With severe storms affecting parts of the U.S. right now, we wanted to check in with the community.
Are you or people close to you being affected?
How are things where you are?
(Loved this image shared by Dr. Malone)
With severe storms affecting parts of the U.S. right now, we wanted to check in with the community.
Are you or people close to you being affected?
How are things where you are?
(Loved this image shared by Dr. Malone)
It has been mostly rain/sleet here in Eastern KY. Thus far there hasn’t been enough actual snow to shovel or run the snow thrower. My wife and I prepared so that we can just stay in until it blows over. We have plenty of food, literature, and video to ride this out. I suspect driving could be dangerous. So far no outages from ice or winds, thankfully. (We have a standby generator, so we don’t worry about that too much.) I grew up at the edge of the snow belt in Upstate NY, and this is hardly worth getting worked up about (yet!).
It should not be a surprise that this weather was scheduled about 7 to 10 days ago by the various weather reporting stations. NOTE that I said scheduled, not forecasted. I hope everyone was prepared for this storm generated by DARPA as they have publicly bragged for years about certain circles that they can control the weather. More information on Climate or Weather modification often called Climate Change, can be found on http://www.geowatchengineering.org. They do an excellent job of reporting and following these issues.
Area of West Central Texas was hit with freezing pipes, slippery roads in my area. Police asked to stay off the roads since we do not have snow and ice removal equipment. Evening though we have been in freezing conditions livestock have not been affected by the freezing weather. We have protective buildings for them of which serves and emergency shelters in their respective areas. Signs pointing to the building are all over. JUST KIDDING!!! Their instinct tells them were to go.
On the South Plains, near Lubbock, TX, we have a few inches of snow and single digit temps. There are some power outages that have been taken care of (thanks to people like those in Dr. Malone’s pic.) TBTG we have not lost power as of Sunday afternoon.
AGREED!!! Everyone should watch The Dimming and keep up with Dane Wigington’s work. The correct URL is geoengineeringwatch.org.
I believe the floods in Western Washington were completely engineered; we don’t get that kind of weather here. In the meantime we have a drought. And more chem trails than you can shake a stick at.
We’d been having crystal clear skies, and last night I checked the forecast for today: “Cloudy”. Well it was crystal clear when I got up… then chem trails polluted the sky in every direction. UGH and TOXIC, and now there are remaining pollutants obscuring the sun – giver of life!
Floods in the mountains of North Carolina??? In any mountains??? How can that happen? Only through geoengineering.
Thanks for updating us. Nothing like growing up with extreme weather conditions to prepare you. I like the idea of having videos as a standby.
Something we are watching with great interest too.
Thanks @joy pearce … these linesmen really are some of the unsung heroes.
“Floods in the mountains of North Carolina??? In any mountains??? How can that happen? Only through geoengineering.”
When there’s lots of rain on mountains, it runs down pretty fast. The water speed is accelerated by loss of tree-cover, roads, parking lots, roofs, and other not-permeable surfaces. This leads to landslides and fast-rising waters in valleys, where most of the people are.
I live in mountainous Haywood County, NC. We’ve had significant flooding in 1916, 1940, 2004, 2021, 2024(Helene). Years between floods: 24, 64, 16, 3. In the early and mid parts of the 20th century we had massive logging which denuded the mountains to feed lumber mills and one of the largest paper mills(horribly polluting, it shut down in 2023) in the world.
Geoengineering may be part of the issue. We don’t have that many flights over the mountains here. A more significant factor is climate change driven by our prodigious burning of fossil fuels, with one of the effects being more variability and extremes in weather patterns.
Last weekend’s storm brought flurries and about 1/4" of ice where I live. The ice was enough to stop travel for half-a-day; it was followed by rain, which washed away most of the ice. Cold weather followed and broke a water main in Waynesville. For this weekend, 4~5" of snow and cold weather are predicted.
Thanks and good health, Weogo