The purpose of Poetslife is to promote the art and discipline of American Tactical Civil Defense for families and small businesses and to contribute practical American civil defense preparedness guidance for all Americans through my articles in the The American Civil Defense Association (TACDA.ORG) Journal of Civil Defense and leadership as the volunteer Vice President of TACDA.

1/06/2020

Screaming Eagle Jack Womer and Navy SEAL Matt Shipley on Memorial Day 2012

Among the great things about living in Carroll County MD is the 145th Consecutive Memorial Day Observance (possibly the oldest in the Good Ol' U, S, of A) in May 26, 27, and 28 of 2012.
It is a spectacular three-day patriotic celebration of the wonder of men and women who have given their lives for this great nation, and the families that raised them and bore the burden of living long past their young deaths.
One event among many held is the WWII reenactors display. 
There, I had the honor of meeting Jack Wormer who just released his book (co-author Stephen C. DeVito) called, "Fighting with the Filthy Thirteen: The World War II Story of Jack Womer - Ranger and Paratrooper."It was an honor to meet Jack and his daughter Ellen. They will go to Normandy for the first time next week, and for Jack that means the first time since WWII.  According to Ellen, Jack will be awarded the "French Senate Medal in Angouville. I can only guess at what that must mean for him.
Jack (seen here at 95) was a member of both the 29th Ranger Battalion and the 101st Airborne's Screaming Eagles. He parachuted behind German lines on D-Day, fought to Bastogne, and rolled up the Wehrmacht as part of the Screaming Eagles. 
I won't ruin your good read by saying any more. This is a gritty, closeup story of how fierce the fighting was in that massive war.He was honored at the Memorial Day Service and heard a deeply moving speech by Matt Shipley, a Navy Seal (bio below).
The photo of them side by side is remarkable when you consider that Jack survived fighting behind the German lines and Matt survived the latest phase of the eternal battle. He's squared away...and then some. Read on. [When Jack saw all Matt's medals he quipped: "He better not fall down! He won't be able to get back up from the weight of all those medals!]"CDR Matthew W. Shipley, a 1984 Westminster High School graduate, also graduated from Navy recruit training in January 1985, Electronics Technician “A” School in October 1985, Naval Academy Preparatory School in 1987 and the United States Naval Academy in 1991.
Shipley’s tours include Assistant Platoon Commander at SEAL Team EIGHT, test article Officer-in-Charge of a Mark V Special Operations Craft (SOC) at United States Special Operations Command, Operations Officer at Special Boat Unit TWENTY, Mk V SOC Liaison Officer to Special Operations Command European Command, Naval Special Warfare Task Unit (NSWTU) Commander for a Mediterranean Amphibious Ready Group, and Platoon Commander at SEAL Team EIGHT.As a reservist, Shipley served as Executive Officer of Navy Reserve Naval Special Warfare Group TWO Detachment 309, as Executive Officer of SEAL Team THREE deployed to Fallujah, Iraq in 2006, as NSWTU Commander Manda Bay, Kenya in Oct 2006 – Mar 2007, and as the Commanding Officer of SEAL Detachment EIGHTEEN in Little Creek, Virginia from Dec 2009 – Dec 2011.Shipley graduated from the United States Naval Academy with a Bachelor of Science degree in Economics. He has also completed Basic Underwater Demolition/SEAL school, United States Army Ranger school, Military Freefall school, Air Command and Staff College Joint Professional Military Education (JPME) and the Joint Staff College’s Advanced JPME. As a civilian he is a General Electric qualified Six Sigma Master Blackbelt, ISO 9000 auditor, a government contractor, a Constitutional lecturer, and author of an energy-efficiency home-improvement book. He is the son of Michael and Barbara Shipley, and he is married to the former Christine Saseen. Shipley’s awards include: Bronze Star Medal, Meritorious Defense Service Medal, Joint Service Commendation Medal, Navy Commendation Medal, Navy Achievement Medal and various unit, campaign and service awards."
At one point when he was getting up to leave, a reenactor nurse came by and helped him to his feet. Then another 92-years vet stepped over and all three stood side-by-side. In the photo, you can see the wonder of this brief meeting.After signing copies of his book in better penmanship that I can master, Jack was taken by his daughter to the National Guard punching bag that measured the strength of your punch. Jack managed a few punches and then returned to his van. 
As he was sitting there, a hard charging soldier ran up and said to him, "Honor to meet you, Sir. I'm a paratrooper, too. Thank you for all you did." It was a beautiful moment seeing a young soldier honoring a man who went before him 75 years ago.
I have written many speeches (such as one to honor Lieutenant Commander Ronald J. Vaulk and Army ChiefWarrant William Ruth), two Mt. Airy residents killed in the Pentagon on 9/1) for our Mount Airy 9/11 remembrance, and I can testify that writing such a speech is very difficult. What Commander Shipley accomplishes in his speech is so much greater than anything I've ever written.Why?  





If that had been his entire speech, it would have been more than enough. But he went further.The ending, "Thank you, and America Bless God!!" just slays me. I'd love to see that phrase be as common as "God Bless America!" because it gets the Divine order right.

