Most people are aware that the greatest loss of liberty occurs when one’s own government centralizes power, not when a foreign force invades. This loss happens most frequently during war. After the war, the centralized power is reduced but it never gets back to the original level. This same phenomenon is now occurring with respect to disaster preparedness.
Most responses are being planned by government, and at increasingly higher levels of government. If we want to retain our freedoms I believe that civilians and those not involved in law enforcement must organize and plan, too, so that government does not completely dominate.
My last position in the U.S. Air Force Reserve was as an emergency preparedness liaison officer. I could see even then, some 15 years ago, that emergency response was being taken over by government entities. The pace only quickened after Sept. 11, 2001. Some provisions in laws like the Patriot Act reinforce this trend.
We need to exercise that eternal vigilance that is the price of liberty.
Phoenix
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'Your papers, please' must never be heard in America

By Tom Howell Jr. - The Washington Times
House Republicans who are critical of the federal health care law have written to more than a dozen companies, including top insurers Aetna and BlueCross BlueShield, to ask if President Obama’s top health official tried to solicit funds from them to support the overhaul.