Source: DAVID HAWKINS blogs.telegraph.co.uk
In 2004, investors in the Sohonet 'special effects' community, hired Franny Arnstrong to prepare the Hurricane Pam simulation for 'The Age of Stupid' and embed saboteurs in the construction teams building the New Orleans levees and the local media.
Sohonet investors with City & Guilds livery companies, especially the Worshipful Company of Insurers ordered Armstrong to set up a parametric catastrophe bond, modeled with a Hurricane Pam 'Monte Carlo' simulation, to be triggered by a flood zone deeper than 10' in the low lying parishes of NO.
Armstrong's camera crews were deployed to backhaul content for Sohonet's Age of Stupid and record the effects of the UNDEX sabotage after Hurricane Katrina had passed 80 miles to the east on New Orleans and 23 hours before the levees were blown.
Armstrong's saboteurs used the Sohonet special-effects community network of C4ISR technologies to blow the levees in four different places and later achieved the 10' flood cat-bond trigger by driving an unmoored Lafarge barge through the walls of the Industrial Canal.
Great footage eh?
Based on the Pam simulation, the Sohonet investors planned to drown 60,000 people by paralyzing the NO transportation system; they failed to establish a real killing field but they did get a 10' flood to trigger the catastrophe bond and enrich the sponsors in the Worshipful Company of Insurers.
Fabian Solutions has bailed; he knows we have established a position inside the Armstrong and Sohonet's OODA (Google) loop and their murder-for-hire snuff film operation.
"The "Hurricane Pam" simulation, the week-long exercise outsourced to FEMA contractors in July 2004, "brought sustained winds of 120 mph, up to 20 inches of rain in parts of southeast Louisiana and storm surge that topped levees in the New Orleans area. More than one million residents evacuated and Hurricane Pam destroyed 500,000-600,000 buildings." "Pam's mock damage, spread over 13 Louisiana parishes, was extensive. Phone and sewer services were knocked out, chemical plants flooded. About 200 miles of road lay under at least 10 feet of water. About 175,000 people were injured, 200,000 became sick, and more than 60,000 were killed ... About 1,000 shelters would be needed for evacuees. The shelters would need to stay open 100 days, but state resources could only keep them stocked for five days at most. ... With many residents stranded by floodwaters, boats would be needed for about 20,000 rescues. Helicopters would be needed for 1,000 more rescues." And a "catastrophic flood ... would leave swaths of southeast Louisiana uninhabitable for more than a year." The last "Hurricane Pam" training exercise was completed August 24, 2005, less than a week before Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast, Penny Brown Roberts reported September 12, 2005, in The Advocate. "'It's eerie how close it is,'" said Madhu Beriwal, founder, president, and CEO of Innovative Emergency Management Inc., comparing "Hurricane Pam" to Hurricane Katrina. IEM "led a team of three firms"--URS Group, Inc. and Dewberry--"that created the simulation, working under contract for the Federal Emergency Management Agency."
Perhaps we should invoke the martial law prescription; if these people are caught breathing pr preaching out of their 'Age of Stupid' uniforms, then (a) a military tribunal and (b) a firing squad.
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