As Robert Frost said once when asked to explain a poem, "What would you have me do? Say it again in other and less good words?"
He reached into his soul and spoke of his agony commanding men who died under his command in our current struggle with the  
Because I knew "of" Commander Vaulk and CWO Ruth, but I did not know them, and certainly not as deeply as he knew the men he served with and so eloquently speaks of here. and world wars, American values, patriotic themes, family honor, the power of poetry to say what cannot be said otherwise, Civil War history and it's impact, and its significance into an historic speech about the real meaning of Memorial Day.
He weaves local people and events, huge battles, and the cost into his speech.
They will take several readings to fully understand the wisdom of what he is conveying here, a wisdom that only a man who has known the clarity of battle can bring to the subject how precious life is to those who cheat death.



  "Before I get started I want to recognize American Legion Post 31 for organizing Westminster’s Memorial Day observance for over 80 years, and especially Skip Amass who has put so much effort into planning this year’s event, my brother, Michael, who, last year, asked me if I would participate in this year’s observance, canvassed for me to do it and whose daughters, Kayla and Mary Katherine, I borrowed for the parade this morning, my parents, Michael and Barbara, who are here this morning, and my wife, Christine, who out of 18 years of marriage has faithfully endured more than 9 of them without me. 
Although, sometimes I think she actually endured the times when I was home, not the other way around. 
"I am honored and humbled to be in the presence of everyone here today and thank you for coming out to pay tribute to the sacrifices of those who have come before us. 
This year is a very commemorative year in that it marks the 200th anniversary of the beginning of the War of 1812, our second war for independence, and the 145th anniversary of Westminster celebrating Memorial Day. Francis Scott Key, a citizen from what now encompasses Carroll County played a special part in the War of 1812 and a Westminster citizen, the locally celebrated Mary Bostwick Shellman, played a special part in starting the tradition of Memorial Day in Westminster. 
Memorial Day, originally called Decoration Day, has its origins in the American Civil War, in which over 618,000 service members lost their lives from both the North and the South. No one town, organization, or individual can justifiably claim credit for being the birthplace or originator of the day, because it was a chain of events that led us to remember all who gave their lives for our nation, which was germinated in the hearts of countless thousands who wept for those they lost. 
Some of the earliest evidence of Decoration Day can be found in Nella L. Sweet’s 1867 hymn "Kneel Where Our Loves are Sleeping", which carried the dedication:
"To The Ladies of the South who are Decorating the Graves of the Confederate Dead" and it goes like this:

Kneel where our loves are sleeping, Dear ones days gone by,
Here we bow in holy reverence, Our bosoms heave the heartfelt sigh.
They fell like brave men, true as steel, And pour'd their blood like rain,
We feel we owe them all we have, And can but weep and kneel again.

Kneel where our loves are sleeping, They lost but still were good and true,
Our fathers, brothers fell still fighting, We weep, 'tis all that we can do.

Here we find our noble dead, Their spirits soar'd to him above,
Rest they now about his throne, For God is mercy, God is love.
Then let us pray that we may live, As pure and good as they have been,
That dying we may ask of him, To open the gate and let us in.

