible confiscation of people's
personal vehicles and electromagnetic devices such as cell phones and
computers, he outlined. In the event of such an emergency, citizens can
also be forced to work on projects the government deems necessary, he
continued.
While the US has a number of ongoing national
emergencies already declared, they are mainly related to security
threats from foreign countries such as Iran, Somalia, Syria, and North
Korea, Tuohy explained, adding that the declarations in these cases
basically serve as pretexts for war or military actions that could be
funded without congressional budget constraints, should the need arise.
While the powers of executive orders weren't delineated into the
Constitution, Congress hasn't acted to remove them, and thus there is
kind of a "slippery slope," as to how these powers might be used, he
pointed out.
Tuohy noted that in some cases it makes sense to
have certain executive orders in place-- such as if a foreign country
suddenly pointed a nuclear missile at the US, there wouldn't be time to
call Congress together to make a response. "The irony with it is," he
remarked, "is that many times the Presidents... are going to act outside
of the constitutional bounds to respond to an emergency to supposedly
ensure constitutional government." He also detailed the US' continuity
of government plans-- each individual federal department supposedly has
three different secret relocation sites. Some of these are said to
involve well-stocked massive underground facilities, possibly set up to
hold 2,000 people for up to 6 months to a year, he said, and this has
contributed to the idea of a "shadow government."
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