The Register (http://anonym.to?http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/09/23/eu_crime_prediction_project/) 23 September 2009
Euro project to arrest us for what they think we will do
'Positively chilling' says LibertyRadical Think Tank Open Europe has this week exposed a study by the EU that could lead to the creation of a massive cross-Europe database, amassing vast amounts of personal data on every single citizen in the EU.
The scope of this project also reveals a growing governmental preference for systems capable of locking people up not for what they have done, but for what they might do.
Open Europe (OE) researcher, Stephen Booth, has been reviewing projects currently in receipt of EU funding. Last week he identified one of these - Project INDECT - as having potentially far-reaching effects for anyone living or working in Europe. The main objectives of this project, according to its own website, are:
QuoteTo develop a platform for: the registration and exchange of operational data, acquisition of multimedia content, intelligent processing of all information and automatic detection of threats and recognition of abnormal behaviour or violence, to develop the prototype of an integrated, network-centric system supporting the operational activities of police officers.
article continues (http://anonym.to?http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/09/23/eu_crime_prediction_project/)
an eerie similarity to the storyline of arch-Zionist Spielberg's 'Minority Report', only using high-tech networked computers instead of psychics to supply data to the planned EU-wide Precrime police force
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minority_Report_(film (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minority_Report_(film))
These sickos we are fighting take twisted pleasure out of dropping clues to the M.O of their future crimes camouflaged as fiction in novels, TV shows and movies, believing us 'goyim' are too stupid to join the dots;
for example, the zio-world press' fake cover-up story that Muslim hijackers flew the planes on 9-11 obviously taken from movies such as 'Passenger 57' (1992) and 'Executive Decision' (1996)