This hymn and the devotion of the Southern ladies to their fallen men and other similar sentiments expressed around the nation so moved General John A. Logan, national commander of a veterans organization called the Grand Army of the Republic that he wrote an order that Decoration Day be observed nationwide and it was soon after observed on 30 May 1868. Mary Bostwick Shellman, the 19 year old daughter of the first mayor of Westminster, was one of the first civilians to follow General Logan’s order and as a result Westminster was one of a handful of towns in America to adorn the graves of soldiers with flowers in May of that same year.Decoration Day grew in popularity as towns across America followed this example and remembered their fallen heroes with freshly cut flowers and markers on their graves. As years passed by and America became involved in other wars, the day became a time to remember the fallen from each of our wars going back to the first, our fight for independence.
Although, the term, "Memorial Day", was first used in 1882, it did not become commonly used until after World War II and in 1967 it was declared the official name by federal law.  
It is no coincidence that Memorial Day, has its origins in the American Civil War, because out of all the wars we have fought, we lost more men in real terms and as a percentage of our population than any other war. 
The American Civil War cost us almost 2% of our population and the war with the next highest war dead as a percentage of population is the War for Independence in which we lost almost 1%. WWII is the next highest in real terms with 418,500 service members, which was 0.3% of the population. 
To put the Civil War’s fatalities in perspective of today’s population it is equivalent to loosing 6,153,713 service members.
It is difficult for me to imagine loosing 6,153,713 people out of today’s population. That is more than four times the total active duty personnel we have in all our armed forces today and it is thirty-six times the total population of Carroll County and just over 100% of the total population of Maryland.
The number is staggering and it is easy to understand why so many people would have a desire to remember what they lost. This was especially true in the South in which they lost 2.8% of their total population or 4.7% when taking other factors into account. That is equivalent to loosing between one and a half to two and a half times the current total population of Maryland, which includes men, women and children. 
When you isolate this to predominately one gender and spread it out over eleven States it is easy to understand why the ladies of the South were decorating the graves of the Confederate dead, because the odds were that they were related to more than just one of them. 
Westminster, where two companies of the Delaware Calvary attacked a larger Confederate force under General J.E.B. Stuart during what has become to be known as Corbit’s charge and Westminster, which is positioned so close to Gettysburg where the 2nd Maryland Line Confederate fought the 1st Maryland Infantry, Potomac Home Brigade at the battle of Culp’s Hill, understood the casualties caused by having combatants on both sides of the line.  My great grandmother also understood it, because her son, William H. Shipley, fought at Culp’s Hill, was wounded and left for dead on the battlefield. 
I am providing these facts, so that we can all remember that wars cost lives and these are not just numbers, they are people who had mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters, cousins, and friends. 
We need to be thankful to everyone who has served our nation in the armed forces and especially to those who lost their lives in doing so. 
Most tragically we are losing over 1,000 WWII veterans each day and with each one passing dies a piece of history, which has enriched our nation. 
We need to cherish them while they are still among us. Of significant note, Charles Fisher Sr. who has been a regular fixture in Westminster’s parade for almost 90 years was just released from the hospital and is still very ill, please pray for him. 
Since last Memorial Day 8 veterans from American Legion Post 31 have passed away, this includes 3 World War II veterans. Most recently, Airman First Class Matt Seidler, a Westminster native, was killed by an IED on 5 Jan 2012 while serving in Afghanistan. These are people you may have known; who may have touched your lives and are with us no longer. 
Additionally, I had the dubious distinction of being the executive officer of the SEAL Team that lost the first two SEALs in Iraq and I can tell you firsthand what that meant. 
We were deployed to the Al Anbar in 2006, which was an insurgent stronghold and the Marines and SEALs were working diligently, hand-in-hand, to break the back of the insurgency. 
We were half way through our deployment when on Wednesday August 2nd we received a report that one of our SEALs in Task Unit Ramadi had been injured. 
He was a Mk 46 gunner, which is a belt-fed machine gun very similar to the Squad Automatic Weapon, and he was providing covering fire from a roof top when an insurgent shot his weapon from which a piece of shrapnel lodged behind his eyes, blinding him for life.
They medivaced him from that position and the platoon consolidated in another location prior to going back out on the battle field. Marine Corps Armored personnel carriers transported them to a building in which the insurgents were reportedly congregating. 
The platoon flooded out of the APCs and conducted a building assault. It was in the ensuing firefight that Petty Officer Mark Lee was killed, he was 28 years old.
Those were very dark times for us. 
The loss of even one person is tragic, but for a small unit like the SEALs it is devastating. The commanding officer, who was greatly affected by the loss, was at the Joint Special Operations Task Force Headquarters when this happened; so I had to make many decisions without his final approval, one of which was to hold a memorial service for that Friday.
He returned to our compound on Thursday and sometime Friday morning he decided he was not ready to have the service. 
When I heard about this from the Command Master Chief the first thing I asked was, “Does General Zilmer know?” Major General Zilmer was the Marine Corps general in charge of Multi-National Forces West and I wanted to make sure he did not show up to a service that had been canceled.
The Command Master Chief assured me that this had been done, so I settled into taking care of the day’s business. 
Communication being what it is in a war zone, somehow the message was not delivered to General Zilmer and shortly thereafter I saw him walking down the corridor of our command tent. 
The CO was speechless, but General Zilmer was gracious and said, “don’t worry about it, and I hope you don’t get good at doing these things.”
I wish his statement could have been true, but it was not to be. We were wrapping up combat operations and getting ready to turn the Area of Operations over to SEAL Team FIVE when the Commanding Officer approved one last mission. 
The operation included a sniper overwatch, where at this location three SEALs were on a rooftop observing a section of Ramadi.
The two SEALs on either side were on guns looking over a parapet wall which surrounded the rooftop. 
The third SEAL, named Michael, was sitting between them with a spotter scope, spotting for his teammates. Of the three SEALs, only Michael had an immediate exit from their confined rooftop position.
An insurgent hugged the wall below their position and tossed a hand grenade up. The grenade came over the parapet wall, bounced off Michael’s front body armor plate, and landed on the rooftop in front of him. 
Michael yelled, “Grenade” as he dove and trapped it between his left arm and chest. It exploded causing minor shrapnel wounds to the legs of the other two SEALs. 
The Task Unit Commander came running up from downstairs and took Michael in his arms where he died a short time later.
Greater love hath no man than this; that a man lay down his life for his friends.
Petty Officer Michael Monsoor was posthumously awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor.  Some of you might be familiar with this story from being featured during the last Republican National Convention in which fellow SEALs took the gold tridents off their uniforms and pounded them into the top of Michael’s casket at Rosecrans Cemetery, Point Loma, California. Additionally, the new movie, Act of Valor, also portrays a similar event based on Michael’s story.
I attended the Medal of Honor ceremonies in Washington and watched Michael’s parents receive our nation’s highest award, but as I looked into their eyes I felt as if they would have traded 100 medals of honor to have their son back, Michael was 25 years old when he was killed.
The Commanding Officer cared deeply for every one of his personnel and after Mark Lee’s death, he would frequently tell me about how he would lay in bed at night and try to imagine what it was like to be blind. 
After Michael was killed and the emergency was over he reacted in a way a father would who had lost his son.  The deaths of his personnel is something that still bothers him to this day and his torment has only increased since Petty Officer Ryan Job, who was blinded the day Mark Lee was killed, died on 24 September 2009 after a major reconstructive surgery, he was 28 years old.
Petty Officer Ryan Job was an amazing individual and his story is very inspiring. The grandson of a World War II fighter pilot, he dreamed of following in his grandfather’s footsteps and in high school he worked part time as a janitor to pay for flying classes and earned his pilot’s license at age 17. Later, while attending his third year of college his ambitions shifted and he dropped out of the University of Washington to enlist in the Navy to attempt to become a Navy SEAL. 
He obviously succeeded.
When he was wounded in Iraq he completely lost his right eye and it appeared as if the entire right side of his head was open. 
With massive amounts of blood hemorrhaging from his wounds it seemed as if he would not survive, but he propped himself up so he would not choke on his own blood and comforted his teammates by telling them it would be OK.
After he returned from Iraq, his girlfriend Kelly, who he wanted to marry prior to his deployment, but postponed the ceremony for fear of making her a widow, stayed by his side throughout his numerous brain and facial reconstruction surgeries in many different hospitals around the nation. 
It was she who broke the news to him that he would be completely blind forever, and he responded by saying, "Well, if I'm going to be blind, I'm going to be the best blind man there is."
Ryan and Kelly got married in 2007, and eventually moved to Phoenix, Arizona with the help of the Sentinels of Freedom Scholarship Foundation. 
He completed a bachelor’s degree in business administration with a 4.0 GPA, obtained an internship from General Dynamics and was offered a full-time job.
His other accomplishments after his recovery included climbing Mount Rainier, training for a triathlon and becoming a spokesman for an organization that helps wounded veterans transition to civilian life. 
Ryan truly overcame every obstacle put in his path and rose far above his circumstances, he never allowed anything to keep him down, but his untimely death deprived him of getting to know his daughter, Leah, who was born six months after he passed away.
Wars have a very real human cost and it is important that we think about that cost and all those who came before us who paid the price or those who might do the same in the future. Yet, we should not limit this to once a year; each of us needs to remember this daily, especially when we make decisions on how we choose to conduct ourselves as a society. 
We need to remember that thoughts, ideas and beliefs have real consequences, so let us honor our war dead by upholding the values our first service members died to secure, which is now embodied in the original intent or our Constitution and the foundation of law upon which it was based, this would be the most fitting tribute any of us could provide.

We cherish too, the Poppy red
That grows on fields where valor led,
It seems to signal to the skies
That blood of heroes never dies.

Thank you, and America Bless God!!"

The pictures below are from the WWII military reenactors. Other reenactors include the Revolutionary War, War of 1812, Civil War, World War II, Korean War, Vietnam War, and Desert Storm.
According to the brochure of the American Legion Post #145:
"Westminster, Maryland has the distinct tradition of having conducted the observance of Memorial Day for 145 continuous years.
This occasion, held to honor those who paid the ultimate sacrifice in the defense of the Unites States, was started in the spring of 1868, led by Miss Mary Shellman, then 16 years old, whose father was the mayor of Westminster."
"Miss Shellman organized the children of the Westminster Elementary School and those of St. John's Elementary School to cut flowers from their gardens, meet at Main and Center Streets,and process to the Westminster Cemetery to place the flowers on the graves of those Union soldiers from the Civil War who were buried there. 
This was known as "Decoration Day"," later changed to Memorial Day. The observance continued under the direction of Miss Shellman when Carroll Post #31, Westminster, took over the reins of organizing and conducting the parade."

Note: My deep thanks to the WWII reenactors for enduring the extreme heat in their WWII wool uniforms to help myself and others see close up how the soldiers lived in those times.
Contact Arnold "Skip" Amas, Coordinator, American Legion Post #31, 410 848 3326, 410 259 0871, arnoldams@verizon.net.

There is nothing I can do to ever thank the 1.2 million men (including my Uncle Frank) who have given their lives for me and mine, but I can at least remember them, honor them, and pass their stories on to my sons who will carry them to their sons.
I wrote last year of how Memorial Day has lost much of its true meaning in the Republic and become an excuse for sales events. 
Patriotism, honoring the war dead, civic duty, prayer for our military...these all matter.
From our Founding Fathers struggles against the tyranny of the British Empire to the current wars, freedom and liberty depend on the willingness of brave men and women to stand watch, fight, and sometimes die.
May we remain worthy of their sacrifice by living up to our current demands with the same vigor with which they defended our freedom and liberty in their day.
This event was held on the ground of theAgriculture Museum in Westminster. The photos at the end of this post show our agricultural heritage as it is presented there with farm equipment and machinery, agricultural technology, livestock, and exhibits, such as that on wormsead oil, a product of Carroll County, had the world for its market, from South America, to Asia, to Europe. 
It cured hook worm in humans and ring worm in livestock]. It is especially well designed for visits from families with small children.
















