BREAKING: Minnesota Under Coordinated Attack — National Guard Deployed

Earlier this week, Minnesota witnessed what might be the most terrifying digital assault on an American city to date. The entire city of St. Paul went offline. No Wi-Fi. No servers. No internal infrastructure. A full blackout.

And now the National Guard is involved.

Governor Tim Walz officially declared a state of emergency and signed an executive order activating the Minnesota National Guard's cyber protection unit. Their mission? To determine what data — if any — was accessed, stolen, or compromised.

St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter issued a chilling statement: “This was not a glitch. It was a deliberate, coordinated attack carried out by an external actor intentionally and criminally targeting our systems.”

That means this wasn’t some random outage. Someone took down a U.S. city’s digital backbone… and almost nobody is reporting on it.

What’s even more alarming is the silence. There’s no media frenzy. No national panic. Just a handful of official statements and local reports. Meanwhile, an entire American city’s data might be in foreign hands.

Is this just the beginning? Was this a test run for something much larger? The National Guard has boots on the ground — not for a hurricane or riot — but for a war in cyberspace.

Let that sink in.

Stay tuned. This story is developing fast.