Fires on the Rise

Thank-you @be1 for the valuable research and insight. :slightly_smiling_face:

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Thank you all - for the posts and insight that pieced this all together. We are grateful for your time, energy, and works.
All references sent to recipients above. And thank you for posting about these horrors.

You are certainly welcome :slightly_smiling_face:

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It was supposed to be a controlled burn, but a New Mexico fire got out of control

July 20, 2022

more about the NM fire that was suppose to be a controlled fire but somehow was allowed to burn out of control. This below is what home owners said about Forest Services. It would seem fires are a money maker like wars, war on people and their homes, to destroy their livelihoods further know as depopulation agenda, seems it all ties together to support their evil satanic agenda.

Killing trees is against God's Law - specifically Deut. 20:19-20 , Matt 5:17-20 : their human-food producing quality: including LIFE giving Oxygen. When breaking the Law of God curses curse will surly come upon them.

FORDHAM: And what angers her the most is that this fire, the Calf Canyon Hermits Peak fire, began as planned burns by the U.S. Forest Service, which escaped control.

NARANJO: All of us are feeling the same grief and anger towards Forest Service that is so intense. I actually wanted to sit and get a bucket of ashes from our house and send it to the Forest Service because they are accountable.

FORDHAM: This isn't the first time the Forest Service allowed what was supposed to be a controlled burn to escape in New Mexico with devastating consequences. In 2000, an escaped planned burn destroyed about 280 homes and damaged the Los Alamos National Laboratory.

https://www.npr.org/2022/07/20/1112411683/it-was-supposed-to-be-a-controlled-burn-but-a-new-mexico-fire-got-out-of-control

Small Northern California town left in ruins after massive McKinney Fire damages area

Ashley R. Williams Chris Pietsch

Residents of Klamath River, a small Northern California town, are reeling from the devastating McKinney Fire that has nearly wiped out their community.

The Klamath River community hall was known to community members as a one-stop shop for weddings, Christmas pageants, fundraisers and funerals, Klamath River Volunteer Fire Department Fire Chief Janet Jones told the Register-Guard of Oregon, part of the USA TODAY Network.

The fire department also trained there, Jones said.

There’s no sign of the building’s red walls or the American flag painted on its roof, video from the Register-Guard shows. The home of bingo nights and Taco Tuesdays had burned to the ground. The community center’s sign, seemingly unscathed by the fire, was all that remained.
The out-of-control McKinney Fire — California’s largest of 2022 — grew to nearly 90 square miles as of Wednesday morning. The fire first ignited southwest of Klamath River in the Klamath National Forest on Friday.

UTAH WILDFIRE: Started by man who said he was trying to burn a spider, officials say

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Four people have died, according to the Siskiyou County Sheriff's Office. Thousands of people have evacuated. It's not clear what caused the fire, but the Klamath National Forest division of the U.S. Forest Service said on Facebook earlier in the week it was "clear" it was not sparked by lightning.

Roger Derry, 80, and his son have lived together in the tiny scenic hamlet of Klamath River for more than 40 years. They know most of the town's 200 or so residents.

They're one of the few families left after the McKinney Fire raged through the riverside town’s modest homes and stores.

A man runs to a truck as the McKinney fire burns in Klamath National Forest, Calif., on Saturday, July 30, 2022.

“It’s very sad. It’s very disheartening,” Derry said. “Some of our oldest homes, 100-year-old homes, are gone. It’s a small community. Good people, good folks, for the most part, live here and in time will rebuild. But it’s going to take some time now.”

Jones told the Register-Guard that somewhere between 50 to 100 homes were destroyed in the McKinney Fire.

Smoke and ash from the fire has elevated the Air Quality Index near Klamath River to unhealthy levels, according to AirNow.

Cloudy, cool weather mitigated fire activity Tuesday night, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

Smaller wildfires that sparked after the McKinney Fire continue to burn in Siskiyou County. The 31-acre Shackleford Fire that erupted Saturday is 31% contained as of Wednesday, Cal Fire reported.
Firefighters have contained 41% of the nearby Meamber Fire, which has scorched 63 acres since starting Sunday.

The Yeti and Alex Fires burning west of the McKinney Fire are both 0% contained over a combined 4.9 square miles, according to InciWeb. Warmer, drier conditions could stoke the Yeti Fire’s flames Wednesday, authorities said.

Rosa Koire: UN Agenda 30 is Literally George Orwell’s Agenda 1984

Depopulation: Pure, Unalloyed Evil

How long must we suffer O Lord? – Until you return to keeping and enforcing The Law

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Explosions at munitions site trigger fire at Berlin's Grunewald forest

Several explosions at an ammunition dump caused a large fire in one of Berlin's largest city forests on Thursday morning.

Around 100 firefighters were on site to control the blaze in the Grunewald forest in the west of the city, German news agency dpa reported.

The fire has so far affected some 15,000 square metres of the forest, the city firefighting unit said, while a one-kilometre perimeter has been set up as the situation remains high-risk.

The fire was spreading quickly, and massive explosions could be heard from the site where old ammunition from World War II, fireworks and explosive ordnance are stored, and controlled explosions are carried out.

"The situation is dangerous," Thomas Kirstein from the Berlin fire department told reporters. He called on residents to stay away from the forest.

Due to flying debris and the threat of further explosions, the fire department said it had not yet begun to systematically extinguish the fire.

Berlin authorities called for additional task forces to help extinguish the flames, including special forces from the German army. Water cannons, helicopters and special evacuation tanks were also due on the scene.

The commuter train service to the city's west was partially interrupted, and one of the city's most important highways, the Avus, was closed.

Homes were not directly threatened by the flames, but the fire department warned that the fire could further spread due to the dry conditions of the forest and the exceptional heat that was expected on Thursday with temperatures of up to 38°C.

The Berlin region is suffering from a particularly severe drought as well.

A large forest fire in July burned more than 850 hectares in southern Brandenburg, the region surrounding the capital. A little further south, a fire in the "Bohemian Switzerland" national park, which started in the Czech Republic and spread to Germany, is still keeping firefighters busy.

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FIRENADO races towards French firemen battling 'monster' blaze amid record-breaking European drought that has dried up rivers, melted glaciers and ravaged farmland

  • Germany, Poland, Romania, Italy, Sweden and Greece sending firefighters and equipment to help France
  • 1,100 firefighters are battling a blaze that has been ripping through the Gironde region for more than a month
  • Europe has been hit by a record-breaking drought which has dried up rivers and turned woodland into tinder
  • In Switzerland, a pass that has been covered in ice for the last 2,000 years is now almost totally ice-free

As we have reported before, multiple food processing plants and other businesses that produce foods of all sorts have been destroyed over the past year. The latest event, and it is an event that has been orchestrated and don’t let anyone tell you different, is a Pendleton, Oregon flour mill going up in flames.

The Timing is...

Local officials support Oregon's fire risk map reversal


The sun sets in the summer of 2021 over a stand of burned trees from the Bootleg Fire in the Fremont-Winema National Forest. The Oregon Department of Forestry on Thursday, Aug. 4, 2022, withdrew its fire risk map after publishing in it five weeks earlier in the wake of backlash from the public and politicians.

PENDLETON — The Oregon Department of Forestry’s decision to pull back and revise its wildfire risk map was a wise move, according to local elected officials.

Sen. Bill Hansell, R-Athena, said the rollout of the map and ensuing letters to property owners about fire risk was not handled well. This not only put the cart before the horse, he said, it raised the worries of lots of people.

The state forestry department yanked the wildfire risk map Thursday, Aug. 4, five weeks after publishing it. According to the Oregon Capital Chronicle, the move came after outcry from Republican state lawmakers and residents in southern and Eastern Oregon who said the roll out of the map was clumsy and led to people losing their property insurance or having premiums doubled. They said the Oregon Department of Forestry was ill-equipped to handle the impacts of the map in the middle of fire season.

