Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Irene: Evidence of a PSYOP to create an "emergency"

This was a total and abject PSYOP waged by two utilities' officers for their handlers until they were called out.


With thousands on Cape Cod still without power in the wake of Tropical Storm Irene and little information on when the lights will come back on, many residents are feeling left in the dark in more ways than one...

Many residents who spoke to the Times wondered why there were so few, if any, electric utility crews working in their communities.

"It's bizarre," said Christopher Shea, who lives on Route 6A in Brewster where about two-thirds of the town was still without power Monday afternoon...

"I saw a total of one truck," he said about the apparent lack of NStar crews in the area.

Most of the people who called or emailed the Times with concerns about NStar's response said they hadn't seen even one of the company's trucks in their area, despite being without power for almost 24 hours.

"There hasn't been a soul around," said Ralph Parette, 65, of Lake Shore Drive in East Falmouth.

Parette and more than a half dozen of his neighbors who were still without power Monday compared notes after going out during the day, he said, adding that they had seen no NStar crews in the area.

"How much warning do they need?" he said. "We had a week to get ahead of this."

Public safety officials raised similar issues with NStar during Monday's cleanup.

"Damage is very minimal," in Chatham, Police Chief Mark Pawlina said, adding, however, that much of the town is without power.

No NStar line crews had been seen in Chatham Sunday or Monday, he said. Tree-clearing crews for NStar started working in town late Monday morning.

In Brewster the fire department, town hall and water tank were all without power, Fire Chief Robert Moran said.

The water tank is being powered by a generator, he said...

Despite repeated requests, NStar would not provide the Times with more detailed information on how many customers on Cape Cod lost power or how many crews are working in the region. Later in the day, on the NStar website, there was a list of the towns and the number of customers who were still without power.

"We're getting more crews in every day, though it's important to remember there are millions of power outages from North Carolina to Maine as a result of Irene and every available utility crew is at work right now," NStar spokesman Michael Durand wrote in an email to the Times.

The company plans to relocate crews from other parts of its service territory to areas most heavily affected by the storm, Durand wrote.

"Obviously things are taking longer than any of us would like because of the level of damage," he wrote.

You're a government run liar. You received millions in federal grants for meters you lie and say aren't smart meters that I have the manual for and say they are.

You were part of a PSYOP and a certain arrest was the warning to stop it.

Despite Vigue's assurances, several people who spoke with the Times and the newspaper's main office in Hyannis said they were without Comcast service for most of the day Monday despite power having been restored.

On Bridge Road in Orleans Mark Reilly, 40, said he had power back but still no Comcast internet service.

This verifies not only what I wrote yesterday, but what I witnessed first hand at Comcast today.

SPQR

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