maneuvers in Kent Ohio
fiction
edward w pritchard
August
30, 2013 the US army, navy seals and the marines sealed off the City of
Kent, Ohio at 9AM and didn't allow any of the citizens to move about.
The military made no efforts to be civil or explain, only expediently
going about their duties and goals for the day. Roads were blocked, the
express way was closed and my Grand daughter and I were detained as were
thousands of others. Local police and fire were not notified before
hand and were in fact detained by the military, as was the city manager,
counsel and numerous prominent business leaders and faculty at Kent
State University.
The military personnel were not fat,
polite, comical or helpful. Soldiers were well armed and came from far
away from an unfamiliar part of America, perhaps Idaho. Within moments
the entire city of Kent was occupied and business, commerce and everyday
life was interrupted. Local radio, television and newspaper and
Internet from nearby Akron, Cleveland and other places was blocked and
in a matter of minutes no news or information was allowed into or out of
Kent.
Over two hundred green military buses held
detainees, of which I and my grand daughter were two of many and large
green military helicopters patrolled the air over all of Portage County,
where Kent is located. Individual soldiers wore infectious disease
retarding masks and vests and randomly checked residents for various
viruses.
Human soldiers were assisted by two to three
hundred overhead flying drones of various sizes and various levels of
technological sophistication. Although drones did not fire on any
citizens of Kent they did address miscreants at times with vocal beeps
and assorted warnings sounds to assist human soldiers with crowd
control.
After about an hour, once the point was
properly made the military immediately disappeared, without explanation
or apology and the citizens were able to resume normal movement about
their homeland. Four years later in Congressional hearings on the matter
it was a point of pride with the military that professional soldiers
and drones were able to secure an entire town without one civilian death
and comparison was made to the May 4, 1970 shootings in which a semi
professional home guard [Ohio National Guard] shot and killed four
unarmed students in a campus demonstration.
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
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