War Apparent Coordinated Attacks on Substations Cut Power to 40,000 Americans - All to stop one faggot kid drag show. Based mad lad domestic terrorism.

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More than 40,000 homes and businesses lost electrical power Saturday night in a central North Carolina county in what authorities suspect to be a coordinated attack.

The outage occurred the same night as a controversial drag show was scheduled in one of the county’s towns.

According to the Moore County Sheriff’s Office, the outages began a little after 7 p.m. Eastern Time. It wasn’t clear when power would be restored.

Officials said that there was evidence that the outage was caused by vandalism found at multiple substations and Moore County Sheriff Ronnie Fields said that the incident is being investigated as a “criminal occurrence.”

“As utility companies began responding to the different substations, evidence was discovered that indicated that intentional vandalism had occurred at multiple sites,” Fields said, according to WRAL-TV in Raleigh.

Duke Energy had almost 38,000 customers without power throughout the county, according to WRAL. Randolph Electric Membership Corp. had 3,000 customers without power in the southern part of the county, WRAL reported.

Jeff Brooks, a spokesman for Duke Energy, told WRAL that crews had discovered “multiple equipment failures” at several substations in the county.

“We are also investigating signs of potential vandalism related to the outages,” Brooks said, according to the station.
Brooks said the company was working to restore power and is cooperating with officials investigating the outage.

According to The Charlotte Observer, some on social media had reported hearing gunshots in the area at the time of the outage. Brooks was asked if there was a connection, but said he couldn’t confirm anything at this stage.

The outage came amid planned protests over a drag show in downtown Southern Pines, a town in Moore County with a population of about 15,000.

The “Downtown Divas” event at the Sunrise Theater started at 7 p.m., according to The Charlotte Observer. After the power went out, it continued until about 9 p.m. the Observer reported.


“I asked that everyone turn on their phone flashlights to illuminate the room,” headline act Naomi Dix said, according to the Observer. “I then led the crowd in singing Beyoncé’s ‘Halo.’”

One of the organizers of protests against the drag show, Emily Grace Rainey, published a post to her Facebook page after the outage began stating, “The power is out in Moore County and I know why.”

She then posted a second statement with a picture of the exterior of the darkened theater stating, “God will not be mocked.”

Late Saturday, she published another post stating that sheriff’s investigators had paid her a visit.

“The Moore County Sheriff’s Office just checked in. I welcomed them to my home,” she wrote.

“Sorry they wasted their time. I told them that God works in mysterious ways and is responsible for the outage. I used the opportunity to tell them about the immoral drag show and the blasphemies screamed by its supporters.

“God is chastising Moore County. I thanked them for coming and wished them a good night. Thankful for the LEOs service, as always.”

According to The Fayetteville Observer, the event was originally opened to all ages. However, the minimum age for the event was changed to 18 after protests that the show was exposing children to “adult entertainment.”

Sunrise Theater Executive Director Kevin Dietzel told the Observer in an article published Saturday that he disagreed with the age restrictions.

“It adds to the stigma that people in the drag community already feel,” Dietzel told the newspaper. “It adds fuel to the myth that the LGBTQ+ community is something that people need to keep their kids away from.”

Organizers of the drag show said that they have received multiple threats ahead of the Saturday event.

According to the Fayetteville Observer, a Southern Pines Christian school sent out a letter Nov. 21 calling for residents of the town to protest at the train station across from the theater.

“The LGBTQ forces are coming to Southern Pines and they are after our children,” the letter from Calvary Christian School administrators stated, the Observer reported. “This is their target audience to peddle their abomination.”

According to the Observer, on Nov. 18, the group requested a permit to protest the show, listing an expected turnout of about 100 on the application.

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Editors Note: For those not in the know this is right in the backyard of Fort Bragg, home to snake eaters and psyop groups. Sounds like somebody went off the reservation on this one. Rumors floating around that the attack is connected to a former PsyOp officer who went to J6. Glowies gonna be scared/working overtime if true.

