AI Could Be Both a Threat and a Solution...
With the power of AI, no one will be able to hide, including illegal voter registrants.
Prescott, AZ February 9, 2024… In an alarming press conference with Sherrif Rick Jones, Butler County Ohio, the Sheriff shared some of his briefing with the FBI and cybersecurity experts that sheriffs from around the nation received last week. Since I can’t do justice to Sheriff Jones’ remarks, the full video can be viewed here, until of course, YouTube deems it unfit for public consumption.
The point of the press conference was to explain the, for the most part ignored, border offensive against the United States. In the unrestricted warfare battle plan, cyber-attacks are a centerpiece. We must appreciate that America is a completely electrified nation. Every aspect of our society relies on electricity from cell phones and household appliances to gasoline pipelines and filling stations, natural gas pumping stations that supply the energy to heat our homes, and even our elections that are heavily dependent on ballot calculation machines. Our cyber-border is as open as the physical southern border with millions of illegal aliens bum-rushing an overwhelmed Border Patrol.
From dispatch to response coordination, emergency service organizations are facing an ever-expanding threat. Even our military and civil service agencies are under constant cyber attacks, and many of those attacks result in successful intrusion to cause chaos. What is the purpose of chaos? Chaos breeds the demand for control. And we have seen the doctrine of “never let a good crisis go to waste.”
What is the cybersecurity defense plan?
Most communities across the United States do not have an adequate cybersecurity defense plan if they have one at all. I don’t say this to be critical, but to illustrate the critical urgency of response. Rural county sheriffs do not have the resources they need for most of their functions, let alone high-tech protection of records and response capabilities. Even metropolitan counties like the behemoth Maricopa County do not have sufficient cybersecurity protections.
Even the federal government with its endless stream of money can’t stay ahead of the cyber-border assault, which polite society does not want to call a war.
“The Pentagon has revealed that a security breach of US Department of Defense travel records may have compromised the personal information of nearly 30,000 military and civilian staffers.”1
But that does not mean we throw our hands up and say, oh well our adversaries got us, let’s move on. It means that we get serious about hardening our cyber-border and fund a local grid-wide defensive strategy and at the same time a local service provider cybersecurity defensive strategy with effective tactical actions.
WASHINGTON - The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), National Security Agency (NSA), and Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), along with key U.S. and international government agencies published a Joint Cybersecurity Advisory today on malicious activity by a People’s Republic of China (PRC) state-sponsored cyber actor, known as Volt Typhoon, to compromise critical infrastructure and associated actions that should be urgently undertaken by all organizations.2 February 7, 2024
And of course, there is an election protection component to this major exposure. Over the last two decades, we have become overly reliant on weakly protected cyber-systems to administer elections for local, state, and federal offices. These too, while the propaganda media complex has vilified those of us calling out the exposure, are at high risk of being penetrated and manipulated.
Fontes claims, “We’ve got it all figured out”
In an interview with the Daily ignal, Adrian Fontes, occupant of the Arizona Secretary of State office, says “We’ve got it all figured out. It’s one list [of voters] and we classify the voters with whether or not they’ve got their stuff [proof of citizenship]. We’ve been doing it for a while,” about the question of positive identification of American citizens to verify their right to vote in state and federal elections. He went on to say, “…there’s no reason not to trust voters.”3
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