1/03/2020

ISIS Use of Social Media as a Force Multiplier

“Our obligations to our country never cease but with our lives.”John Adams Letter to Benjamin Rush 18 April 1808 

I wrote and published this article in a small obscure security journal in 2014. It still holds so I'm republishing it here in 2020. For the longer paper on ISIS Use of Social Media as a Force Multiplier, see here

ISIS (and its newer versions) has proven very adept at using social media tools to win power, influence, recruits and strategic advantage over their opponents. So far, they've used social media tools (Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Instagram, Google+, Snapchat and others) to celebrate and publicize their strategic, battle field, psychological and opponent success after they have achieved them. 
For more resources on how to combat them, see here
Here, I will examine how they could use social media as a significant force multiplier if they coordinate their assault with their social media skills to cause panic, chaos, death and destruction in the United States. To do so, I will highlight how easily ISIS or an ISIS clone can create widespread panic through the use of social media tools as a force multiplier if they use these tools in tandem with an actual physical assault within the United States. 
A social media force multiplier as I use the term here is an individual or small team who, through the use of special tactics, can do the damage of a much larger force. It is easy to understand that a skilled sniper is a force multiplier on the battle field. Why? Because snipers are capable of force multiplication without ever directly engaging the enemy, they are a commonly known force multiplier. 
Where we use social media tools as ways to share information, fun, family, and find and build friendships, ISIS uses them as a weapons platform.  In reality, social media is the ultimate dual use technology. And ISIS has figured out a way to use as a weapons platform to attract recruits, to transmit their ideology, tactics, battles, blood lust and psychological operations, on a scale that is exponential, not linear. 
That is what they have already done in just a few years since the Obama Administrations dystopian so called, “Arab Spring” I propose that they will come at the American people with a battalion-sized unit of jihadi social media “snipers” who will create chaos, death, destruction, and panic to millions of American civilians on the level that will be 9/11 times 1,000.
Enter “#ISIS” as a search term in Twitter, or YouTube, or Google+, or in any social media platform.  You will be amazed at the number of entries that display when you do, and most of those entries support them.
For example, when I did so on December 4, 2014, the very first entry of the majority that all supported ISIS or had no idea what religion they were evident.
Or, if you prefer, use the acronym for the Islamic State in the Levant, enter “#ISIL” as a search term in Twitter and you will get similar results.
More remarkable, when these same USC Berkeley students were asked who was responsible for the bloodshed in the Middle East, the vast majority blamed the United States.
If you think that ISIS confusion and outright support is unique to UCS Berkeley, a majority of Harvard University students also say the U.S. is a bigger threat to world peace than ISIS. http://www.foxnews.com/us/2014/10/08/twisted-ivy-harvard-students-say-us-bigger-threat-to-world-peace-than-isis/
If we read the other posts about ISIS on Twitter, this same misinformation about who ISIS is and how they accomplish their goals is widespread.
“So what?” you might ask. So a few students are misinformed or misguided about ISIS. After all, ISIS is in the Middle East and hardly a threat to us here in the U.S. thousands of miles away.
Well, the 9/11 Commission reached a number of conclusions about what we had done wrong in the years leading up to that disaster, but their number one finding was that our intelligence community suffered from a “lack of imagination.”
That lack of imagination continues.
With social media tools, whatever safety we enjoyed once behind oceans and land masses is gone. Hacker’s daily strike at our government, our corporations, and our infrastructure’ digital gold. As they are after specific information, be it financial, military, or otherwise, they generally do not destroy the servers or data or destroy electronic, digital, water, financial or other networks.
But what if ISIS were to strike those same networks? And what if they used their substantial knowledge of social media as a force multiplier to increase their destructive capability to justify their actions to the world?
They’ve already proven themselves to be very adept at using their social media tools to recruit and train candidates from dozens of nations. They’ve uploaded their combat and recruitment films to Facebook, YouTube and Twitter. Their assault on Syria and Iraq was probably the first combat operation that was carried live on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and other social media.
They have demonstrated a professional grasp of messaging and messaging tools. They understand that the optics as captured in social media is as important to their victory as anything they achieve on the battlefield.
So…let’s take just one scenario.
Let’s assume that for a year or two they accumulate weapons and explosives inside the U.S. If they preposition operatives and supplies in just 300 (or 100 or even 50) U.S. neighborhoods, they have a rather formidable force.
Then, they pick a day for a coordinated attack and hit hard.
But knowing how powerful social media can be as a force multiplier, they not only stock piled arms and explosives. They also set up hundreds of accounts on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Instagram and other social media, and preprogrammed smart phones to spread their message rapidly…all as a force multiplier.
As in Syria and Iraq, they have one operative with a cell phone recording every action. As fast as it happens, it is uploaded to social media. And they comment about it all, enjoying the element of surprise and the advantage of first report without counterviews reported.
Now our misinformed USC Berkeley and Harvard University students are useful multipliers for ISIS. A recognized tenet of social media marketing is trust. Anyone who markets a product or a service on social media must have their customers trust to assure that their message is recognized and broadcast to a wider customer base.
So, too, with ISIS. They need others to identify with their message and to transmit it once they upload it. Given the indicated sympathy of the USC and Harvard students, they have a trust base outer ring. Their own committed sympathizers assure they get to the inner ring who can then multiply the impact of their propaganda to a much wider ring.
