Y2K Emergency Update

by Jim Redden; www.cinemonkey.com

7/99

The official word is this: The Millennium Bug is not a problem. Don't worry about Y2K. The governments of the world have everything under control. Maybe you should put away a little food, water, and money, but not much. Prepare like you would for a winter storm ... and no more.

That's what the federal government says on its official Y2K website, operated by the President's Council on Year 2000 Conversion. And that's what the establishment press says about the programming glitch that could cause millions of computers around the world to crash just after midnight on January 1, 2000. But it doesn't take much research to learn that the government and the mainstream media are lying. Most experts, who have written numerous books and articles on the subject, believe the Millennium Bug will cause power failures, food shortages, water disruptions and other "infrastructure" problems.

Consider these items gleaned from the establishment press and alternative news sources:

This was a major theme at a recent United Nations conference on the Millennium Bug. Representatives from more than 170 nations met at the U.N. headquarters in New York on June 23 for the Second Global Y2K National Coordinators Meeting. According to a report by the British Broadcasting Corporation, the delegates "voiced concern about the potential for panic among an ill-informed general public."

According to a March 4, 1999 report by World Net Daily Internet news reporter David M. Bresnahan, "The Federal Emergency Management Agency has issued plans which include the use of the military as a domestic police force in the event of Y2K civil disturbances. The plan also provides for the movement of large numbers of people into shelters in the event of a disaster associated with Y2K computer failures. The FEMA plan of action for the Y2K crisis is outlined in the report 'Contingency and Consequence Management Planning for Year 2000 Conversion: A Guide for State and Local Emergency Managers.' The plan was recently made available to local governments throughout the country."

The specter of public panic has prevented the U.S. government from dealing candidly with the Y2K issue. According to the February 18, 1999 edition of Wired News, the government doesn't even know what to tell its own employees. "White House officials fear federal agencies that advise employees to begin personal Y2K preparations could unduly alarm the public," Wired News reported. "The problem of what to tell workers has quickly become a thorny one for government officials who are trying to balance candor with discretion."

For more information on this a related topics, go to the government FEMA site, as well as The Drudge Report.

Copyright © 1999 by Jim Redden.

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