Executive Orders
Executive Orders (EO)s are decrees that are issued by the President of the United States and which carry the force of law when activated by a president. All EOs are printed in the U.S. Federal Register.
Contents
State of National Emergency
The following are a few examples of some EOs and their purposes that relate to a State of national emergency. [1]
- 10995--Federal seizure of all communications media in the United States;
- 10997--Federal seizure of all electric power, fuels, minerals, public and private;
- 10998--Federal seizure of all food supplies and resources, public and private and all farms and equipment;
- 10999--Federal seizure of all means of transportation, including cars, trucks, or vehicles of any kind and total control over all highways, seaports and water ways;
- 11000--Federal seizure of American people for work forces under federal supervision, including the splitting up of families if the government so desires;
- 11001--Federal seizure of all health, education and welfare facilities, both public and private;
- 11002--Empowers the Postmaster General to register all men, women and children in the United States of America;
- 11003--Federal seizure of all airports and aircraft;
- 11004--Federal seizure of all housing and finances and authority to establish Forced Relocation. Authority to designate areas to be abandoned as "unsafe," establish new locations for the populations, relocate communities, build new housing with public funds;
- 11005--Seizure of all railroads, inland waterways and storage facilities, both public and private;
- 11051--Provides FEMA complete authorization to put above orders into effect in times of increased international tension of economic or financial crisis (FEMA will be in control in case of "National Emergency").
"President William Jefferson Clinton wrote one EO that can cover all of these. He wrote Executive Order 12919 on June 3, 1994, which was released on June 6, 1994.
This EO will be the only thing he needs to enact in order to become a fully empowered dictator. It covers all of the EOs mentioned previously. The only thing this EO doesn't do is define WHAT the "national emergency" would have to be in order for this EO to be signed. Please keep that in mind. Anything can be declared a "national emergency" to facilitate EO 12919 being enacted." [2]
Taken with permission from Government by Executive Order by Paula Demers, 1996.
Additional Executive Orders
- Executive Order 12600 by which companies are granted potential veto power over Freedom of Information Act requests for copies of their contracts with the U.S. government.
- Executive Order 13233 of November 1, 2001, by which George W. Bush "greatly restricts access to Presidential papers by forcing all requests for documents, no matter how innocuous, to be approved by both the former President and current White House." [3]
- "On Nov.1, 2001, Bush issued Executive Order 13233, which revoked a prior order issued by President Reagan. In doing so, Bush gave himself and former presidents the right to withhold records or delay their release indefinitely. A license to re-write history via incomplete records? You bet. But there's hope yet.
- "The Senate is currently looking at The Presidential Records Act Amendments of 2007 (H.R. 1255), which seeks to rescind Executive Order 13233."—Editorial Board, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, April 6, 2007. re Bush administration U.S. attorney firings controversy
- Executive Order 13303 of May 22, 2003 by which George W. Bush protects the interests of the Development Fund for Iraq and the petroleum industry as a threat of "national emergency".
- Executive Order 13315 of August 28, 2003, aka "The Official Looting of Iraq".
- Executive Order 13328 of February 6, 2004, creating "a Commission on the Intelligence Capabilities of the United States Regarding Weapons of Mass Destruction."
Related SourceWatch Resources
- Bush dictatorship
- Establishing martial law in the United States
- Federal Emergency Management Agency
- Homeland defense
- Homeland security
- Hurricane Katrina: FEMA
- Hurricane Katrina: Police State Occupation of New Orleans
- War Powers Act
External links
Executive Orders
- Online Access via National Archives & Records Administration
- At least some of the Orders of the current executive are online at http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/orders/.
Articles & Commentary
- Harry V. Martin, "The Executive Order: a Presidential Power not designated by the Constitution," Free America, 1995.
- Peter Baker and Michael Abramowitz, "A Governing Philosophy Rebuffed. Ruling Emphasizes Constitutional Boundaries," Washington Post, June 30, 2006.