Read The Falsification of History: Our Distorted Reality Online
Authors: John Hamer
The officer took his time about reaching over to turn off the engine.
With another sigh, he slowly opened the door and climbed out.
He then proceeded to close the door and stood there with his legs spread astride.
“Lady, do me a favour,” he answered.
“Find yourself a piece of paper and a pencil.
Write down your name and social security number next to the telephone number of your nearest living relative.
Tuck the piece of paper in your pocket so tomorrow, when I find your body, I'll know who to contact.”
“No! No!” I cried out. “You don't understand.
I need to get to a hospital.
I've been badly injured.”
“No! You're the one who doesn't understand,” he hissed back.
With that, he reached over to his holster and took out his gun.
He grabbed me, forcing me up against the side of the car, and proceeded to put the barrel of the gun against my temple.
I heard the hammer cock.
From the position he had pushed me into, I could see directly into the car. The man sitting in the front passenger seat looked away from me immediately, glancing down at the floor.
The two passengers in the back seat turned their heads quickly, staring out the window on the opposite side of the car.
My son and the other survivor watched as the officer had pulled back the hammer on the gun.
So shocked out of their minds by what they were witnessing, neither one could move!
“You don't belong here!” the officer growled, pressing the barrel into the side of my head. “Now you get the hell outta here before I blow away your ass!”
He shoved my face into the car window and then released me. Someone grabbed me from behind and whirled me around so fast, I didn't have time to think!
Before I knew it, I was being thrown over a shoulder.
My rescuer took off running as fast as he could!
I caught a brief glimpse of my son running next to me.
With one gigantic leap, he and the survivor who carried me, dove behind a pile of debris.
All three of us crashed on top of each other in one tangled-up heap.
“I'll shoot your damn asses!” the officer's voice rang out.
When hurricane Andrew slammed into South Dade, the State Attorney of Florida was none other than Janet Reno.
Her office was located at the Dade County Court House in the City of Miami.
The President of the United States was President George H.W. Bush, and the Vice-President was Dan Quayle.
Bill Clinton was running for President, and Al Gore for Vice-President.
Senator Bob Graham held office, and the late Lawton Chiles was Governor of Florida.
His successor turned out to be Jeb Bush, still the Governor of Florida and, ironically enough, the son of former President Bush whose other son, George W. Bush, the then Governor of Texas, has since become the "self-selected" President of the United States...
Curious how the United States Government evacuated Homestead Air Force Base just before hurricane Andrew struck, yet never released the information to the civilians of South Dade.
"This is worse than anything we saw in Saudi," said Master Sgt Lester Richardson (who had spent six months in the Middle East during Operation Desert Storm) one week into the aftermath.
"These people need a miracle" The survivors did need "a miracle", but what we got instead didn't resemble anything near it.
While we remained roped off from the outside world by Metro Dade Police and the military, the news media reported grossly understated information from the first day onward.
On August 24, 1992, the morning hurricane Andrew ended, the Miami Herald broke with:
Andrew Hits Hardest in South Dade.
Five thousand people were left homeless by the storm, Metro Dade Police Director announced.
They'll be moved into shelters in North Dade.
Over subsequent days, the Miami Herald read as follows:
August 25, 1992:
Destruction at Dawn.
Among worst hit in the Country Walk area of South Dade, few homes escaped at least minor damage and many were utterly destroyed.
10 killed in Dade.
August 27, 1992:
The Toll Rises.
22 dead as the search continues.
63,000 homes destroyed.
175,000 homeless.
1 million without power.
August 28, 1992:
WE NEED HELP.
Relief effort collapsing due to United States inaction, Metro charges.
Aid us now or more will die, Feds told.
As Dade County's hurricane relief effort neared collapse Thursday, more than 1,500 airborne US soldiers were ordered into the county to cope with what is now being called the worst natural disaster in United States history.
The move came after a day of bitter sniping among agencies that share responsibility for the relief effort.
United States aid official Wallace Stickler stated:
"Andrew has caused more destruction and affected more people than any disaster America has ever had."
Dade County's Emergency Director pleaded for federal help, one angry voice among many that spoke in dire terms of needs unmet.
