It
was with a dose of dark irony that some of us watched the British
news headlines on the 30th July, the same morning as London based
Gary McKinnon had his Law
Lords appeal rejected with regard his
extradition to the USA. The ironic twist came from the fact that the
primary headline besides Gary’s plight was the fact that many energy
companies were expected to raise UK fuel bills by an astonishing 70%
- this despite the likes of BP forecasting their highest ever
quarterly profit up 56% to £4.3bn [$8.6bn].
Anyone who has followed
the case of Gary since his arrest by the Hi Tech Crimes Unit in
March 2002 may be aware that one of the main factors which catalysed
his actions was the fact that:
“In Britain the
elderly are dying each Winter as they are being made to choose
between heating and eating.”
McKinnon sincerely believed that if new energy systems that could
help change this situation were being closeted by the military
industrial complex, we had a right to know. Having had a long-term
interest in the UFO issue since childhood as well as having seen the
2001 Disclosure Project in action – Gary knew the inextricable link
between the numerous types of over-unity, anti-gravity or quantum
flux and the advanced vehicles operated by visiting intelligences
and probably terrestrial above-government factions. Thus began a
novel search for real information.
Gary laughs at the idea
he is an efficient hacker. Using basic, self-taught PC and network
skills he proceeded to access several of the main military networks,
including NASA, and took a look around. He admits he should face a
court for his exploits and this was meant to be a short jail term or
community order to be done in the UK – however, for various reasons
his “crime” has been hijacked by US authorities and he faces a long,
harsh jail term on US soil. Some officials have claimed they want to
“see him fry” when he gets extradited. Given McKinnon can be viewed
as a truth seeking activist on UFO and exopolitical issues, could
the wider community have done more to highlight his cause and even
prevent the amplified term he is now facing?
McKinnon not only
found the odd gem of significant exopolitical data, he also found
that the US’s military and intelligence electronic networks were, to
understate it, vastly insecure. Using a bought piece of software
[which eventually helped him to be traced and caught] called
Remotely Anywhere, McKinnon was able to browse servers and
individual networked PCs as if the main administrator. Passwords on
the various networks were often left blank or to default and even
caught in the act a couple of times the intruder managed to blag his
way out of trouble as a ‘sys admin doing security checks’. Many
people believe that the over-zealous targeting of Gary by the US
authorities is down to the humiliation those in charge of network
security and their superiors must have felt. In fact Gary has been
pursued when he claimed that numerous foreign IP addresses were
regularly doing the same as he – a significant amount from China. So
it’s likely the Pentagon saw that some early retirements were taken
and personnel moved round to pretend that this was a momentary flaw
but the reality is that for years prior to McKinnon - there had been
a hacker free-for-all on transnational military/intel networks. It’s
unfortunate that a UK citizen with [whatever your moral views on his
activities] humanitarian intent should now be facing a 60 year jail
term when possibly more threatening actors are still free behind
their respective computer screens.
Gary had seen the
testimony of former
NASA employee Donna Hare as part of the Disclosure Project
whistleblowers. She had mentioned a specific building where
air-brushing of satellite images took place before their release to
the wider public. After much searching – McKinnon claims to have
found examples of this practice – including folders marked ‘touched’
and ‘untouched’. One image especially showed a huge,
vivid object over the earth prior to photoshop cleansing but he
claims the filesize prevented him downloading this to his home PC in
London as this was still the era of 56K dial-up connections. Even
more interesting although equally unprovable are a couple of other
items he located. It’s worth remembering that McKinnon spent
numerous hours online trawling these networks and finding mostly
regular material – it was his obsessive nature on the embargoed UFO
issue that pushed him onwards.
By the time of his
arrest, Gary had found two items that have been endlessly debated in
the field ever since.
First was a list of ‘non-terrestrial
officers’ and second was a spreadsheet detailing ‘fleet-to-fleet
transfers’.
Given that some
researchers claim a separate, black-project secret space program
exists with much of the usual NASA actions being more of a public
front, it seems very possible to me that a covert space program,
perhaps with historical and current support from ET groups, is
operating and of course requires a crew. Maybe instead ‘non
terrestrial officers’ means a group not from this planet but
operating from here? The reality could of course be more basic –
someone suggested this means ‘satellite repair staff’?! Just as
interesting is the spreadsheet on fleet-to-fleet transfers. When we
think of fleets we usually think “ships” yet Gary claims to have
checked the names he saw of the vessels against records of all
sea-going [ie: naval] ships and found not one match. It’s likely
that a fleet could then refer once more to a non-disclosed
NASA/Pentagon fleet as part of the previously mention covert space
program.
