Exact time unknown but video provides a sense of what the flooding was like. Notice the large tree keeling over in front of the cars when they stop. ABN
Tag: environment
Hurricane Milton historically UNPRECEDENTED; appears weaponized
The Dimming, Full Length Climate Engineering Documentary ( Geoengineering Watch )
What Is Actually Going on in North Carolina? (Part 1)
Solar Panels are a Scam — Ashton Forbes
Solar panels only convert 6-20% of the energy they absorb into electricity. The rest is converted to heat. The heat radiates back out into the environment and rises into the atmosphere. Theoretically, this could impact the weather.
Solar panels require toxic chemicals such as Lead, Cadmium, Arsenic, Hexafluoroethane, Polyvinyl fluoride to produce. Some panels release Nitrogen trifluoride which is magnitudes worse for atmosphere than carbon dioxide.
Toxic solar ewaste represents a growing problem. Only about 10% of solar panels are being recycled. It is estimated 78 million metric tons of solar panels will have reached the end of their life by 2050.
The only thing green about solar is the money being used to line corrupt pockets.
The Secret Underwater UFO Retrievals: What’s Lurking Beneath Our Oceans?
Beneath the vast, unexplored depths of our oceans, a hidden world of covert operations is underway. These aren’t routine deep-sea explorations or routine military maneuvers; these are top-secret missions aimed at recovering crafts from the ocean floor—objects that defy everything we know about technology and engineering. Referred to as Unidentified Submerged Objects (USOs), these underwater crafts have baffled some of the most advanced minds in defense and intelligence.
For years, classified efforts have been conducted in secrecy. The CIA’s Maritime Branch, the U.S. Navy, and the National Underwater Reconnaissance Office (NURO) have all reportedly been involved in the pursuit and recovery of these submerged objects. These missions are anything but ordinary, often involving the use of highly specialized deep-sea vehicles and advanced detection systems that allow them to track objects that move in ways previously considered impossible.
USOs differ from their aerial counterparts, but their existence challenges the same boundaries of current understanding. Descriptions of these crafts suggest an extraordinary level of technological sophistication. Eyewitness reports from insiders indicate that these crafts often appear to be metallic, smooth, and shaped unlike any known underwater vehicle. Some have even been described as emitting faint neon-like glows as they move silently beneath the water’s surface. But what truly sets them apart are their capabilities—instantaneous acceleration, rapid changes in direction, and seamless movement between water and air. These characteristics are far beyond the abilities of modern human technology, raising serious questions about where these crafts come from and who, or what, created them.
Federal court rules against EPA in lawsuit over fluoride in water
A federal court in California ruled late Tuesday against the Environmental Protection Agency, ordering officials to take action over concerns about potential health risks from currently recommended levels of fluoride in the American drinking water supply.
The ruling by District Court Judge Edward Chen, an appointee of former President Barack Obama, deals a blow to public health groups in the growing debate about whether the benefits of continuing to add fluoride to the water supply outweighs its risks.
Environmental nonprofit Food & Water Watch and a handful of anti-fluoride groups, like the Fluoride Action Network, have been in court for nearly a decade after the EPA denied their petition against local water utilities adding in the mineral.
While Chen was careful to say that his ruling “does not conclude with certainty that fluoridated water is injurious to public health,” he said that evidence of its potential risk was now enough to warrant forcing the EPA to take action.
“In all, there is substantial and scientifically credible evidence establishing that fluoride poses a risk to human health; it is associated with a reduction in the IQ of children and is hazardous at dosages that are far too close to fluoride levels in the drinking water of the United States,” the judge wrote in his ruling.
Ponderosa pine near wildfire
How To Prove the Multiverse Exists | Dr Brian Keating
Takes a few to get going but very good talk after that. ABN
There’s an acidic zone 13,000 feet beneath the ocean surface — and it’s getting bigger
The carbonate compensation depth — a zone where high pressure and low temperature creates conditions so acidic it dissolves shell and skeleton — could make up half of the global ocean by the end of the century.
In the deepest parts of the ocean, below 13,100 feet (4,000 metres), the combination of high pressure and low temperature creates conditions that dissolve calcium carbonate, the material marine animals use to make their shells.
This zone is known as the carbonate compensation depth — and it is expanding.
This contrasts with the widely discussed ocean acidification of surface waters due to the ocean absorbing carbon dioxide from the burning of fossil fuels.
But the two are linked: because of rising concentrations of carbon dioxide in the ocean, its pH is decreasing (becoming more acidic), and the deep-sea area in which calcium carbonate dissolves is growing, from the seafloor up.
The transition zone within which calcium carbonate increasingly becomes chemically unstable and begins to dissolve is called the lysocline. Because the ocean seabed is relatively flat, even a rise of the lysocline by a few metres can rapidly lead to large under-saturated (acidic) areas.
Our research showed this zone has already risen by nearly 100 metres since pre-industrial times and will likely rise further by several hundreds of metres this century.
Millions of square kilometres of ocean floor will potentially undergo a rapid transition whereby calcareous sediment will become chemically unstable and dissolve.
Chainsaws and Ladders: A Dangerous Mix — Terry Hale
Preserving Our Forests Is Destroying Them
Excellent video, explains why US wildfire policies have done more harm than good. ABN