With a terrorist journalist assigned to each strike force, they could quickly disseminate their message. A violent, coordinated, well executed attack on a large number of American neighborhoods accompanied by a professional social media campaign, in addition to causing a large loss of life and significant damage to property, could accomplish the penultimate goal of every terrorist organization: panic.
And they have mastered this ability already. One Tweeter named Mahdi under the name “Shami Witness,” an executive from Bangalore, India:
“…spent his mornings, afternoons and evenings sending thousands of tweets of propaganda about the Islamic State militant group, acting as the leading conduit of information between Jihadi’s, supporters, and recruits.
His tweets…were seen two million times each month, making him perhaps the most influential Islamic State Twitter account, with over 17,700 followers.”[i]
And how do we roll back these live terrorist tweets? Well, the Islamic terrorist strike in Sydney, Australia at a Lindt café and chocolate store at the height of the Christmas shopping in the heart of the financial district. What did the Sydney police tweet?
FredZeppelin retweeted
@ABCNewsLive @ABC @9NewsAUS Sydney police have requested NO Tweets. Lives in danger; don't want to provide gunmen with info they don't have
This was excellent counter intelligence by the Sydney police. They knew the right information to tweet, and did so.
Remember, in contrast to prior terrorist hostage takings going all the way back to when the Palestine Liberation Organization would hijack planes in the 1970’s when all hostages were silenced, the terrorists at the Lindt store allowed their hostages to keep their phones. Why?
Why would they do that when doing so would provide an opportunity for them to communicate with their families and the media?
For precisely that reason. The terrorists had some hostages call news outlets and try to get on the air. Again, why? I argue they know by now very how powerful a force multiplier can be and they deliberately used it. While misguided, uninformed or defeatist analysts in the West may label these actors “lone wolfs,” they are well aware they are part of a larger 1,400 year long tradition of martyrs bent on global domination.
Here is Marcia’s social media post from the Lindt Café that was also meant as a force multiplier. 
Has our foreign policy elite identified the ISIS social media weapons platform threat or developed policies to eliminate it?
Well, to judge by one white paper on the topic put out by the well-funded and prestigious Brookings Institution called, “The ISIS Twitter Census: Defining and describing the population of ISIS supporters on Twitter” by J.M. Berger and Jonathon Morgan, the answer is yes to the first question but no to the second.
The Brookings report examining the phenomena of ISIS social media skill on Twitter, just one of several social media weapons platforms they use, only to conclude with bizarre recommendations about nuance and gender, such as:
“Government, for its part, must do something it has not traditionally excelled at: fully address a complex situation and attempt to find a nuanced approach.”
And “There are many attendant questions that should be of interest to civil libertarians. These include, for example, whether suspensions disproportionately impact people of certain genders, races, nationalities, sexual orientations, or religions. Twitter in particular discloses literally no information about the accounts it suspends, yet this activity takes place every day. Again, this is an area in which companies would be well-advised to consider proactive measures, and it is an area where government oversight may eventually come into play.”
After decades of following terrorists, with ISIS being the latest brand, their websites, their enablers, supporters and members, trust me...NONE of them are nuanced. None worry about civil liberties, gender, or sexual orientation. They are equal opportunity killers.  And they are very clear when they say on their websites: “We have been at war for 1,400 years. You forgot. We didn’t.”
The Brookings analysis reminds me of the monks of Lindisfarne monastery debating theology as the Vikings arrive and debated with their broad axes. That is a metaphor for what we face today with the Mohammedians, whatever politically correct psycho-babble Brookings and the foreign policy elite religiously parrot in the media daily.
The daily atrocities of ISIS, from enslaving, raping and selling Christian, Yazidi and other women, their hanging bodies from gantries of towns they conquer, their cutting off human heads, their torture and killing of prisoners, their destruction of ancient cultural treasures, their use of children as soldiers, their throwing gays off roofs, their burning or churches and homes...well, their savagery is endless. But it is not nuanced.
Conclusion: Orson Wells in his famous 1938 drama “War of the Worlds” achieved massive citizen panic using just his voice and an earlier social media tool, the radio. ISIS has far more sophisticated tools at its disposal, and it knows how to use them.
Once underway, this kind of large-scale citizen panic is difficult to contain. As they have already cut off captives heads, engaged in mass murder and mass rape, enslaved thousands, turned Christian churches into prisons, recruited, trained and activated suicide bombers and engaged in other widespread and repeated violent behavior, their launching multiple attacks inside the U.S. is easily imaginable.
Given their proficiency and experience coordinating their attacks with social media propaganda, ISIS using social media as a multiplier force is easily imaginable. The full impact of that attack is not imaginable, although their use of these social media tools for the past several years in the Middle East and globally shows they are proficient in their use.
We can shut down ISIS social media tools BEFORE their use of them results in large numbers of death, panic, mayhem and destruction. Twitter has finally begun to shut down thousands of jihadi accounts, but thousands of others spring up when they do.
Maybe the Defense Intelligence Agency, the Central Intelligence Agency, the National Security Agency, and the dozens of other intelligence agencies the taxpayers give billions to each year can assist Twitter, YouTube, Google+, Facebook and the other social media tools ISIS uses as weapons platforms in the task of shutting down their force multiplier.
The consequences of waiting until AFTER this social media force multiplier is used on a larger scale are unimaginable. We can connect the dots on this one NOW. We can also take care of this threat NOW if we show the wisdom, courage, and action that our future depends on. The millions of men and women who gave their lives and limbs for this country deserve no less. So, too, do our children and grandchildren whose precious lives hang in the balance.


