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Showing posts with label Crops. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crops. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

What else is tucked under the rug?

The question this morning was "what do I put on my blog?".  There is so much going on in the world and I am all consumed with how it is all connected and is affecting us all in profound ways.

Weather is an interesting factor in all of this.  As you know, the weather patterns change, but we all share the same atmosphere.  What happens in Australia will eventually effect us in the United States.  The weather may change, but it circulates on a global scale.

Not only does the actual weather circulate on a global scale, but the effects of the weather disasters circulate as well.  Because of the weather disasters, including the effects on crops, you'll notice that the quality and availability of produce in your local grocery store has changed quite dramatically.  In my local grocery store, there have been signs above the produce, explaining that the quality may not be what we are used to seeing because of the destructive freezing weather.  When crops are destroyed or damaged, we all feel the pain.

Additionally, we have the issue of the earthquakes, the volcanic eruptions, and the Middle-East revolution that we continue to experience, all of which effect our security, our economy, and other aspects of our daily lives.  This has no exception on a global scale.  The only exception would be the severity of the produced effects.

There are other factors that you may not know about that are changing things where you live, making you sick, making you a guinea pig for biological experiments, and more.  Over the past few years, the things that I have learned about the government makes me sick to think that I trusted them fully not long ago.  Their secret societies are real.  The Bilderbergs.  The Illuminati.  More.  There are an elite group of people who are trying to rule the world without thinking of the consequences for the general population.  They speak words that seem beautiful to hear, but their actions don't match their grand speeches.

I'm not a crazy person.  I'm a highly educated, curious, researcher who has stumbled upon some interesting topics with some interesting theories.  I may not agree with the extremes that others do, but I do think there are things going on right under our noses without us being privy.  Here are just a few.

This video is one that I found fascinating.  I don't agree with many of the aspects that they put into it to make it more dramatic (i.e., the people in the planes, the blowing up of planes, etc), but I do think that it is a creative masterpiece when it comes to things like chemtrails, biological experiments, and other "secret" government issued things.



There is also the question of the mass animal deaths that scientists cannot find answers for.  This was the most recent...
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Millions of fish found dead in California marina


Fish lie dead in the harbor area of Redondo BeachReuters – Fish lie dead in the harbor area of Redondo Beach, south of Los Angeles, California March 8, 2011. REUTERS/Lucy …
REDONDO BEACH, Calif. – Millions of dead fish were found Tuesday floating in a Southern California marina. Boaters awakened to find a carpet of small silvery fish surrounding their vessels, said Staci Gabrielli, marine coordinator for King Harbor Marina on the Los Angeles County coast.
California Fish and Game officials believe the fish are anchovies and sardines.
Experts had yet to determine what happened, but Gabrielli said the fish appeared to have moved into the harbor to escape a red tide, a naturally occurring bloom of toxic algae that can poison fish or starve them of oxygen.
High winds overnight might then have trapped the fish in the harbor, crushing them against a wall where they used up the oxygen and suffocated, she said.

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What if, your government has used weather warfare?  Would you trust your government or other governments?  What about Katrina?  Look at this from the History Channel and find out what you feel about the possibility that your government is, in fact, using weather warfare?



Here is another video that may interest you...



Patent...http://conspiration.ca/brevet_chemtrails/United%20States%20Patent%204,686,605.htm

Because of limited time with writing this post, I'll leave these pieces of information with you.  Mull them over.  Do your own research.  You'll find that you may have doubts as to the cause of certain weather disasters, earthquakes, and other things that you used to trust were just natural phenomena.  This is when your eyes open and you realize that there may be more tucked under the rug.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Australia's Once-In-A-Century Cyclone

Australia reels from once-in-a-century cyclone

TULLY, Australia (AFP) – Australia's biggest cyclone in a century shattered entire towns, pummelling the coast and churning across the country Thursday, terrifying locals but causing no confirmed fatalities.
Shaken residents emerged to check the damage after Severe Tropical Cyclone Yasi hit land at around midnight, packing winds of up to 290 kilometres (180 miles) per hour in a region still reeling from record floods.
Officials and locals said 90 percent of the main street in the small Queensland town of Tully, south of Cairns, had "extensive damage", while the coastal community of Cardwell also suffered "significant devastation".
"There are people now that have lost their homes, they lost their farms, they have lost their crops and they have lost their livelihoods," Queensland state premier Anna Bligh said.
Australia's deputy prime minister Wayne Swan said the damage was worse than he had expected. "It's a war zone," he said.
Regional hub Cairns, a centre for foreign tourists visiting the Great Barrier Reef, was spared Yasi's worst with problems largely restricted to fallen trees and minor damage to buildings.
No deaths or serious injuries were reported, although police said severed mobile phone networks were hampering efforts to check on two men who may be missing in the Cardwell area, and a third man was reported missing in Port Hinchinbrook.
Officials said good planning, strong public warnings and the fact that the storm veered suddenly southwards, away from Cairns, home to 122,000 people, saved the region from the catastrophic losses that had been feared.
But Bligh warned that a full picture was yet to emerge from a group of the worst-hit towns, where communications and road access remained difficult.
"It's a long way to go before I say we've dodged any bullets," she said.
Near the storm's "ground zero", families had cowered as roofs were ripped from homes, and some 10,500 people huddled in evacuation centres as the storm raged with a roar like a jet engine.
"We were sitting at the kitchen table, we heard a ripping and off came the roof," said Scott Torrens, 37, who hid his three children beneath mattresses in the family living room.
In Cardwell, aerial pictures showed house after house with its roof shorn off, a shattered church also had its roof blown away, and the town was covered in mud left by surging ocean waters.
At nearby Port Hinchinbrook, dozens of luxury yachts swept from their berths were piled on each other like discarded toys, while the marina lay empty.
"There's so much damage it's just incredible," Tully cane farmer Vince Silvestro told AAP news agency. "When I woke up it looked like what it would have looked like in World World II or something if the city had been bombed."
Power blackouts darkened 177,000 homes across the region, including the city of Townsville, as emergency workers battled into the worst-hit towns, hampered by roads cut by floods and falling trees.
Despite the devastation, three babies were born during the tempest, including a little girl who was brought into the world in an evacuation centre. The baby's mother ruled out naming her "Yasi".
Swiss mining giant Xstrata evacuated its Mount Isa and Cloncurry mines as the storm headed further inland, after being downgraded to category one. But the coal ports of Hay Point and Dalrymple Bay reopened, as well as sugar harbour Mackay.
About 75 percent of Australia's banana supply was estimated to have been affected, while damage to sugarcane crops was put at roughly Aus$500 million.
The storm's size and power dwarfed Cyclone Tracy, which hit the northern Australian city of Darwin in 1974, killing 71 people and flattening more than 90 percent of its houses.
It was also twice the size and far stronger than the category four Cyclone Larry that caused Aus$1.5 billion ($1.5 billion) of damage after hitting agricultural areas around Innisfail, just south of Cairns, in 2006.
The maximum-category five storm, reportedly large enough to cover most of the United States and with winds stronger than Hurricane Katrina, followed widespread flooding that left much of Queensland under water.
But Professor John Merson, head of the Institute of Environmental Studies at the University of New South Wales, warned more such disasters were likely as climate change warms up waters and fuels extreme weather.
There is a "complete lack of attention being given to the fact that we have a category five cyclone because we have climate change, yet we completely ignore this factor in the whole thing", he said.