Saturday, December 19, 2020

WEF Predicted Global Cyberattack In July 2020


Are Globalists Setting The Stage For A Cyber Pandemic?



The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) recently published a document alerting of a significant cyberattack that compromises “U.S. government agencies, critical infrastructure entities, and private sector organizations.”

According to A.P., the hack, which an unnamed official dubbed “the worst hacking case in the history of America,” was far-reaching, “compromising” Federal agencies and “critical infrastructure”.

National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) was also reportedly affected. Politico is reporting “sources directly familiar with the matter” as stating: “The Energy Department and National Nuclear Security Administration, which maintains the U.S. nuclear weapons stockpile, have evidence that hackers accessed their networks as part of an extensive espionage operation that has affected at least half a dozen federal agencies.”

Senator Deb Fischer, who is chair of the subcommittee that oversees our nuclear forces, said, “I have great confidence in the safety and security of our nuclear weapons. Nevertheless, I’m troubled by reports that hackers accessed the National Nuclear Security Administration’s network.”



For those following the World Economic Forum, the cyberattack that we are currently witnessing is not all that shocking. That is because WEF has been strongly cautioning the world that the next “crisis” would be dealing with cybersecurity.

In a Round Table on “The Great Reset in Bible Prophecy” late last month with Jan Markell and Amir Tsarfati, Pastor Barry Stagner discussed the WEF’s clear and open dialogue of a future large-scale cybersecurity breach.

“One of the things that just happened this past year on July 8th, the spokesman for the world economic forum came out and said clearly and openly without hesitation that there is coming another crisis very soon that will make COVID-19 pale in comparison,” Stagner explained. “It will have a greater economic impact by far than COVID-19 has had on the global economy, and he said that crisis is in relation to cybersecurity.”

In other words,” Pastor Barry continued, “there is coming a cyberattack, and media outlets are reporting it all over the world that there have been countless cyber threats on the power grids of different countries, including the united states. Every single day, thousands of attacks have been thwarted on the power grid in the U.S.”


“They’re already pitching this. They’re already greasing the skids, so to speak, preparing us. That the next wave is coming, and it’s going to be far worse than this wave, and it’s going to come in the form of a cybersecurity breach,” he reiterated.


The comments Barry Stagner was referencing came from Klaus Schwab, who warned of a so-called “cyber pandemic” back in July:

“We all know but still pay insufficient attention to the frightening scenario of a comprehensive cyberattack, which would bring to a complete halt the power supply, transportation, hospital services, our society as a whole. The COVID-19 crisis would be seen, in this respect, as a small disturbance in comparison to a major cyberattack… It is important to use the COVID-19 crisis as a timely opportunity to reflect on the lessons cybersecurity community can draw and improve our preparedness for a potential cyber pandemic.”

In June, WEF also published an article titled, “What the COVID-19 pandemic teaches us about cybersecurity – and how to prepare for the inevitable global cyberattack” [emphasis added].

In this article, they urge the public that what they should really fear is a “COVID-like incident” they call “cyber-COVID”:

We should prepare for a COVID-like global cyber pandemic that will spread faster and further than a biological virus, with an equal or greater economic impact

Our “new normal” isn’t COVID-19 itself – it’s COVID-like incidents.

And a cyber pandemic is probably as inevitable as a future disease pandemic. The time to start thinking about the response is – as always – yesterday.








No comments: