Some observers are anticipating a false flag in London after observing that nearly all of London’s omnipresent webcams have been uncharacteristically turned off.
Yesterday, as I was finalizing my new report on Great Britain, an update to my August 26 article “The Coming Collapse of Britain,” YouTube randomly suggested to me a short video by one Craig Houston titled, “Why are ALL LONDON webcams offline…?” I was nearly floored: Mr. Houston looked through hundreds of Webcams across London and could not find a single one that was live. See for yourself here and here! That’s extremely odd: clearly, someone made the decision to switch them all off – they couldn’t all have failed randomly.
One of the webcams over the Westminster bridge displayed the last image it recorded: it was on 2 September 2024 at 16:51, which at least gives us a clue about when the Heart of Darkness went dark to the world. I posted a comment about this in my TrendCompass report yesterday and one of the readers found a working Webcam at Abbey road. Still, that’s one out of hundreds that are still dark.
Why someone would decide to cut all the webcams is a mystery, and an ominous one. Mr. Houston didn’t offer any explanations, which is understandable given that he lives in Britain where singing, “kung fu fighting,” or silently praying on the sidewalk can get you arrested. But where he declined to tread, I’ll venture a guess.
I think it’s the only explanation that makes any sense to my mind: they are planning a false-flag terror attack on London which they’ll blame on Russia, so that they can trigger an all-out, whole-of-society mobilization by all of the Western powers against Russia.
This hypothesis may explain why the Russians have gone to such lengths to very publicly display the terrible capabilities of their conventional weapons, such as the Oreshnik medium-range ballistic missile, in order to demonstrate that any nuclear false flag was neither necessary nor orchestrated by them. Two hallmarks of false flags is that the number of casualties is always less than would reasonably be expected – less than three thousand people died in the demolition of the Two Towers, when more than 50,000 people worked there every day – and the scale and scope of the false flag is always a little bit smaller and less consequential than would otherwise make sense.
In other words, a real terrorist attack on the FBI isn’t going to be in some random field office; the Oklahoma City truck could have just as easily have been parked in front of the J. Edgar Hoover Building. If there is a false flag attack in London, it would probably be on some trivial, but vaguely symbolic structure that was already scheduled for demolition. An aging football stadium scheduled for replacement would make an ideal candidate.
But a small dirty bomb going off somewhere in London is going to look totally unconvincing now that everyone knows Russia can demolish any target in the UK in less than 17 minutes with 36 hypersonic warheads in a single missile launch.
Whether Clown World actually dares to risk waving a false flag or not with the Trump administration taking power in little more than a month, it’s clear that its warmongers are increasingly desperate to put the nations of the West on the same sort of martial footing that the October 7th green flag succeeded in creating in Israel. Whether the deactivated streetcams of London are an indication that one is forthcoming or not, it’s best to watch with a deeply jaundiced eye whatever the next big current event happens to be, particularly if we’re immediately informed that the Russians were responsible.
UPDATE: The website that shows all of the camera feeds shows that they are still offline.
TFL Security incident – webcams are currently offline