31E - Internment / Resettlement Specialist
National Guard Job Advertisement. Hmmm, I wonder what this is for? Can you say, “FEMA Camp?”
The Job Description from the National Guard website is available below the video… just in case it disappears.
31E - INTERNMENT / RESETTLEMENT SPECIALIST
Description
Internment / Resettlement Specialists in the Army are primarily responsible for day-to-day operations in a military confinement/correctional facility or detention/internment facility. Internment / Resettlement Specialists provide rehabilitative, health, welfare, and security to US military prisoners within a confinement or correctional facility; provide custody, control, supervision and security to internees within a detention/internment facility; conduct inspections; prepare written reports; coordinate activities of prisoners/internees and staff personnel.
Some of your duties as an Internment / Resettlement Specialist may include:
- Assisting with supervision and management of confinement and detention operations
- Providing internal or external security to confinement/corrections facilities or detention/internment facilities
- Providing custody, control, supervision and escort to all security levels of U.S. military prisoners or internees/detainees
- Counseling and guidance to individual prisoners within a rehabilitative program
- Preparing or reviewing reports and records of prisoners/internees and programs
Training
Job training for a Internment / Resettlement Specialist requires 19 weeks, one day of One Station Unit Training (OSUT) which includes Basic Training and Advanced Individual Training. Part of the training is spent in the classroom and part in the field. Some of the skills you’ll learn about:
- Military laws and jurisdictions
- Level of Force Procedures
- Unarmed Self-Defense Techniques
- Police Deviance and Ethics Procedures
- Interpersonal Communications Skills
- Close confinement operations
- Search and restraint procedures
- Use of firearms
- Custody and control procedures
Skills
Helpful attributes include:
- An ability to think and react quickly
- An ability to remain calm in stressful situations
- An interest in law enforcement and crime prevention
Responsibilities
Advanced level Internment / Resettlement Specialist supervise and train other Soldiers within the same discipline. As an advanced level Internment / Resettlement Specialist, you may be:
- Responsible for all personnel working in the confinement/correctional facility, including security, logistical, and administrative management of the prisoner/internee population
- Supervising and establishing all administrative, logistical and food support operations, confinement/correctional, custodial, treatment, and rehabilitative activities
- Conducting stand-alone operations, providing command and control, staff planning, administration and logistical services, and custody/control for the operation of an Enemy Prisoner of War/Civilian Internee (EPW/CI) camp, detainee internment facility
- Conducting stand-alone operations, providing command and control, staff planning, administration and logistical services, and custody/control for the operation of a displaced civilian (DC) resettlement facility
Civilian Related
The skills you’ll learn as a Internment / Resettlement Specialist will help prepare you for a future with federal, state, county or city law enforcement agencies. You might also be able to pursue a career as a security guard with industrial firms, airports or other businesses and institutions.
Source: http://www.nationalguard.com/careers/mos/description.php?mos_code=31E
Tags: 31E - Internment / Resettlement Specialist, and security, Army, conduct inspections, control, coordinate activities of prisoners/internees and staff personnel, day-to-day operations, detention/internment facility, FEMA camp, health, internees, military confinement/correctional facility, National Guard Job Advertisement, prepare written reports, provide custody, security, Specialists provide rehabilitative, supervision, U.S. military prisoners, US military prisoners within a confinement or correctional facility, welfare


















August 19th, 2009 at 5:38 pm
Funny thing, I just went to the site where this ad originally was, I know it was there, I saw it. It’s gone.
I went to show it to my fiancee, and I couldn’t find it. He believes me now, though. He used to think I was a nut; I’ve had to move slow with him. I showed him the Denver Airport, and the Georgia Guidestones, and he’s no longer calling me a nut.
I’ve been researching for a year now, and there are a lot of things I’d like to show him, but I know he’s not ready for most of it.
I’ve been trying to show him how easy it would be for “them” to exterminate a vast amount of us, but I don’t think he really believes that they’d actually go through with it, what with military intervention to get everyone to take the shot.
Unfortunately, for a variety of health reasons, I’m one of those that they really push to get a shot every year.
August 19th, 2009 at 7:35 pm
That is exactly why we “snag” videos and content so that they can be posted where they won’t disappear. We provide the link to where we got it (for reference, attrition and validation), but you’d be surprised how often the originals “go missing” these days.
And yes, it’s really difficult to explain these topics to people (sheeple) if they are still plugged into the matrix. It’s devastating to learn that our “reality” is not at all what we’ve been programmed to believe.
That has a lot to do with why EndGameNow.com came into being. Trying to just verbally “tell” someone about these things without videos, documentation and links to sources… it’s impossible. This site exists specifically for informational, educational and research purposes first and foremost. We provide as many differing views to topics as are available so that our visitors can draw their own conclusions or be provoked into researching further for themselves.
The more you learn, the more you realize that truth really IS stranger than fiction.
August 30th, 2009 at 2:42 am
[...] I felt it was time for someone such as me to publicly broach the subject. Needless to say, the response was overwhelming. Even more interesting is the fact that the web link to the National Guard Military Occupational Specialty (MOS) of “Internment/Resettlement Specialist” that I included in my column was removed shortly after the column was published. Was this a coincidence? [Added by EGN - See: http://endgamenow.com/new-world-order/31e-internment-resettlement-specialist/ [...]