Background Resources


Footnotes

[i] http://www.channel4.com/news/unmasked-the-man-behind-top-islamic-state-twitter-account-shami-witness-mehdi


















12/29/2019

Church Emergency Plan Template

In our November 2019 St. Mike's Safety and Security Committee meeting they read a DHS warning that Christian Churches are at a high probability of attack this Christmas. 
Below is a plan I wrote in 2012 that could help your church prepare for that possibility. Sadly, this is the world we live in.
Thank God Americans are heavily armed and can protect their families, religious leaders, and churches because so many are legally carrying defensive weapons in the pews. Anyone attempting to kill American Christians in church will find that, unlike in say Egypt, the return fire will be deadly, accurate, and rapid.

Here are some other links on this subject on this blog.
https://poetslife.blogspot.com/2019/09/church-emergency-response-plan-example.html
https://poetslife.blogspot.com/2017/05/church-emergency-evacuation-shelter-in.html
https://poetslife.blogspot.com/2018/09/church-tabletop-exercise-one-potential.html
https://poetslife.blogspot.com/2018/09/church-tabletop-exercise-two-category-4.html

Tip: The one item you need to include in your first aid kit is a tourniquet. It will prevent death in the golden hour you have to keep a serious wound causing bleed out and death. Here is a tourniquet that has been used thousands of times successfully toward that end: 
In the early 1980's I visited Emergency Operations Centers (EOCs) throughout the United States. The best ones were in Texas (they face the most and greatest threats and therefore have to rise to the event) and Utah (the Mormons are survivalists as part of their religion and due to their history ). Otherwise, most Americans were (and are) unprepared for an emergency, a state of affairs still true today. And one of the most unprepared is churches.
In hopes of changing that, here is a template I wrote that you and your church can use to prepare for emergencies. Over a thousand people downloaded this on Knol before that site was taken down, so it must offer something you can use. I wrote it in an afternoon for my church (St. Michael the Archangel Catholic Church in Poplar Springs, MD) and many parishioners found it useful
In response to your request for beginning a safety and emergency preparedness plan for the church, here are a few ideas. I tried to provide what is useful, practical, and mostly free. This is a process that will take some time. It is an all threats approach (jihadi's, hurricanes, fire, shooting). Hope this is a good beginning.

Personal, Fire and Security Awareness

Take a comprehensive approach to address personal, fire and security situations. Emphasize what is unique about each, but that common strategies for handling them exist. You will need to develop this plan. It should include:
-     Fire – what to do and how to do it
What to do if a distraught parent shows up (custody battle where, usually, the father is going to kidnap the child)
-     Sexual predators – how to identify them, how to keep them away
-     Angry Parishioner out of control
-     Mentally unbalanced individual
-     Criminal entering the building – obvious and not so obvious
-     Weather emergency
-     Natural Disaster
-     Jihadi's

Communication

Cell Phone Broadcast Message – Before an event, create a list of the cell phone numbers of all parents. Use this list to do a broadcast email or text message if weather or an emergency warrants it.
Teacher to Teacher – Have teachers in exchange their phone number with the teacher closest to them when they teach.
Staff to Staff – Have staff members exchange their cell phone number with the staff member that is closest to them.
ICE – In Case of Emergency –ICE, is a program that enables first responders, such as paramedics, firefighters, and police officers, to identify victims and contact their next of kin to obtain important medical information. Have staff dial in their emergency contact numbers on their cell phones.
Telephone Contact List – Get cell, home, work numbers and email addresses of all staff and volunteers. Create a one page table with name, cell, home, work number and email. Distribute list to all on it, Father Mike, and other relevant parties.
Emergency Contact List – In addition to 911, add emergency fire, ambulance, and police full numbers to a list for Carroll, Frederick, Howard and Montgomery Counties. 
One problem when you dial 911 in this area is that you spend valuable time explain what county you are calling from. Then, you get transferred and transferred again. This list will avoid that problem as well as giving the precise number and service to call.

First Aid

Teach Staff, Volunteers, and Coaches First Aid – Have a nurse volunteer teach them, or have the Red Cross teach them during the blood drive.
Distribute Basic First Aid Kits – Place larger first aid kits in the large rooms (church, gym, cafeteria, and library) and smaller first aid kits in each classroom.
Defibrillators – Purchase at least one and place it outside in the vestibule where it can be reached from all areas.

Weather

http://emergencyemail.org/
Sign up staff for the Emergency Email and Wireless Network. Get notified of an emergency by email, cell and pager. 
Most emergency notifications will be about the weather, but this system will also notify staff of national and regional emergencies.

Volunteer Mobilization Center
This is a structure for how to identify, brief and use effective volunteers (skilled construction workers, nurses, doctors) and how to send away ineffective volunteers (those with no skills).

Emergency Supply Kits

Purchase and distribute a basic emergency supply kits. Many kits are available online. Here is one good source:
https://tacda.org/the-survival-store/
The items listed here are just suggestions. You will have to decide what is necessary, practical and useful. I believe that whistles, water, and food are the most basic and are absolutely necessary. The rest are as money permits.

