FEMA Director Deanne Criswell is at GITMO, but that hasn’t stopped her underlings at the wicked, autonomous agency from reigning terror on the American populace.
In the wake of Hurricane Helene, which wrought unprecedented destruction on parts of the Southeast, FEMA deployed 3,500 armed personnel to storm-ravaged North Carolina, particularly Asheville, which took the brunt of Helene’s biblical devastation. True to form, FEMA’s massive convoys and flights carried no relief supplies and no medicine, only crates of automatic rifles, steel canisters packed with limitless ammunition to wage a bloody war against storm-torn refugees and their property, and a healthy supply of body bags, ostensibly to eternally house their victims.
No sooner had Helene’s winds waned and the torrential rain stopped than FEMA descended on the Tar Heel State with numbers not seen since the agency waged a bloody war of attrition in Lahaina two years ago.
One Ashville resident, whose house and belongings the storm demolished, would later tell Real Raw News that FEMA personnel seemingly outnumbered Asheville’s citizenry—population 94,000. Hyperbole aside, one fact is still certain: FEMA dispatched the equivalent of three US ARMY battalions to the Blue Ridge Mountains, having equipped them for a protracted conflict.
The same resident told us that when she asked FEMA where she could seek refuge until the flooding abated, the agents, carrying M-16s and pistols, suggested she find a hotel room outside the disaster area. Except there were no hotel rooms available; FEMA had already booked every room in a 150-mile radius. And even if she’d found one, she couldn’t have reached it, for her car got swept away like a raft when pouring rain transformed her street into white-water rapids. She’d lost her home, her car, her belongings, and she had neither food nor water. Adding insult to injury, an agent allegedly told her, “Too bad you lost it all. We could’ve made a deal if you had something to trade.”
As FEMA antagonized and intimidated citizens, another crisis unfolded in a Rutherford County village. On September 27, the majority of Chimney Rock, once a serene, scenic vista, was destroyed by flooding, with the Broad River inundating the village. Two days later, as residents struggled to save what they could, the Biden-Harris regime seized Chimney Rock under the auspices of eminent domain, an archaic, unconstitutional law that allows the federal government to wantonly and irrevocably confiscate private property for public use.
Residents of Chimney Rock suddenly found themselves confronting two opponents—the weather and federal forces. On September 30, FEMA surged upon the tiny 2.8-square-mile village and gave citizens a chilling ultimatum: Get out or else.
The storm had razed the village. Its population—a whopping 140 people—had lost everything, including cell service and any means of leaving Chimney Rock, as the floods had inundated what few roads led in and out. When residents refused to go on foot, FEMA agents pointed rifles at them, demanding they trek out in whatever footwear they were wearing or be shot.
One resident who braved the journey, wading through waist-deep water filled with venomous snakes and biting insects, told RRN on Friday he had witnessed FEMA agents gun down a neighbor who refused to vacate his flooded house. The same resident, a 36-year-old lithium miner, said, “There are bodies everywhere; I saw dozens floating in the water, bullet holes in all of them. I’m lucky to have made it out.”
Given FEMA’s lengthy history of terrorizing and murdering storm victims, an important question must be asked: Where were the White Hats, since General Smith is certainly not oblivious to FEMA’s recurring criminality?
As of Thursday, White Hats were in North Carolina and had engaged federal forces, a source in Gen. Smith’s office told RRN. “Better late than never,” he said.