GARY MCKINNON INTERVIEW 2015: WHY HE THINKS, HIS CASE WAS A PSY-OP
RICHPLANET TV
Forbidden Knowledge TV | Aug 7,
2016 | Alexandra Bruce
This is a great, intimate
interview with Scottish Sys Admin, Gary McKinnon, a self-described "Nerd
Who Went Too Far", describing his unexpected experience of becoming an
Enemy of the State of the US. McKinnon weighs in on the veracity of the
Apollo Moon Missions, as well as on the missions to Mars and much, much more in
this unpretentious and unprecedented interview.
In 2002, Gary McKinnon was
arrested for visiting the unprotected pages on NASA's network and on other US
military computer systems.
From his basement in London,
using nothing more than a cheap Windows PC and a 56k modem, he viewed the files
of the world's most powerful military organizations.
What McKinnon did cannot be
construed as "hacking", because there was virtually no security on
these websites he visited.
McKinnon did not need to do any
hacking to gain access to these files. The files were publicly available for
all who had access to the Internet, using Windows platforms on PCs, requiring
no security passwords. He says he saw IPs from countries all over the world
visiting these sites at the same time that he was on them.
Nonetheless, the US Government
requested his extradition and put him through Hell for over a decade.
What was the real reason for his
public lynching? Were the masses being psychologically trained to envision a
new type of terror threat?
Possibly - but McKinnon did access
a NASA project charged with air-brushing out the UFO images captured by
satellites, as described by NASA employee, Donna Hare, in Dr. Steven Greer's
2001 'Disclosure Project'.
McKinnon also stumbled upon an
Excel file with a list of "Non-terrestrial Officers" as as well
"Non-terrestrial Ships", on the site of the US Navy, which named
names and named vessels.
For whatever it's worth, in the
urban legend known as the Montauk Project, the US Navy is alleged to have long
been deeply involved in interstellar and interdimensional exploration.
No comments:
Post a Comment