“My phone was ringing off the hook, and the emails,” Hansell said, after the state put the map online. Lawmakers were aware the state was working on the map, he said, but the process did not include public input that he was aware of.

The map was part of a $220 million bill — Senate Bill 762 — that came from the 2021 legislative session as part of a state push to protect Oregonians against worsening, climate change-fueled wildfires.

The Oregon Department of Forestry and Oregon State University created the Oregon Wildfire Risk Explorer map. The searchable map showed the wildfire risk of 2 million tax lots across the state, categorizing them in five categories: no, low, moderate, high or extreme risk. About 80,000 property owners were found to be in high or extreme risk areas, and received letters from the Department of Forestry telling them that they could be subject to fire-resistant building codes currently under development.

Imagine living on Weston Mountain, Hansell said, and you have never heard of Senate Bill 762 but you then get a letter from the Oregon Forestry Department saying your land is in a high-risk fire zone and you could be subject to fire-resistant building codes that are in development. And if you disagree with that, you can appeal.

But appeal what? Hansell said. The farmer in this case does not even get to know what regulations to appeal.

Umatilla County Commissioner John Shafer of Pendleton said that is a scenario he can relate to because he received the letter about a week ago.

“I was trying to figure it out,” he said. “I was as much in the dark as anybody else who received it.”
Shafer said his property is under the protection of a city fire department with a Level 3 Insurance Service Organization rating and the letter states he was in a high-risk area of wildfire.

“That didn’t make sense to me,” he said.

The map created backlash during its brief existence. Many people argued that it incorrectly listed homeowners in high risk areas when they may not have been in part because they were not given credit for taking steps to make their homes fire resistant. Others complained that the map resulted in insurance companies raising premiums significantly and lowering property value.

Shafer said right off he wanted to know who in Salem from Eastern Oregon was working on addressing this, and found Hansell was on it as well as Rep. Mark Owens of Crane and Sen. Lynn Findley of Vale, all Republicans.

The refinements that will be made to the new fire risk map will incorporate feedback from more than 2,000 Oregonians received during the recent in-person and online meetings with people around the state, according to the Oregon Department of Forestry’s website.
The department has not set a timetable for the revisions, according to the website, because it wants to allow for plenty of time to get input from the public.

Oregon State Forester Cal Mukumoto said in a statement his agency got specific feedback from 2,000 residents about problems with the risk designations that were assigned by the Oregon Explorer project and said climate scientists would refine the map and reissue a new version at a later date.

“While we met the bill’s initial deadline for delivering on the map, there wasn’t enough time to allow for the type of local outreach and engagement that people wanted, needed and deserved,” Oregon State Forester Cal Mukumoto said in a statement. “We know how important it is to get this right.”

“I actually applauded the efforts of the Oregon Department of Forestry to roll it back,” Hansell said.

https://www.eastoregonian.com/news/local/local-officials-support-oregons-fire-risk-map-reversal/article_ab6ff9d2-16b8-11ed-aff2-ffa922d745d2.html

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Why is the Amazon Rain Forest burning?

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At the COP26 conference last year, the "not-really-a-prince" Charles called for a vast military-style campaign.

The devil speaks with a double-tongue. THEY say sustainable, but act the opposite.

So, which side of the war are the poppy-wearing, double-tongued Charles and his mum really on? The answer is clear:

The British people, who are Israelites, under The Covenant, have been betrayed; impoverished and oppressed by the monarchy through-out its long and evil existence, because the people themselves have not kept The Covenant, that they swore at Sinai to keep for ever.

Under that Covenant the monarch is prohibited from using their position for personal material gain of any kind and from making up their own laws and taxes and economic policies; either themselves or their politicians. - Monarchy

Prince Charles claims a "vast military-style campaign" is required

Queen says she ‘couldn’t be more proud of Charles
https://video.cloud.huawei.com/p/shortvod/dmx88331s.html

Thank-you.

