The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #80783   Message #1474945
Posted By: *daylia*
30-Apr-05 - 09:27 AM
Thread Name: BS: Auschwitz, Ohio?
Subject: BS: Auschwitz, Ohio?
A couple weeks ago brucie started a thread here called "10,000 arrested in US today". I spent a few hours at the computer that night researching the 'secret' FEMA concentration camps mentioned to in that thread, and this one unfortunately has been on my mind (AARRGGHH thanx alot brucie!   ;~)

The Ohio Incinerator

They expect the worst - they do not expect the unthinkable. -- Charlotte Delbo

Ohio Incinerator: It is there.

And, "friends" have supplied me with a current video of the place. The good news is that the place has not changed since originally filmed back in the early 90s. In other words, it appears that it was abandoned shortly after the first filming of it.

It was built by the Vienna Ohio Air National Guard (it is about three hours south of Vienna, Ohio near Antrim, Ohio). Their (Air Guard) security said it was being built for use as a manure storage facility. (WE know the Govt. has a great interest in storing manure as they are so full of it -- LOL).

It sits on a 100 acre site owned (at least, at the time/don't know for sure now) by the Govt.

There are 10 ovens (20'X30' and 40' tall), all built in rows of five each and facing each other, and situated in a ravine dug out of the hillside, with about 40' between the face of the ovens. The doors on theses ovens are about a foot thick, approximately 15' square and slide up and down along metal guides.

An Owens Corning Engineer was there at one time and said it appeared to be an Auschwitz -style crematorium (at about ten times the scale).

Two days after it was filmed, one of the film crew had his house "arsoned." (Probably talked about it on the phone -- my guess).

What the "Friend" saw/filmed today was:

Everything from the first filming, except: the one oven door that was installed had been removed as were all the other oven doors; the pre-fabbed railroad track sections were gone; and, the troughs from each oven had been filled in.

An abandoned construction project that probably cost about two million up to the point of abandonment.

A 20 story tall construction (tower) crane sat in the middle of it all.

The rebar (about 1&1/2" diameter) sticking out of the top of the unfinished walls (about five feet left to go) had rusted and left stains down the side of the walls. There were literally tons of unused, still stacked, rusting rebar bundles.

The planking for the concrete pouring along the top of the oven walls was still in place.

There was a "reception" building measuring approximetely 300 feet by 150 feet and about 50 feet tall that sat nearby the ovens. This building also had work to be done on an outside retaining wall (about three feet left to go) that appeared to have sat as long as the rest of it. On the east (300') side of this building, there was an "unloading platform" that went inside the building and sat approximately 10-12' above the main floor (at this time, there was a cement mixer and some other vehicles and trailers parked upon it).

Easily, tractor trailers could back into the building to dump the cargo into 60 foot long, 8' wide and 4' deep, open-topped (tar-lined) rail cars that were still on site. I imagine these cars would have had tractors to pull them on the rail lines to the ovens. This building, on the ground floor and opposite the unloading platform, had 8 (1'X3') windows at ground level (I imagine for cleaning purposes). A tunnel (outside the main building) under the place where the trucks would have backed up before getting onto the platform (inside the building) had grated floor drains running the length of it, with drains though the ceiling of the tunnel.

A hillside opposite and cati-corner of the first set of ovens was partially (about 1/2) dug out, presumably for another set of ovens.

Inside the oven complex it appeared as if the place had been abandoned, but not forgotten. There was a huge generator box trailer (double axle, dual tires/still good), there was a few electric generator motors, a rebar bending device. Inside the "reception" building were a few vehicles, one (a dump truck) with temporary tags, and in the tunnel outside the reception building was a Mack tractor with expired tags hooked to a "gravel-hauling" trailer with plates good to May/02. My friend says we can and will track the plate numbers.

This place was massive, cost the taxpayers millions, and was most likely abandoned because it had been captured on film ('92 or so). One of the questions I have, is where, if at all, did they build the "new" one? Another question I have, is what were they thinking when they built this one????????!!!!!!!!?????????

There is no doubt in my mind that this crematorium was meant for us, and I think you could say if not for the Ohio militia, it would most likely be a fully functioning crematorium right now (actually, it wouldn't take much to finish it and get it working).

"The one who does not remember history is bound to live through it again."



There's a rather chilling aerial photo of that facility at the link. The article sounds as if it was written by a student, but the information given seems too detailed to be a fabrication.

Is there a 'Catter or two living near Zanesville Ohio who could give us a first-hand acct of what is or isn't there .... and (hopefully)SAY ALL THIS ISN'T SO?!?