Another event happened that is something that can’t happen—this time in the Valencia region on Spain.
It was neither a “storm” nor a “hurricane” but a sudden appearance of violent mud, water, mud and debris, pushing down bridges, tearing up streets, and flinging cars, even even huge trucks, into chaotic piles, resembling a boy’s car collection emptied from a bucket onto a pile on the floor.
My daughter in law told me yesterday, confirming what we are hearing, that based on what she heard from people in the Valencia region, people got no warning.
Do you remember how I kept saying the most ominous thing about “Helene” was the lack of warning? That seems to be an essential part of these new “weather” attacks, which are not weather.
“Storms” are tracked. Obsessively, with high tech precision, by professionals all over the world, and certainly Spain is no exception.
So what happened here?
One year’s worth of rain in 6 or 8 hours? I don’t think we should continue to use words like “rain.”
It was water. Violent water, out of nowhere. Mud water.
Right now I am only emphasizing the things that are impossible—I’m not offering “answers,” and of course, I am well aware of weather weaponry and have reported on it, more and more recently.
It seems this time they are not even trying to make it appear like a real “storm.”
What are we looking at here? It’s towns and cities filling up with water as you’d fill a bathtub. Water just descending, like a Hollywood film effect. There is no reference point for this. My daughter in law told me it is known hardly ever to rain in the Valencia region—but I am adamant it’s not rain, so what should we call it?
There may be nothing to these weather disasters (the wind in Lahaina, the Hurricane in North Carolina, the rain in Spain), by which I mean nothing human. There may not be any conspiracy. In fact, reason would tell us there is no conspiracy.
But just the fact that so many people are willing to entertain the idea of human conspiracy tells us we are living in a time when the belief in human institutions is completely breaking down.
And that is at least as notable as any potential conspiracy.
A system is built on the efforts of people. If the people no longer believe in the system, the efforts of the people will break down. The system will break down.
Terrific visuals emerged from the floods in Paiporta, Valencia.
— #كابتن_غازي_عبداللطيف (@CaptainGhazi) October 31, 2024
The impact was truly heartbreaking. #Paiporta #Valencia #Spain
pic.twitter.com/7mvx4d6W4s
How the disaster started in Valencia before the inhabitants even got any warning.
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) October 31, 2024
[📹 GuillemValenci]pic.twitter.com/a6EoRDC5lT
Horrific flooding disaster in #Spain.
— Ronny (@FreePalesten) October 30, 2024
at least 64 killed. #Spain declares three days of mourning.#Disaster pic.twitter.com/Eigi3gzhsb
WEF Promotes Guiding Principles for Governance of Geoengineering Experimentation
In 2013 panelist David Keith stated that Geoengineering “might end up killing many tens of thousands of people a year.”
“This is a really important moral point. So if I made a decision or if there was a collective decision to do a geoengineering program, and you put say, the kind of program I think that makes more sense is what about a million tons a year[of sulfur dioxide], let’s say, you might end up killing many tens of thousands of people a year as a direct result of that decision. I think that has moral consequences, I don’t sweep that under the rug. This is a case where I take this much differently from Alan and think it’s a much more serious issue. Now, it’s true that part of doing that, you would hope that the overall benefits of human mortality would be so that you would save many many more people than that. But the fact that you uh, would save more people than you kill, doesn’t mean there’s no moral impact of making a decision that directly kills people. And I think that we who talk about this have a duty to be clear-eyed about the direct risks involved in doing it.” -August 7, 2013 David Keith Geoengineering Debate
I'm not dismissing geo engineering, but some things can be explained by simple physics.
I've seen flash floods occur in the past, when rainfall occurs on higher ground and inevitably forces it's way through any obstacle lower down.
It can be bone dry, then within minutes it's 10 feet under a raging torrent.
1 comment:
We lived along a dry creek bed in Mexico when I was a child. It had rained heavily in the mountains. We heard what sounded like massive thunder and a neighbor yelled, "The river is coming!" Within seconds, a massive wall of water 9-10 feet tall made an appearance. We lost our chicken coop and all of our chickens because they were near the river bed. From dry to chaos only took a few seconds. Insufficient drainage in Valencia?
Post a Comment