Burning down a bank would not cover up any crimes because of the digital nature and data of assets. However, I'm inclined to believe there are crimes being covered up at this HSBC Bank. Remember, the Hampstead children testified that abuse was happening in Starbucks, Mcdonald's, Banks and other seemingly legitimate businesses.
Many records are not kept digitally but only in hard copy. This is especially true of legacy data, but it also holds true for particularly sensitive data. That "plane that flew into the Pentagon" in 2001 gives testament to this.
Records for all transactions are required by corporate law everywhere in the world (articles of incorporation). Keeping those records in paper form satisfies the contract. Accidental fires that seem to be preferentially localized to the records rooms are an unfortunate hazard for paper records, but it's a risk that the PTB are willing to take for "security."
Yes. You usually don't upload digital photos and videos of those kinds of crimes to the cloud. Like all they supposedly found on Epstein island. Maybe this was another cache/copies.
The entirety of the digital world is housed in computers which have physical locations. If by coincidence all their records were housed on servers, and on backup tapes all burned up by fire, then a lot of digital records are removed. Or at least connections needed are removed. Not saying this is what's happening, just reminding that "digital" and "cloud" stuff have physical addresses.
Burning down a bank would not cover up any crimes because of the digital nature and data of assets. However, I'm inclined to believe there are crimes being covered up at this HSBC Bank. Remember, the Hampstead children testified that abuse was happening in Starbucks, Mcdonald's, Banks and other seemingly legitimate businesses.
https://wakeup-world.com/2015/02/28/suppressed-pedophilia-allegations-reveal-culture-of-satanic-ritual-abuse-hampstead/
Many records are not kept digitally but only in hard copy. This is especially true of legacy data, but it also holds true for particularly sensitive data. That "plane that flew into the Pentagon" in 2001 gives testament to this.
Records for all transactions are required by corporate law everywhere in the world (articles of incorporation). Keeping those records in paper form satisfies the contract. Accidental fires that seem to be preferentially localized to the records rooms are an unfortunate hazard for paper records, but it's a risk that the PTB are willing to take for "security."
Yes. You usually don't upload digital photos and videos of those kinds of crimes to the cloud. Like all they supposedly found on Epstein island. Maybe this was another cache/copies.
The entirety of the digital world is housed in computers which have physical locations. If by coincidence all their records were housed on servers, and on backup tapes all burned up by fire, then a lot of digital records are removed. Or at least connections needed are removed. Not saying this is what's happening, just reminding that "digital" and "cloud" stuff have physical addresses.
This. Cloud = someone else's computer. Who's to say that there aren't other people's data on machines therein?