MOD NOTE: For Nulls sake don't spam 'here is how you take down a transformer WINK WINK' Atomwaffen shit. We do not need to give the feds more ammo to attack us with.
You can speculate on motives and methods, but please treat it as an academic matter, not 'totally go out and do this'. -Randall Fragg
 
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I thought maybe this had been posted in A&H before, but couldn't find it so,

America’s electric utilities facing transformer shortage crisis​

BY JOY DITTO, OPINION CONTRIBUTOR - 10/24/22 3:30 PM ET
SHARETWEET


Many Floridians are still recovering from the devastating impacts of Hurricane Ian, one of the most severe hurricanes to hit the United States in recorded history. The people of southwest Florida bore the brunt of the Category 4 Hurricane, which caused at least 137 fatalities and catastrophic damages estimated at over $50 billion.

We all appreciate the efforts of electric utility workers from across the country who restored power in Florida in record time for a hurricane of this magnitude. The storm, together with a critical supply chain shortage, has depleted the equipment reserves of many utilities that lack adequate distribution transformers and other necessary grid equipment. It is unclear if we have the transformers to rebuild after another significant weather event this year — a situation that is untenable for a country that requires electricity for everything we do.

When we at the American Public Power Association (APPA), serving not-for-profit publicly owned utilities, surveyed our members at the beginning of 2022, transformer delivery times averaged one year, compared to three months in 2018 (before the pandemic). Now, our membership is reporting wait times as high as 18 months to two years, with some manufacturers canceling orders because they don’t have enough available stock to fill them. Decision-makers in Washington and transformer manufacturers must act swiftly to address this shortage of essential equipment without which we cannot provide power to new homes and businesses, nor can we restore power after severe weather events.

Distribution transformer shortages have impacted all regions of the U.S., which means limitations on equipment needed to help those impacted by hurricanes and other weather events, such as wildfires. While we hope this year’s hurricane season ends with Ian, hope is not a strategy to ensure reliable operation of the electric grid for Americans, including our member utilities that provide electricity to 49 million Americans in 49 states.

Communities depend on public power utilities for necessities like refrigeration, communications, lighting, and comforts like air conditioning and entertainment. Modern society does not work without electricity. Because electricity underpins everything, the electric utility industry has a robust “mutual aid” network and planning process that kicks into motion before, during, and after major storms or other challenges to ensure that the lights stay on — or get back on quickly. Such networks and planning mean that crews of highly skilled utility workers stage themselves in advance of storms and often travel hundreds of miles to help restore power.

Given this willingness to share people and equipment, as soon as the supply chain crisis for distribution transformers emerged, public power utilities sprang into action — banding together with our industry brethren to engage our federal government partners and transformer manufacturers to find solutions. We ramped up mutual aid activities by facilitating material sharing between utilities, leveraging APPA’s existing sharing platforms to do so. Individual public power utilities have also gotten creative by reusing, refurbishing, and delaying the deployment of equipment to protect supplies. But these efforts can only shift around or extend what is already available to us in stock and do not address the real need for more supply to meet the demand.

A step in the right direction is first to clarify the use of the Defense Production Act, as invoked by President Biden, and to expedite the distribution of funds to use the DPA. We urge the Department of Energy to take the critical next step — convening transformer manufacturers to develop concrete solutions to the shortage so that the DPA can be used as a tool to help implement those solutions. Our shared goals of increasing our clean electricity production and electrifying other sectors of the economy are also being hindered by the lack of access to these essential grid components.

The time to act on the shortage of transformers and other critical grid equipment is now.

Joy Ditto is the President and CEO of the American Public Power Association.


So the lack of replacement transformers has been a problem for so long that line workers have been organizing to try and find ways to cope.
Maybe it was done to draw attention to this ongoing problem?
 

Found this article on substack talking about possible motives and other details about the incident

This guy makes some interesting points about the attack, along with comparisons with similar incidents that happened.

Here's a piece of the article:

The blue half of social media has taken as a given that the snipers who knocked out the Moore County power grid were doing so to stop a drag show. This drag show was apparently very controversial in the small town of Pinehurst outside of Fayetteville, and monopolized a tremendous amount of police resources. Local government issued permits for the show, permits for protesters of the show, and had a large number of police activated to ensure neither side of the culture war outbreak got too unruly. By all accounts, no one did get unruly, other than perhaps some raised voices, until the power went out when everyone went home.

The snipers hit multiple transfer stations at the same time, knowing which equipment to hit so that power could not be rerouted. The power may be out as long as Thursday. Four things pop for me, given the known facts so far.

One: Local rednecks probably wouldn’t knock their own power out over a drag show, when they could just show up to protest like everyone else.