Again the debate has
on occasion tended to play down what the findings could mean but I
would view the possibilities within an open framework where
considerations are made for the fact that firstly we know black
projects are decades ahead of what’s publicly known and seen and
secondly we have evidence of ET visitation and human/ET liaison.
Thus we need to employ a wider, parallel approach to research than
previously. UFOlogical or exopolitical elements are best viewed as a
mosaic instead of the usual, linear conceptual format. Given this
and adding the peripheral data about secret space programs and ET
liaisons and agreements it becomes equally possible that these two
findings of McKinnon are what we’ve suggested, just as much as they
may have more down to earth explanations.
More recently,
Gary’s findings I believe have been backed up by UK based astro-video
expert John Lenard Walson. On the
Exopolitics UK site I commented on the point that if half of
what JLW has located in high earth orbit is real hardware, then we
could well have lists of active space officers and transport records
of off-planet craft.
So with this week’s
ruling, Gary is a step closer to being dispatched abroad to face
what has been suggested as a Guantanamo style closed military
tribunal which could result in up to 60 years in jail: yes it’s
that big. Given McKinnon refutes the charge about causing thousands
of dollars worth of network ‘damage’ and he was following what he
saw as a just course of action [with maybe a little harmless
mischief thrown in] – can this be justified? It seems some
behind-the-scenes discussion led to the closing ranks of the Law
Lords considering the appeal which isn't surprising given current
UK-USA relations over the amplified 'terror' status. It's still a
sad indictment on the UK however - we have been previously known for
our liberal support of what some consider modern human rights. The
published outcome was less of a shock though when we learn that the
leading author was Intelligence Services Commissioner - not a role
that has a 'retirement' period perhaps?
There’s still the
European Human
Rights Court to pursue but as pointed out in recent online
discussion, Gary's case is difficult to frame within the aims and
operation such systems. This is again ironic because when we step
back, McKinnon’s case is all about human rights – we just have a
conceptual lag so much of the public and civil/legal systems fail to
see it this way. We've seen how the US intelligence services and
traditional media have linked Gary's actions to that of "cyber
hacker" and "terrorist" - both these misleading terms are sufficient
on their own to reduce those willing to offer support but add on the
UFO and alternative energy tags and such a case becomes still
further isolated. Not only have the usual left-wing and libertarian
groups failed to align themselves with Gary's plight but most of the
UFO and Exopolitics field have offered limited support also.
Both the
Freegary.org.uk support site and Exopolitics.org.uk have attempted
to publicise the McKinnon case as it progressed. This took the form
in the last couple of years of writing to certain MPs, visiting one
sitting MP, mentioning it at conferences and events and distributing
leaflets and media online and offline. More recently we distributed
template letters people could send in to the Uk Parliament, MPs and
finally the Law Lords direct office at the Houses of Parliament.
However I still have this nagging feeling the wider community could
have done more but we seemed to just accept the limited narrative
which bounced between authorities, traditional media and the public
consensus without much intervention. What we essentially have
summarised in the McKinnon case is a real-world example of what
happens when someone attempts something tangible in the search for
disclosure and truth with regards the UFO phenomenon and new energy
systems. Let’s have optimistic ideas of how to push things forward
to a new world and new paradigm but remember this cannot happen and
will not happen without human causalities along the way - it's the
nature of the beast we're collectively tackling.
It's sad that when
someone needed a full-on response from a [not insignificant] UFO/Exopolitics
community it didn’t materialise. Seeing this take place has made me
doubtful that this field has the ability to deal with some of the
harsher incidents that will occur as we continue to push for a more
open, ethical system with regards energy and off-planet
communication. It's all very well asking us to smile and embrace the
coming disclosure but this will be a tainted new world,
post-disclosure, if we don't support those that fall along the
wayside through no real fault of their own.
To be fair we should
point out that some support was offered from various areas. In
response to the points made above Alfred Webre from
Exopolitics.com
pointed out the complexities of the situation:
“We attempted
to communicate with the Solicitors, with Gary and with his
family and were not successful in getting an approval to go
forward with an activist Exopolitical community and media
campaign, which we were prepared to carry out.”
