#WR: What are the links between “Dark Winter” simulation and COVID-19? To understand this question we have to know that Frank Keating, former governor of #Oklahoma wrote a column in
@WSJ were he explained that in June 2001, he and others played #DarkWinter” #simulation. #COVID19
#WR: What about “Dark Winter” and COVID-19? Frank Keating explains in “War-Gaming” The Next Pandemic” (@WSJ) that #DarkWinter simulation was about the release of the smallpox virupars at an Oklahoma City shopping center and its spread to 25 other states and 15 countries. #COVID19
#WR: What about “Dark Winter” and COVID-19? Frank Keating explains in “War-Gaming” The Next Pandemic” (@WSJ) that #DarkWinter simulation was about the release of the smallpox virupars at an Oklahoma City shopping center and its spread to 25 other states and 15 countries. #COVID19
#WR: The “Dark Winter” simulation shows that a lot of important American politicians knew before that COVID-19 came to us, that the pandemics are possible as war tools to put in panic to the population. wsj.com/articles/war-g
via @WSJ
Personally myself, I never had access to the Dark Winter simulation referenced by the former Republican governor of Oklahoma, Frank Keating. However, during my university studies of Computer Sciences, I had the possibility to play a very simple war-game about a pandemic. For this reason, I think the column of Frank Keating is very important.
In addition, before my Computer Sciences studies, I was studying Philosophy in other university. At that moment, a Psychology professor talked me about a possible technological catastrophe linked with the advance of biological disciplines and the use of computer systems like we have today as simulation tools. In those days, I was playing in an IBM computer of only 8Kbytes every night during my breaking time as operator of a computer center of the 1960s. But since that moment, I was expected that a day, something similar to COVID-19 could happens. By the way, my Psychology's professor showed me a small book written by a French intellectual about the fight between two power groups in a computer research lab where they were planning the end of the human civilization.
Personally myself, I never had access to the Dark Winter simulation referenced by the former Republican governor of Oklahoma, Frank Keating. However, during my university studies of Computer Sciences, I had the possibility to play a very simple war-game about a pandemic. For this reason, I think the column of Frank Keating is very important.
In addition, before my Computer Sciences studies, I was studying Philosophy in other university. At that moment, a Psychology professor talked me about a possible technological catastrophe linked with the advance of biological disciplines and the use of computer systems like we have today as simulation tools. In those days, I was playing in an IBM computer of only 8Kbytes every night during my breaking time as operator of a computer center of the 1960s. But since that moment, I was expected that a day, something similar to COVID-19 could happens. By the way, my Psychology's professor showed me a small book written by a French intellectual about the fight between two power groups in a computer research lab where they were planning the end of the human civilization.
SOURCES: @WSJ, @dwnews and my personal tech think tank
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