Frustrated to the point of tears, Kate Hale said that the relief project was on the brink of collapse, a victim of incompetence and political games:
"Where the hell is the cavalry on this one?
We need food!
We need water!
We need people!
If we do not get more food into the south end [South Dade] in a very short period of time, we are going to have more casualties!
"We have a catastrophic disaster.
We are hours away from more casualties.
We are essentially the walking wounded.
We have appealed through the State to the Federal Government.
We've had a lot of people down here for press conferences but Dade County is on its own.
Dade County is being caught in the middle of something and we are being victimized.
“Quit playing like a bunch of kids and get us aid!
Sort out your political games afterward!”
On the same day Hale made the desperate plea, Miami Herald staff writers Martin Merzer and Tom Fiedler wrote:
“The question echoed through the debris Thursday: If we can do it for Bangladesh, for the Philippines, for the Kurds of northern Iraq, why in God's name can't we deliver basic necessities of life to the ravaged population of our own Gold Coast?”
The short answer: because no single person or agency is in charge.
The result: a planeload of food and equipment is still a rarity.
Instead of delivering goods, helicopter pilots shuttle government officials who just sit idle.
Metro police turn away individuals trying to bring in food or water to a barren South Dade.
On August 29, 1992, six days into the aftermath, the Miami Herald reported:
Problems Plague Red Cross.
The man on the phone wanted to donate 100 electric generators, extension cords and enough tools to build a small subdivision.
But the operator who took his call at the Red Cross Command Centre in Miami had no idea what to do with the offer.
“We get a call, we take a message, we give it to somebody who signs it to somebody else,” said the operator, Melitta de Liefd.
“We have no idea what happens to it.
The whole place is being run by senior citizens and college kids.”
Welcome to Red Cross headquarters - where the brains of Dade County rescue effort have been knocked almost unconscious most of the week.
Callers offering services and supplies are put on hold.
Others can't get through at all.
The hurt and suffering plead for help over ham radio.
On August 29, 1992, one week after hurricane Andrew struck, the Fort Lauderdale Sun Sentinel reported 250,000 people homeless in South Dade.
A NUCLEAR INCIDENT
Of course, the rather ‘insignificant’ incident resulting from Andrew's winds bombarding the Turkey Point Nuclear Power Plant was not aired by the news media either nationally or abroad.
Tom Dubocq reported in the Miami Herald of September 5, 1992:
Demolition crews toppled a 400-foot smokestack at Turkey Point [Nuclear] Power Plant [owned by Florida Power and Light Company], Friday [September 4].
The stack, which had a gaping 200-foot crack, was dropped without a hitch, a Florida Power and Light [FPL] spokesman said.
The other smokestack at the plant will be salvaged. Turkey Point will be shut down for several months while repairs are made.
The cost will exceed $90 million, according to an initial damage report.
When Turkey Point was built in the 1960s, its main structures were designed to withstand 235 mph winds.
Hurricane Andrew was clocked at 164 mph at the plant. FPL officials don't know why the smokestack didn't hold up...
One hundred million dollars’ worth of damage resulted from the nuclear power plant's smokestack having been cracked wide open. The plant is situated approximately 15 miles northeast of where I lived.
How well I recall the leaflets circulated several months before Andrew struck, advising all residents within a "thirty-five mile radius" of Turkey Point nuclear plant to be aware of the potential hazards involved if an event such as a natural disaster or unexpected catastrophe happened.
Such a grim reminder of the Chernobyl tragedy.
Could it be more than coincidence that within 24 hours of hurricane Andrew ending, all 12 survivors in my little group, including our animals, broke out in big, raw, oozing sores which itched and burned at the same time? We suffered horrible headaches which made us so nauseous we had the dry heaves, and our stomachs cramped badly from sudden onsets of diarrhoea.
These symptoms lasted well over three months.
Within a relatively short period of time, each one of our surviving animals died from cancer.
HURRICANE BUREAU'S FAILURE TO WARN
Speaking of coincidence, I often wonder what kind of a coincidence it is that the National Hurricane Bureau is responsible for reporting to the US Department of Commerce - especially considering that during 1992 South Florida did $31 billion worth of trade in tourism.