[00:00:00] [SPEAKER_00]: Brief final question, you liken yourself to Cassandra, the Greek mythological figure who
[00:00:04] [SPEAKER_00]: could see the future and the prophecies but was never believed.
[00:00:09] [SPEAKER_00]: What is something you see happening in the near future that we should be taking more seriously?
[00:00:14] [SPEAKER_01]: Well, I do think that the press needs a consistent narrative about the danger that Trump poses.
[00:00:28] [SPEAKER_01]: The press needs a consistent narrative.
[00:00:30] [SPEAKER_01]: The press needs a consistent narrative.
[00:00:32] [SPEAKER_01]: The press needs a consistent narrative.
[00:00:34] [SPEAKER_01]: Something will happen in October as it always does.
[00:00:37] [SPEAKER_01]: The Russians, as I said earlier, are very active in this election.
[00:00:44] [SPEAKER_02]: Latent simulations about coming cyber attacks.
[00:00:47] [SPEAKER_02]: The opening speakers of it was the Russian prime minister, the weft, but it was done
[00:00:52] [SPEAKER_02]: in one of these cyber attacks of the cyber pandemic will be on the financial system to some degree.
[00:01:01] [SPEAKER_02]: So for example, if you look at cyber polygon, it was the weft but it was done in partnership
[00:01:06] [SPEAKER_02]: with Russia's largest bank, Spurbank and was one of the opening speakers of it was
[00:01:11] [SPEAKER_02]: the Russian prime minister and things like that which is in direct contrast for example
[00:01:16] [SPEAKER_02]: to the supposed Russian hacker narrative that's been propagated extensively in US mainstream
[00:01:20] [SPEAKER_02]: media.
[00:01:20] [SPEAKER_02]: The US government had no problem and no criticism participating in cyber polygon and no criticism
[00:01:26] [SPEAKER_02]: of the weft for host to co-hosting their cyber simulation, cyber attack simulation with
[00:01:34] [SPEAKER_02]: the supposed hackers at large that supposedly interfered in the US elections.