"Cyber pandemic"? Schwab is off his meds again.
There was a post-apocalyptic fiction novel called "Lights Out" by an author writing under the pseudonym of Half Fast, I think, that circulated on the internet a few years ago. You can probably still find copies of it laying around the 'net if you look. I find it interesting that the alleged "white supremacists" chose that for their operational title.
I also wonder just how much of this "white supremacist" government-generated chatter is really just a cover for all the hostile-state actors and saboteurs that the BidenHarris regime is allowing to pour across the southern borders with impunity. What makes them think it is "white supremacists" if they can't catch any of them to verify?
I'm informed that there are 9 specific substations strung across the US that, if knocked out, would cause a cascading grid failure similar to the one that struck the northeastern US in the 1990's, but longer-lasting and nation-wide. I don't think their battery-powered Hot Wheels cars would do very well under such conditions.
Make no mistake - the actual targets of these inconvenience attacks know the exact why of them, but have not yet figured out a way to tie it to "white supremacists", so they keep it close to the vest until they can, and the attackers seem not to be interested in claiming their "messages", as they are probably pretty sure their opponents know the why of it, too, and thus feel no need to brag.
Loose lips sink ships, as they say, and their ship ain't been sunk yet, which seems to verify that old axiom.
I personally think there is a good possibility that theses are just warning shots across the bow, serving notice to someone that they'd best fix a few things before it gets all out of hand, but who knows?
Isn't it interesting that out of all these attacks, the only one to get major press was a minor one that inconvenienced a Drag Queen show? Things that make you go "hmmmm...".
.
There was a post-apocalyptic fiction novel called "Lights Out" by an author writing under the pseudonym of Half Fast, I think, that circulated on the internet a few years ago. You can probably still find copies of it laying around the 'net if you look. I find it interesting that the alleged "white supremacists" chose that for their operational title.
I also wonder just how much of this "white supremacist" government-generated chatter is really just a cover for all the hostile-state actors and saboteurs that the BidenHarris regime is allowing to pour across the southern borders with impunity. What makes them think it is "white supremacists" if they can't catch any of them to verify?
I'm informed that there are 9 specific substations strung across the US that, if knocked out, would cause a cascading grid failure similar to the one that struck the northeastern US in the 1990's, but longer-lasting and nation-wide. I don't think their battery-powered Hot Wheels cars would do very well under such conditions.
Make no mistake - the actual targets of these inconvenience attacks know the exact why of them, but have not yet figured out a way to tie it to "white supremacists", so they keep it close to the vest until they can, and the attackers seem not to be interested in claiming their "messages", as they are probably pretty sure their opponents know the why of it, too, and thus feel no need to brag.
Loose lips sink ships, as they say, and their ship ain't been sunk yet, which seems to verify that old axiom.
I personally think there is a good possibility that theses are just warning shots across the bow, serving notice to someone that they'd best fix a few things before it gets all out of hand, but who knows?
Isn't it interesting that out of all these attacks, the only one to get major press was a minor one that inconvenienced a Drag Queen show? Things that make you go "hmmmm...".
.