For the larger rooms:

Food and Drinking Water
         Pouches of emergency water
         Packs of high-calorie food rations
Emergency Whistle
         Used to attract attention
         Contains a compass and reflection mirror
         Water-tight compartment
Mag-light
         Provides spot-to-flood light
         Can be set on end
         Anodized for corrosion resistance
         Dependable in emergency situations
Emergency Strobe Light
         Used as a beacon because it is very bright
         Can be spotted through smoke and light debris
Emergency Supply Kit Contents can include:
         Light and sound generating devices
         Inclement weather/exposure protection
         Respiratory protection
         Movement and relocation supplies
         Communication information
         First-aid and life safety supplies
         Food and drinking water
         Emergency egress supplies
         Escape hoods – for fires
Life Safety Supplies
         CPR barrier
         Latex gloves
         Quick reference CPR guide
         Two containers glucose tablets
         First-aid kit and supplies like metal instruments
Latex Gloves

         4 pairs
         Provides protection against body fluids
Emergency Egress Supplies
         Heavy-during gloves
         Safety glasses
         30-foot of bright orange webbing
         Mini radios
         Batters for Blackberries® and portable radios
         Collapsible reading glasses
Movement and Relocation Supplies
         Stored in sealable document storage bags
         Multipurpose tools
         Small roll of duct tape
         Map pack
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Barrier
         Mask serves as a protective barrier when administering mouth-to mouth
         One-way valve and directional diaphragm allows no back flow of air
         Consult quick reference CPR guide
Glucose Tablets
         Glucose tables like candy to provide sugar immediately
         Never put them in the mount of someone in shock

For the smaller rooms:

Food and Drinking Water
         Pouches of emergency water
         Packs of high-calorie food rations
Emergency Whistle
         Used to attract attention
         Contains a compass and reflection mirror
         Water-tight compartment
Emergency Communication Methods
         Non-toxic glow sticks
         Heavy-duty mini-mag light

Continuity of Operations


  • Store vital documents in a fireproof box.
  • Store critical computer data on backup hard drives.
  • Keep backup hard drives at a secure location.
  • Give staff a memory stick. Have them keep their on critical data on that memory stick.
This is a big area. We can discuss further later.

Special Needs – Seniors, the Disabled, and Young Children


Senior and disabled people have special needs, especially in a power failure or disaster. Using common sense, try to plan for and meet their needs. For example, keep backup generators for power failures and diabetic foods ready.

Young children also have special needs. 
Keep a few stuffed animals, toys and games around to give them to occupy them in an emergency. 
The immediate threat at my church was a hurricane. 
I put the following email together and the church secretary sent it to all our parish members.

http://www.reuters.com/subjects/hurricanes/hurricane-tracker



Here is some information from our parish Emergency Preparedness Expert-

Prepare spiritually and physically. 
Pray. 
Pray always, and if you don't, an earthquake and major hurricane within one week should make you begin. 
Here is how you may prepare physically.

Hurricane Irene is forecast to impact the State of Maryland this weekend. 
Although there are still uncertainties in the final track of the storm, we urge all residents to begin to prepare now.  
Please remember that this is a large and powerful storm and it will not need to pass directly over Carroll County to cause heavy rainfall and high winds. 
You can receive up to date information on Hurricane Irene directly from the National Hurricane Center at http://www.nhc.noaa.gov and your local National Weather Service office at: http://www.erh.noaa.gov/phi/
Also, see the VueToo and Meteorological Musings (Mike Smith) link below.

Additional information can also be found at.
https://www.facebook.com/notes/cecil-county-department-of-emergency-services/hurricane-irene/266632026697500.

Please consider the following items as you prepare for Irene.

Make sure your family, friends and other important phone numbers are available.
Know where your family, friends and neighbors are in case you need them or they need you.
Have emergency supplies ready BEFORE the storm.

Check your emergency kit. Learn more about what to keep in your kit at http://www.ready.gov
-      Ensure that insurance information is current and stored in a safe location.
-      Secure any outdoor items.
-      Check and clear rain gutters and drains.
-      Check the serviceability of sump pumps if your home has one.
-      If you must leave your home, do not cross flooded roadways.
-      Ensure that you are registered to receive emergency notifications from the Department of Emergency Services at http://www.ccdes.org

Hurricane Irene updated strike path information and situation...
http://www.emergencyemail.org/newsemergency/anmviewer.asp?a=1352&z=1


MEMA Maryland
http://www.mema.state.md.us/MEMA/index.
jsphttp://www.mema.state.md.us/Pages/default.aspx

http://www.vuetoo.com/vue1/SituationPageNews.asp?sit=7565&ref=anm

http://www.accuweather.com/blogs/news/story/54158/hurricane-irenes-impacts-on-ea.asp

http://meteorologicalmusings.blogspot.com/

If you smell gas or suspect a gas leak:
Leave the area immediately and go to a location where you no longer smell gas, and report the leak by calling 911 (If Fire Rescue is not already on the scene).
In any event: Do Not:

   Light matches or smoke. Avoid use of all open flames.
   Try to locate the source of the gas leak.
   Use any electrical device, including cellular phone, I-pods etc.
   Turn light switches On and Off.
   Re-enter the building or return to the area until it has been declared safe to do so by Fire Rescue Personnel