Like many Australians, I had just finished watching a live telecast of Donald Trump’s inspiring speech at the US Republican Conference following his miraculous survival of an assassination attempt, when suddenly the screen pixelated then died.
Trump recounted how he had survived a sniper’s bullet which nipped his ear just as he turned his head to look at a screen showing illegal immigration numbers, but the commentary immediately afterwards suffered the equivalent of a sudden cardiac arrest.
We didn’t know why, but at the same moment, other news channels also went on the blink, along with supermarket checkouts, banking systems, a wide range of commercial enterprises and health systems.
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Lines formed at airport checkouts as flights were cancelled globally and aircraft at some international airports were placed on holding patterns as runways were occupied by planes unable to take off.
We were soon informed by a couple of stalwarts on Sky News that it was all the result of a “glitch” with a Microsoft systems update by US-based cyber security firm CrowdStrike.
Chaos reigned, but we were assured it was not the result of a cyber attack. What the —- How could this be?
My mind works in strange ways but it tripped back more than a quarter century in its own version of the Tardis to New Year’s Eve, 1999, when we were all warned that what had just happened was about to happen.
The Y2k Bug, or Millenium Bug, was about to bite and civilisation as we knew it was about to crumble - planes would drop out of the sky, public utilities such as water, sewerage, power, food supplies would suddenly be disrupted as clocks ticked past midnight.
This was all supposed to happen because computer programmers had abbreviated years to the last two digits - 1999 was 99 and 2000 was just 00 and “experts” predicted that the computers wouldn’t be able to distinguish between the end of the previous century and the dawning of the new millennium.
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Governments around the world invested billions in attempts to offset or cope with possible after-effects and many gullible citizens stocked up on canned food, water, cash, weapons and other necessities. But when midnight had passed it was quickly obvious that nothing bad was happening. Civilisation survived along with its computers, and governments claimed credit for their “preventative action”.
According to the University of Queensland’s John Quiggan: “Despite an expenditure estimated at $A12 billion in Australia (Campbell 2000) and as much as $US 500 billion for the world as a whole, no serious ex post evaluation has been undertaken. In this paper, it will be argued that, although some relatively minor problems were prevented, and some collateral benefits were realised, most money spent specifically on Y2K compliance exercises was wasted. Moreover, it will be argued, evidence available early in 1999, should have been sufficient to justify the adoption of a less costly strategy of ‘fix on failure’...”
That was then, this is now. A much used quote from the new likely US Democrat Presidential candidate Kamala Harris following Joe Biden’s highly anticipated withdrawal, “What can be, unburdened by what has been,” might actually have a glimmer of sense in this context. But I’m sure she wouldn’t have known that in between fits of the laughter which would put Queensland Premier Steven ‘Giggles’ Miles to shame.
If what we thought might happen back then actually has happened almost on a similar scale and there really was no malicious intent, just imagine what could happen if there was an actual cyber attack by such a powerful player as China, Russia, North Korea or an Evil Axis of all three. No need to drop a bomb, just unleash TikTok.
The vulnerability of our ever-more digitally dependent way of life seems incomprehensible but it’s obviously a reality. More than 8.5 million computers around the world were affected, and Home Affairs Minister ClareO’Neil told the ABC it could take up to a fortnight to get all our systems up and running:
"CrowdStrike informed the meeting this morning (Sunday) that they are now close to rolling out an automatic fix to the issue with their update, as is Microsoft. This should increase the speed at which systems across the economy are back online," Ms O'Neil said.
“While some supermarkets were still experiencing issues, there was no fear of food shortages and no need to stockpile, she said.
“Ms O'Neil warned the public to be ‘extremely cautious’ of scammers trying to capitalise on the outage…”
All this should ring huge alarm bells against moves to introduce digital IDs and digital currencies or to believe all our governments tell us is for our own benefit. In fact, trust in government edicts is probably now at an all-time low.
Perhaps this latest mass outage was entirely innocent, but some have already pointed to links between CrowdStrike, its major shareholders Blackrock and Vanguard (both with more than 16 million shares) and claimed ties with the World Economic Forum.
That’s the international group calling for a New World Order, led by the Bond-villainesque Klaus Schwab. A few years ago, it featured a promotion with the message, “You will own nothing and you will be happy …”
Another Presidential candidate, Robert F Kennedy Jr has also warned that Black Rock, State Street, and Vanguard are “robbing Americans of the ability to own homes.” He claims they are on track to own “60 percent of American family homes by 2030”.
Investigative journalist Whitney Webb has also warned of Blackrock’s manipulation of carbon credits and Bitcoin to “tokenize everything”.
Conspiracy theories? You be the judge, but remember, what were dismissed as wild conspiracies and misinformation a few short years ago on topics such as covid vaccine mandates, effectiveness and safety are now widely accepted as fact.