Cybersecurity or Spellcraft? 91-DIVOC, Asymmetric Warfare, and the War on Discernment
- jubbdavid

- 3 days ago
- 1 min read
Cybersecurity is no longer about firewalls and passwords; it is asymmetric warfare waged through narratives, monopolies, and control of information. When fusion centers, private platforms, and corporate systems blur the line between governance and profit, breaches are not just technical—they are civilizational. From vanished evidence and supply-chain backdoors to mass data exposure without consent, the terrain of conflict has shifted into the psyche, the ledger, and the law.
History warns us what happens when discernment collapses. Cambodia’s killing fields were obscured by academic denial, misdirection, and sanitized language—until it was too late. Today, similar patterns appear: censorship framed as safety, mandates framed as care, and propaganda framed as consensus. When monopoly controls the narrative, public oversight vanishes, and cyber operations become social operations—polarization replaces truth, and compliance replaces consent.
This episode challenges listeners to recover discernment: the ability to distinguish truth from managed perception, law from code, rights from contracts imposed without permission. Cyber conflict now targets infrastructure, currency, courts, and identity itself. The question is no longer whether systems are secure—but whether the people living under them still are.
Subscribe for uncensored analysis across cybersecurity, history, and common law. Share this episode if you believe discernment—not fear—is the first line of defense. Links for deeper resources and conversations are in the description.
