Here’s how VULNERABLE our global internet system is: Declan Ganley
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Were to cut those underseas cable.
I've heard this discussed as a kind of an early you know if they were to make an acute military move beyond this unrestricted warfare they've been waging.
But actually, you know, go into full kinetic yes, but wouldn't that cut them off as well?
Yeah but, but they're ready for that, I would argue.
So if you know you're going to do that and you have your own closed network in a continent that's continental terrestrial network, and you are planning for an event like that and you have stockpiled the things that you would need to have before the internet went down and you had transportation systems that were resilient enough to operate without the internet,
you could do that and look if the internet goes out.
You know today and it goes out globally that the approximately 550 global subsea cables were cut.
The internet goes down, the existing satellite systems that you've heard about go dark.
They won't work because they all use ground gateways and ground relay systems that ultimately require and rely on these subsea cables.
So you will have this cascading domino effect where your phone, your smartphone, will not work, your tv will not work, because the ip based signals that are producing that that tv show and putting it onto your tv.
That's going to all fail.
The logistics systems that supply that, that the, the wholesalers use to supply supermarkets, will also fail.
There will be no flights.
Flight aircraft will be grounded because of the ip Based systems that they rely upon.
Gas stations will not be able to get refueled because of the supply.
When that happens, if that happens, the last thing anybody's going to be thinking of in you know Poughipsky is is Taiwan being invaded right now and they're not going to think about it or care about it, probably for months, because they're not even going to know it happened for at least days and probably longer.
The first thing that will work reliably will be a transistor radio um, and everybody should have one, but they're still going to.
There'll be guys in bootstrapping um radio stations to get them, get the older tech, some of the older stuff, turned back on so that they will be able to broadcast, and that scenario is not some dystopian.
Oh gosh, it would be so hard to do.
It's really like you could, I could do it for approximately and I know i'm safe with this number 60 million dollars will do that job.