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You're welcome and thank-you.

Proof the Govt. is Starting All Wildfires!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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Proof the Govt. is Starting All Wildfires!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! | The Truthseeker

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Radical Drought Caused by Military Weather Weapons – Dane Wigington

Last month, climate engineering researcher Dane Wigington predicted “40 million in West would be without water in 2023.” Looks like the U.S. government is just as worried as Wigington about the extreme drought conditions. The Bureau of Reclamation just announced a first-ever forced water cut plan as the Colorado River dwindles to a trickle in Western America. Wigington contends the severe drought in the West and around the world is not a natural event but caused by man-made weather modification called geoengineering. Wigington explains, “What do we see around the globe? It’s not just Europe and not just the Western U.S., but South America also. We are seeing radical protracted drought that is crushing crops everywhere while Las Vegas is being deluged in an engineered scenario. This is all technology. They control the spigot, period. We have said this at GeoEngineeringWatch.org for a decade and a half. Everything is manifesting itself. What are we seeing? While Vegas is being flooded, we are seeing in the bread basket in the Midwest and California 110 degree temperatures, single digit humidity in some places, and crops are virtually imploding here.”

Who is responsible for the biggest drought in the last 1,200 years? Wigington says documents show it is the U.S. military. Wigington says, “Zbigniew Brzezinski, former National Security Advisor to Presidents Johnson and Carter, stated on the record that climate modification operations were the exceptional covert weapon of the U.S. military to make countries and their populations more compliant. Climate modification is the Crown Jewel weapon of the Military Industrial Complex. It’s not just for foreign adversaries, but for their own populations. They can bring them to their knees without them ever knowing they are under assault. Think how absurd this is when we have climate modification operations cutting off precipitation to tens of millions in the U.S., and nobody seems to have a clue. Nobody is willing to acknowledge this elephant in the sky.”

The military is also using forest fires as a weapon. Wigington says, “We have found a document that is titled ‘Forest Fires as a Military Weapon.’ (Wigington also has produced a video with the same title.) It actually names the processes or road map to prepare for intense incineration. What is most damning about this document is it specifically cites not only many locations in the U.S., including Mount Shasta where I live, it also cites the ‘prime burn windows’ for other U.S. allies that are on fire now such as Portugal, Spain and Greece. How much more damning can a document be? This is business as usual for the U.S. military. Think about the insanity of this. You incinerate forests as a military weapon and inflict damage on your own citizens.”

Wigington says there is a short window to fully wake people up to stop geoengineering, but the most important group is the U.S. military. Wigington says, “Our military personnel are unknowingly participating in this . . . . They are being told they are doing something for the greater good. It’s something that is saving the planet when it is, in fact, killing the planet.”

Wigington talks about all the contaminated rain water, nuclear war, nano lipid particles, aluminum in your body and how much time we have left before the entire ecosystem implodes because of man-made weather modification called geoengineering.

There is much more in the 36 min interview.

Wildfires As A Weapon: US Military Exposed

Is the military industrial complex insane enough to incinerate Earth's last remaining forests in order to achieve the objectives of the global controllers? The short answer is yes. A formerly classified US military document titled "Forest Fire As A Military Weapon" is a truly shocking exposé of planned scorched Earth destruction. The US Forest Service actually participated in the research and planning that went into this military instruction manual for carrying out orchestrated forest fire catastrophes. What part have climate intervention operations played in the preparation of forests for extreme and unprecedented incineration all over the world? The short video report below reveals the shocking degree of research that the US military and the US Forest Service has put into preparing forests for extreme incineration.

Wildfires As A Weapon, US Military Exposed

[Full report ... ]

Another One: Poultry Processing Plant Catches Fire in Montebello, California

A poultry processing plant in Montebello, California was caught on fire on Sunday.

A representative for the city of Montebello said that QC Poultry, located at 1111 W. Olympic Blvd., had building damaged and that numerous commercial cars may have been destroyed by fire, according to KTLA.