“I personally felt
this was a strategic error on behalf of Gary's legal team, and
still do, especially given the remarks of
Gary's solicitor on the BBC TV today to the effect that the
UK had not prosecuted Gary because they wanted to give full
berth to the USA to do so. That makes this a political case,
and I do not understand the logic of Gary's solicitors in not
wanting us to raise the UFO political issue widely and loudly.”
Alfred Webre rightly
indicates that agreement from the family and legal team was not
received in any formal manner in fact when we learned the
extradition was going ahead Alfred even offered his experience as an
international and human rights skilled judge. The difficulty they
had on Gary’s side was deciding on whether to risk raising the
political issues further by aligning the case with core disclosure
themes. The last thing any of us want is for Gary to become a kind
of ‘poster boy’ for UFO and disclosure issues - it may have brought
further problems to sway the final outcome. On a personal level I
fully believe that if it had been up to Gary himself he would have
welcomed a more formal layer of support from this community. He
certainly wasn't afraid to
comment on the 9/11 issue in an interview done only a few days
before the hearing.
A couple of points
come to mind. One is that the case has been going on since 2001/2.
We knew several years back that an extradition was being sought or
at least that the US military were going to ensure he was made an
example of in a disproportionate manner. Very little was organised
or highlighted by this community in that time. We were all happy to
endlessly debate and discuss the 2 or 3 significant gems of
disclosure type information he found but less interested when it
came to ensuring a researcher did not suffer for seeking such
information.
Secondly, given the
complexities raised by offering close political support from this
field, it was feasible [and still is] to think of other ways to help
out. I realise it's a huge task as it essentially meant taking on a
vast and well-resourced network of legal, political and military but
in other areas where someone has taken a stand for truth this has
happened to varying extents so something could have been created
from our side of things. Given that most people who consider
themselves as role-players in the exopolitics/free-energy/UFO area
should be painfully aware of how difficult the topic is to approach
with the wider population outside - we should also realise that
extra effort is required when someone from within our community,
with altruistic intention, tries to act and gets caught out. With
the Disclosure Project we saw significant numbers of civilian and
military personnel essentially break laws when they ignored their
security oaths and discussed what they felt needed to be public. Why
is McKinnon so different when he essentially sought information for
the public good also yet he faces loss of liberty and the DP
witnesses have had no ramifications from their actions?
Whatever your views
morally on what McKinnon did - the fact is a truth seeker who wanted
to gain nothing for himself is now facing a huge jail term as a
scapegoat. Punish him for minor computer infringements but don't buy
the hype on the rest of it to the point where it becomes something
we fail to act upon. My fear is that we have other, similar
casualties in coming years that may break laws and get caught - I
just hope we have a shift in priorities and get systems in place to
stop them being sacrificed for the rest of us. I'm not criticising
any individuals or even groups of individuals over this - it's more
the overall approach of the community as a whole that I believe
needs to change somewhat to cater for such incidents. Maybe if he is
forced to a trial in the US our trans-Atlantic friends can consider
creating a basic support system for Gary over there – its one scary
big country to us little islanders!
So we can see in the
McKinnon situation a microcosm of the current state of play of the [exo]political
elements of UFOlogy: an individual decides to seek answers to
core issues by locating embargoed information on new energy and UFOs
in closed government systems. When he is stopped [as are so many
in a variety of ways] and the situation comes to public attention we
are confronted with the fact that wider society is still not
ready to have key areas to do with new energy systems, black
budgets, sequestered technologies and intelligent ET visitation
raised as part of the defence of a truth-seeking researcher.
Things are however shifting fast with regards public perception and
interest so at the current rate of change if Gary’s case had
occurred in 2012 not 2002 things may have been profoundly different.
This just tells us to keep pushing these issues into wider
consciousness so maybe one day individuals won’t see the need to
illegally access information networks for information it is our
collective birth-rite to know.
Resources:
BBC video on appeal
result:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tn_QFTx8muM and BBC interview with
Gary: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B4PkNPCEnJM
BBC radio play on
Gary’s exploits:
http://tiny.pl/2jm6
For updates on the
Gary McKinnon case check
Freegary and
Exopolitics UK.
A selection of
articles and media can be found here and at the
Black Vault Wiki.
Gary’s case and
community support will be discussed on the next episode of
Exopolitics
Radio