- This topic has 200 replies, 22 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 11 months ago by
urbanrealtor.
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December 26, 2008 at 10:45 PM #320866December 27, 2008 at 11:03 AM #320467
Veritas
ParticipantHere is another little gem that proves things could always be worse even in the 50’s:
“The Internal Security Act of 1950, sometimes
called the McCarran Act after its sponsor, Senator Patrick McCarran, enforced compulsory registration of Communists and their sympathizers with the Attorney General, and authorized the government to conduct preventive detention in times of internal security emergencies.”“Title I of the Internal Security Act was named the Subversive Activities Control Act. It provided that the government establish the Subversive
Activities Control Board (SACB), which was to determine if a particular organization was a Communist organization. If the SACB so determined, it could order the organization to register with the Attorney General as such, and also to annually submit the list of its members as well as its financial statement. If the organization failed to register, it was a duty of the individual members to register, and the failure to do so resulted in criminal prosecution.”December 27, 2008 at 11:03 AM #320814Veritas
ParticipantHere is another little gem that proves things could always be worse even in the 50’s:
“The Internal Security Act of 1950, sometimes
called the McCarran Act after its sponsor, Senator Patrick McCarran, enforced compulsory registration of Communists and their sympathizers with the Attorney General, and authorized the government to conduct preventive detention in times of internal security emergencies.”“Title I of the Internal Security Act was named the Subversive Activities Control Act. It provided that the government establish the Subversive
Activities Control Board (SACB), which was to determine if a particular organization was a Communist organization. If the SACB so determined, it could order the organization to register with the Attorney General as such, and also to annually submit the list of its members as well as its financial statement. If the organization failed to register, it was a duty of the individual members to register, and the failure to do so resulted in criminal prosecution.”December 27, 2008 at 11:03 AM #320868Veritas
ParticipantHere is another little gem that proves things could always be worse even in the 50’s:
“The Internal Security Act of 1950, sometimes
called the McCarran Act after its sponsor, Senator Patrick McCarran, enforced compulsory registration of Communists and their sympathizers with the Attorney General, and authorized the government to conduct preventive detention in times of internal security emergencies.”“Title I of the Internal Security Act was named the Subversive Activities Control Act. It provided that the government establish the Subversive
Activities Control Board (SACB), which was to determine if a particular organization was a Communist organization. If the SACB so determined, it could order the organization to register with the Attorney General as such, and also to annually submit the list of its members as well as its financial statement. If the organization failed to register, it was a duty of the individual members to register, and the failure to do so resulted in criminal prosecution.”December 27, 2008 at 11:03 AM #320885Veritas
ParticipantHere is another little gem that proves things could always be worse even in the 50’s:
“The Internal Security Act of 1950, sometimes
called the McCarran Act after its sponsor, Senator Patrick McCarran, enforced compulsory registration of Communists and their sympathizers with the Attorney General, and authorized the government to conduct preventive detention in times of internal security emergencies.”“Title I of the Internal Security Act was named the Subversive Activities Control Act. It provided that the government establish the Subversive
Activities Control Board (SACB), which was to determine if a particular organization was a Communist organization. If the SACB so determined, it could order the organization to register with the Attorney General as such, and also to annually submit the list of its members as well as its financial statement. If the organization failed to register, it was a duty of the individual members to register, and the failure to do so resulted in criminal prosecution.”December 27, 2008 at 11:03 AM #320966Veritas
ParticipantHere is another little gem that proves things could always be worse even in the 50’s:
“The Internal Security Act of 1950, sometimes
called the McCarran Act after its sponsor, Senator Patrick McCarran, enforced compulsory registration of Communists and their sympathizers with the Attorney General, and authorized the government to conduct preventive detention in times of internal security emergencies.”“Title I of the Internal Security Act was named the Subversive Activities Control Act. It provided that the government establish the Subversive
Activities Control Board (SACB), which was to determine if a particular organization was a Communist organization. If the SACB so determined, it could order the organization to register with the Attorney General as such, and also to annually submit the list of its members as well as its financial statement. If the organization failed to register, it was a duty of the individual members to register, and the failure to do so resulted in criminal prosecution.”December 27, 2008 at 11:26 AM #320497Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantVeritas: I’m pretty sure the nuns had a Subversive Activities Control Board when I was in school and I was on it.
December 27, 2008 at 11:26 AM #320844Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantVeritas: I’m pretty sure the nuns had a Subversive Activities Control Board when I was in school and I was on it.
December 27, 2008 at 11:26 AM #320898Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantVeritas: I’m pretty sure the nuns had a Subversive Activities Control Board when I was in school and I was on it.
December 27, 2008 at 11:26 AM #320916Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantVeritas: I’m pretty sure the nuns had a Subversive Activities Control Board when I was in school and I was on it.
December 27, 2008 at 11:26 AM #320996Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantVeritas: I’m pretty sure the nuns had a Subversive Activities Control Board when I was in school and I was on it.
December 27, 2008 at 11:28 AM #320502Veritas
ParticipantWhere was your internment camp anyway? Did the Nuns use waterboarding on you?
December 27, 2008 at 11:28 AM #320849Veritas
ParticipantWhere was your internment camp anyway? Did the Nuns use waterboarding on you?
December 27, 2008 at 11:28 AM #320903Veritas
ParticipantWhere was your internment camp anyway? Did the Nuns use waterboarding on you?
December 27, 2008 at 11:28 AM #320921Veritas
ParticipantWhere was your internment camp anyway? Did the Nuns use waterboarding on you?
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