- A prisoner in an internment camp has smuggled a small camera into the camp, and vlogs how her life is impacted by martial law, and being held against her will.
- The year is 2012, and in an internment camp, a small camera is found that contains video of a former camp resident. The video clips are presented to chronicle one prisoner's experience in the internment camps during United States Martial Law. The RFID protests included citizens who refused the ID chip who for them, was their only act of protest. Once resisters were rounded up and sent to camps, there, they were to be chipped and sent home. It didn't always turn out that way. A prisoner in an internment camp has smuggled a small camera into the camp, and logs how her life is impacted by martial law, and being held against her will.—Anonymous
- On July 20, 2011, the United States Senate passed the United States Personal Identification Act. This act, signed into law by the president, became effective June 1, 2012. Its primary mandate was to insert RFID chips into all legal citizens of the United States of America, to assist with immigration problems.
Numerous groups and individuals protested this law, either by demonstrating, or by not getting chipped by the effective date. The FBI advised that the level of civil unrest was uncontrollable, and that martial law should be put into effect.
Martial Law in the US lasted from November 30, 2012 until the coup on November 5, 2013.
It is estimated that over 1.5 million Americans, resisting the RFID chip implant, were imprisoned in various prison camps. After the camps were evacuated across the US, a small camera was found at one of them.
In the interest of disclosure, we present these clips from that small camera. They tell one story of internment during that disastrous time.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content