Two: Red tribe culture warriors probably don’t have the sophistication to know exactly which equipment to sabotage to bring down the power grid.

Three: They did it when they knew the police were going to be overly burdened managing a culture war protest.

Most importantly, four: If the local, state, or federal authorities became aware that this entire “terrorist operation” was a distraction for some kind of heist, they absolutely would not make that information public because they might empower copycat heists across the country. It’s entirely possible this was just “some people seeing if they could do it,” and okay fine, but I wonder if it wasn’t.
 
This drag show was apparently very controversial in the small town of Pinehurst outside of Fayetteville, and monopolized a tremendous amount of police resources. Local government issued permits for the show, permits for protesters of the show, and had a large number of police activated to ensure neither side of the culture war outbreak got too unruly
so there's totally real video footage of any of this happening, right?
not as a slight against you personally, just the idea that there's this massive cops afoot and nobody bothered to inform beyond substack
 
I should also mentioned that the point of the article I posted above is that there may or may not be a elaborate Die Hard inspired heist plot to not only this infrastructure sabotage incident, but also similar incidents that happened in the past. Also that details of the incident is being kept hidden from the public in fear of inspiring copy cats.

"The chance that each of these acts of infrastructure sabotage were actually some elaborate Die Hard inspired heist plot is diminishingly small. The chance that one of them was a heist is also very small, but is greater than the chance all of them were. And the chance that this sort of thing isn’t going to be used in the future to run a heist is very low, since the future goes on forever. Eventually some master thief is going to figure this out. And when they do, we can be sure that the federal agencies investigating it won’t tell us about it, out of fear of copycat heists.

Are we already in the age of Die Hard?

Hard to say."


I think we'll have to wait and see if whoever is responsible gets caught or not. If it was just a bunch of dumb rednecks then they'll prob get caught sooner than later. Some disgruntled utility worker might get away much longer but not for long.

If it was the work of foreign agents or a professional criminals then they might get away with it.

Destroying public infrastructure is surprisingly easy as demonstrated here and in the past. The tricky part is not getting caught doing it, being able to evade authorities and destroy evidence.
 
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Found this article on substack talking about possible motives and other details about the incident

This guy makes some interesting points about the attack, along with comparisons with similar incidents that happened.

Here's a piece of the article:

The blue half of social media has taken as a given that the snipers who knocked out the Moore County power grid were doing so to stop a drag show. This drag show was apparently very controversial in the small town of Pinehurst outside of Fayetteville, and monopolized a tremendous amount of police resources. Local government issued permits for the show, permits for protesters of the show, and had a large number of police activated to ensure neither side of the culture war outbreak got too unruly. By all accounts, no one did get unruly, other than perhaps some raised voices, until the power went out when everyone went home.

The snipers hit multiple transfer stations at the same time, knowing which equipment to hit so that power could not be rerouted. The power may be out as long as Thursday. Four things pop for me, given the known facts so far.

One: Local rednecks probably wouldn’t knock their own power out over a drag show, when they could just show up to protest like everyone else.

Two: Red tribe culture warriors probably don’t have the sophistication to know exactly which equipment to sabotage to bring down the power grid.

Three: They did it when they knew the police were going to be overly burdened managing a culture war protest.

Most importantly, four: If the local, state, or federal authorities became aware that this entire “terrorist operation” was a distraction for some kind of heist, they absolutely would not make that information public because they might empower copycat heists across the country. It’s entirely possible this was just “some people seeing if they could do it,” and okay fine, but I wonder if it wasn’t.
Why aren't Catholics having corpus Christi processions in fag town?
 
There are a hundred thousand men in California with the knowledge and capacity to take the whole thing offline.
The same can be said for for nearly every state. (though the number wouldn't be quite so high.) There's just the understanding that you don't shit where you eat.

It was much funnier when substations went down because dumb niggers thought it would be an easy way to get tons of copper.
 
I should also mentioned that the point of the article I posted above is that there may or may not be a elaborate Die Hard inspired heist plot to not only this infrastructure sabotage incident, but also similar incidents that happened in the past. Also that details of the incident is being kept hidden from the public in fear of inspiring copy cats.

"The chance that each of these acts of infrastructure sabotage were actually some elaborate Die Hard inspired heist plot is diminishingly small. The chance that one of them was a heist is also very small, but is greater than the chance all of them were. And the chance that this sort of thing isn’t going to be used in the future to run a heist is very low, since the future goes on forever. Eventually some master thief is going to figure this out. And when they do, we can be sure that the federal agencies investigating it won’t tell us about it, out of fear of copycat heists.

