Topic: Direct Energy Weapons....(DEW) | |
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Have you researched direct energy weapons....?.....The fires in california..., do you think they are natural.....human error or deliberate....by a higher source?
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Stoned hippies.
Best of luck. |
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The fires in california
I believe they are directly related to heat and burning. I could be wrong tho? Welcome to M2 Forums. |
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So you mean the PG&E, while admitting that some of the fires were caused by faults in supply lines, have actually weaponized the grid ?
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Have you researched direct energy weapons....?.....The fires in california..., do you think they are natural.....human error or deliberate....by a higher source? "deliberate....by a higher source?" Is this the Twilight Zone? |
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Probably different causes for different fires. Some probably were started by electrical faults and others by accident, like dropped cigs or sparks from cars/trucks, and others probably from arson. I think the fires near L.A. are probably arson, but no proof, either way.
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What everyone seems to be ignoring is the fact that California is burning, yet again.
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Ref: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_California_wildfires
These are the 20 largest wildfires in California since 1932 (when accurate records started to be kept) Big Bar Complex /Trinity County/140,948 acres/August 1999 A list of the 20 deadliest wildfires, according to CAL FIRE, can be found at "Top 20 Deadliest California Wildfire" Camp/Butte County/153,336 acres/November 2018/86 deaths A list of the 20 most destructive wildfires, according to CAL FIRE, can be found here: http://www.fire.ca.gov/communications/downloads/fact_sheets/Top20_Destruction.pdf Camp/Butte County/153,336 acres/November 2018/18,804 structures/Town of Paradise destroyed Starting in 2001, the National Interagency Fire Center began keeping more accurate records on the total fire acreage burned in each state. Pre-2000 Notable Wildfires Santiago Canyon Fire (1889). Burned on the order of 310,000 acres (130,000 ha). Berkeley Fire (1923). Destroyed 640 structures, including 584 homes. Griffith Park Fire (1933). Official death toll was 29 firefighters, but may have killed up to 58. Rattlesnake Fire (1953). 15 firefighters were killed in this arsonist's fire. Bel Air Fire (1961). 484 homes were destroyed; 112 injuries. Laguna Fire (1970). 382 homes burned, killing eight people. Painted Cave Fire (1990). 1 death and 430 buildings burned in this arson fire near Santa Barbara. Oakland firestorm (1991). Killed 25 people. Destroyed 2,843 single-family homes and 437 multi-family units. Mount Vision Fire (1995). 45 homes destroyed. Cause: illegal campfire. Panorama Fire (1980). 28,800 acres burned, destroying 310 homes and 67 structures, killing four people, and injuring 77 in north San Bernardino. 2000 = 7,622 fires 2001 = 9,458 fires 2002 = 8,328 fires 2003 = 9,116 fires 2004 = 8,415 fires 2005 = 7,162 fires 2006 = 8,202 fires 2007 = 9,093 fires 2008 = 4,923 fires 2009 = 9,159 fires 2010 = 6,554 fires 2011 = 7,989 fires 2012 = 7,950 fires 2013 = 9,907 fires 2014 = 7,865 fires 2015 = 8,745 fires 2016 = 6,986 fires 2017 = 9,133 fires 2018 = 8,572 fires 2019 = over 6,190 fires so far I feel for the people whose lives have been changed from this current fire but California is burning, yet again. |
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I don't know the peticulars, but brush mowing has been banned in certain areas. (Maybe the entire state) That's bad. More fuel, more fire. Those environmentalists brought it on themselves. But since when has California had an overabundance of mental giants?
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Humm not sure what you mean by Higher Power most of the fires were started by neglect or Human error... No ET did not come down and point his pointy finger at the brush and make it start~~~
http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/environment/a29623250/california-fires/ Fires ignite for any number of reasons. In recent years, Pacific Gas & Electric's poorly maintained infrastructure have sparked a number of large fires, several have been ignited by discarded cigarette butts, and a handful of blazes in recent years have spiraled out of control at homeless encampments or been set off by fireworks. While some fires do occur naturally, most are inadvertently set by humans, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. Fighting these fires in California's varied terrain is undoubtedly challenging—firefighters have deep canyons and steep hills to contend with. But it takes a perfect storm of conditions to turn a small spark into a vast conflagrations that char hundreds of thousands of acres. |
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I have heard that wild fires can be started by the sun reflecting off of tin-foil hats.
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it is a little disturbing and unsettling when your watching the news and looking at entire blocks that have been reduced to literally nothing but smoldering ashes, even the cars that are aluminum blocks have a pool of hardened molten aluminum around them....
but all the trees are still standing, still green, and virtually untouched. some idiots out there will say house are made of highly combustible materials blah blah.. take a lighter or hell even a blow torch to a car and then to a tree and tell me which one is more combustible. |
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it is a little disturbing and unsettling when your watching the news and looking at entire blocks that have been reduced to literally nothing but smoldering ashes, even the cars that are aluminum blocks have a pool of hardened molten aluminum around them.... but all the trees are still standing, still green, and virtually untouched. some idiots out there will say house are made of highly combustible materials blah blah.. take a lighter or hell even a blow torch to a car and then to a tree and tell me which one is more combustible. I find this interesting but what are you saying? Selective burning indicates a fire with purpose? I've heard about it before with the 9/11 tower fires. Do you see a link with what's happening now and what happened then? Care to expound on your theory? |
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