Send CathInfo's owner Matthew a gift from his Amazon wish list:
https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/25M2B8RERL1UO

Author Topic: cувєr Polygon  (Read 2772 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

cувєr Polygon
« on: June 11, 2021, 10:55:47 AM »
This covers the cувєr Polygon issue, and the important part starts at 8:40: The exercise involves a simulated attack on the financial services & supply sector, and we've already seen attacks on Colonial Pipeline, and JBS this year, among others, which seem to reflect the targets of the cувєr Polygon exercise.

There are some powerful organizations involved such as ICANN, IBM, Deutche Bank, Euronews, Sberberg Group, as well as other companies such as NITEC (based in Kazakhstan), and Xalq Banki (based in Uzbekistan).

Skip to 8:40.  Really, just skip to 8:40.


Re: cувєr Polygon
« Reply #1 on: June 24, 2021, 09:29:21 PM »
Deep state telegraphing their intention.

There seems to be some sort of satanic requirement to tell the narrative before perpetrating the evil act.

I am not sure whether this is to do with pride or whether God somehow forces this to happen to warn good people who are paying attention.  I think the former.

It may come from a perverted sense of wanting to feel that their cause is righteous.  The end justifies the means but they want the sticking plaster of legitimacy to make themselves feel like their cause is just.

Communists do this.  They torture people, threaten their families, fake evidence but they get all of the legal paperwork typed perfectly, stamped in triplicate and witnessed dated and filed away as though the admin process signifies that justice was done and you got a fair trail. 


Offline Matthew

  • Mod
Re: cувєr Polygon
« Reply #2 on: June 25, 2021, 05:52:42 AM »
Yes I'm concerned about this Cyber Polygon thing too. When they do an "exercise" it either means the real thing will break out at the same time (9/11) or it will happen with a couple months (Covid "pandemic").

Either way, we should be concerned.

Go buy a Blu-ray DVD burner for less than $100 and a stack of 50 BD-R discs for $40. Each disk can hold 24.5 GB of information. And optical media is impervious to EMP attacks as well as floods.

If you don't have it in your house, you don't own it. Period.

Brainstorm what you would miss if the Internet went down for 3 years, 30 years, or forever. What information, what videos, what resources, what PDFs, what books, what software?

Right now it's super easy to download anything within seconds. We're so spoiled. But we could lose it OH SO EASILY. If you only knew how fragile the system was.

Offline Ladislaus

  • Supporter
Re: cувєr Polygon
« Reply #3 on: June 25, 2021, 06:06:37 AM »
Yes I'm concerned about this cувєr Polygon thing too. When they do an "exercise" it either means the real thing will break out at the same time (9/11) or it will happen with a couple months (CÖVÌD "pandemic").

Either way, we should be concerned.

Go buy a Blu-ray DVD burner for less than $100 and a stack of 50 BD-R discs for $40. Each disk can hold 24.5 GB of information. And optical media is impervious to EMP attacks as well as floods.

If you don't have it in your house, you don't own it. Period.

Brainstorm what you would miss if the Internet went down for 3 years, 30 years, or forever. What information, what videos, what resources, what PDFs, what books, what software?

Right now it's super easy to download anything within seconds. We're so spoiled. But we could lose it OH SO EASILY. If you only knew how fragile the system was.

This is not a bad idea.  Except of course you’d need to keep a computer and BluRay reader protected in a Farraday cage so you had a means to access it later since an EMP would wipe these out also.  And of course the power grid would go down for a very long time.

Offline Matthew

  • Mod
Re: cувєr Polygon
« Reply #4 on: June 25, 2021, 07:45:55 AM »
Yes, which leads to another idea --

If it were possible to be more SELECTIVE about what you're backing up, you could burn it to DVD-R or even CD-R, because there are exponentially more of those drives out there in existence. Plus they're cheaper.

So there are different options.

Also, you could get a regular magnetic HD and just fill-er-up with data, and put that in a faraday cage. That would just need to be plugged into a working PC and you'd be in business.

So there are many options.

And if you can be REALLY selective, the safest/best is to buy books or at least print out important PDFs. But paper/toner cost money and paper takes up space -- so you have to be discerning. You can't just print out an archive of 1000s of PDFs to hardcopy.