Are we already in the age of Die Hard?

Hard to say."


I think we'll have to wait and see if whoever is responsible gets caught or not. If it was just a bunch of dumb rednecks then they'll prob get caught sooner than later. Some disgruntled utility worker might get away much longer but not for long.

If it was the work of foreign agents or a professional criminals then they might get away with it.

Destroying public infrastructure is surprisingly easy as demonstrated here and in the past. The tricky part is not getting caught doing it, being able to evade authorities and destroy evidence.
Far as I know nobody was ever apprehended for shooting up the substation outside San Jose. Drove by there Friday. While there are now walls around the place, the walls would do little to fend off another shooting, since the substation is overlooked by hills, where the first shooting came from. This is not a small substation, either, rather large.
 
One: Local rednecks probably wouldn’t knock their own power out over a drag show, when they could just show up to protest like everyone else.

Two: Red tribe culture warriors probably don’t have the sophistication to know exactly which equipment to sabotage to bring down the power grid.

Three: They did it when they knew the police were going to be overly burdened managing a culture war protest.
Here's what we call "confirmation bias", boys and girls.
Schrodinger's MAGA Terrorist: simultaneously a dumb, obsolete bumpkin who can't fight an F-15, and who is highly effective at organizing, propagandizing, sabotaging, infiltrating, and killing.
 
Two: Red tribe culture warriors probably don’t have the sophistication to know exactly which equipment to sabotage to bring down the power grid.

One of my favourite parts of the leaf trucker protest was that upon arrival, they self organized and started building structures including stages, installing audio equipment and lights, coordinating trash and snow removal. In -20 degree weather they kept everyone warm, fed, and honking.

Compare to the CHAZ/CHOP.

Without too much detail, I have spent a lot of time around many electricians and high voltage techs and all I will say is, we should be grateful that they typically want to build up their society because it’s not a lack of knowledge preventing them from tearing it down.
 
From a purely academic viewpoint, wouldn't .17HMR be more suitable than a .22LR?
Maybe - but you'd also want to consider price viability. A .22 runs you ~$300. A plastic water bottle runs you ~$1.

Any gun used to commit a crime becomes a "burner" that they would want to lose in a boating accident post haste. It's not necessarily a question of effectiveness and more a question of acceptable losses where the smart criminals need to get rid of everything associated with the crime.

Of course, it goes without saying that no one on this forum would endorse such criminal activity.
 
Maybe - but you'd also want to consider price viability. A .22 runs you ~$300. A plastic water bottle runs you ~$1.

Any gun used to commit a crime becomes a "burner" that they would want to lose in a boating accident post haste. It's not necessarily a question of effectiveness and more a question of acceptable losses where the smart criminals need to get rid of everything associated with the crime.

Of course, it goes without saying that no one on this forum would endorse such criminal activity.
As this is an academic discussion there isn't much to say about the "burner" aspect of it, but just for reference, a semi-auto Savage A17 in .17HMR can be found for around $450. It reaches out further than a 22LR due to better ballistics.

Edit: Some additional thoughts. .17HMR is also a very frangible round, meaning there won't be much left of the bullet for forensics, assuming one doesn't just leave casings everywhere. Also it has a specific report when suppressed, can be difficult to identify it as a gunshot. Only concern is wind, as the light 17gr round can be affected by it pretty easily.
 
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That depends on your goals.

Note: This is just discussion, not advocation.

Transformers require the oil inside of them to prevent overheating, overhead powerlines are held up there with wire rope to hold the load at the pole, power disconnects have fuses in them that are sensitive, there is a whole list of things a .22 subsonic can damage (with a few shots) that would cause an outage. No, it will not be a major one, but an outage nonetheless.
Someone correct me if I’m wrong but they don’t have dry-type pole mount xfmrs? Or is dry type mostly pad mount?
 
Schrodinger's MAGA Terrorist: simultaneously a dumb, obsolete bumpkin who can't fight an F-15, and who is highly effective at organizing, propagandizing, sabotaging, infiltrating, and killing.
What's that old maxim about fascists? That they imagine their enemies as all-powerful wicked oppressors yet at the same time pathetic and stupid subhumans?
 
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