The fire was contained with the help of Montebello Fire and other mutual aid fire departments.

“Shortly after 4:00 p.m. on Sunday, August 28, your [Montebello Fire Department] responded to a reported structure fire in the 1000 block of Olympic Blvd,” Montebello FD wrote on Instagram.

“First arriving units on scene found a large industrial building with heavy smoke showing. As members began to deploy, the fire was upgraded to a third alarm commercial fire.”

The cause of the fire is unknown.

“Firefighters initially took a defensive stance and held the fire from spreading to any other nearby structures. After a significant amount of resources worked to access the burning areas, the fire was declared knocked down at 8:00 p.m. At the time of this posting, the cause of the fire remains under investigation,” the post concluded.

“Footage from the scene shows burn damage near the building’s windows and doors, as well as at least one unit from the Monterey Park Fire Department present to assist,” per KTLA.

“The fire was located in a heavily industrial area and no residential properties were threatened, though the blaze was adjacent to the Montebello Bus Lines service facility and bus yard,” the outlet added.

What’s Going On? Ohio BP Explosion Kills Two, Fourth Gas Plant Explosion Since June

Two employees were killed last night in an explosion at the BP Toledo, Ohio refinery.

The BP Toledo refinery was “safely shut down” in response to Tuesday night’s fire where two employees died.

The cause of the fire is not yet known.

Reuters reports:

BP said on Wednesday two of its staff were killed after sustaining injuries in a fire at its 150,800 barrel-per-day Toledo, Ohio, refinery.

“The fire was extinguished last night and refinery was safely shut down and remains offline,” a company spokesperson said.

“All other staff is accounted for and our employee assistance team is on site.”

The cause of the fire is not known, but leaking fumes from a crude unit may have caused the ignition in another unit at the facility, a source told Reuters.

The refinery has been operating for over 100 years on a parcel of land that covers 585 acres and processes approximately 160, 000 barrels of crude oil a day.

This is the fourth fossil fuel disruption/explosion since June in our nation.

Reuters shares that Freeport, Texas, LNG was taken offline on June 8, 2022, and will not return to service until mid-November per “Upstream Energy Explored”.

Freeport, Texas provides 20% of all U.S. LNG processing and one of the largest US exporters in the nation.

On July 7, 2022, in Fort Bend County, near Houston, Texas, an explosion occurred to a natural gas line. The fire was quickly extinguished.

On August 24, 2022, Illinois and its surrounding states experienced a major disruption in fuel distribution from a shutdown at the BP facility in Whiting, Illinois. BP experienced an electrical fire at its facility which necessitated an immediate shutdown. This facility supplies a major international airport, distribution centers, automobile and manufacturing region and seaway corridor for the Great Lakes Region.

BP resumed operations on September 16, 2022. Hopefully the backlog will quickly dissipate.

Illinois Business Journal reports,

Governor JB Pritzker announced today that his administration has taken steps to proactively address a shutdown at a BP facility in Whiting, Ind., caused by an electrical fire. Illinois, along with Indiana, Michigan, and Wisconsin, requested and were granted an emergency waiver of federal fuel regulations from the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

“After learning of the electrical fire at the BP facility in Whiting, our administration has taken proactive steps to increase gas supply and reduce barriers so all Illinoisans have access to the fuel they need,” said Pritzker. “This coordinated effort with our neighboring states will reduce the chance of disruptions and keep the people and businesses of Illinois moving.”

The temporary waiver, which was granted through Sept. 15, 2022, allows for high volatility gasoline to be sold during the summer months, reducing fuel disruptions following the fire which broke out on Aug. 24.

The waiver also means that Illinois corn farmers will provide the needed fuel through their ethanol production, which is a lower emission alternative to gasoline produced without ethanol.

At a time of high inflation, two major fossil fuel production facility shutdowns, previous explosions and disruptions, it begs the question: Why we are experiencing so many major disruptions in our natural fossil fuel supply production/distribution facilities?

Fire breaks out at world's biggest produce market in Paris

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/fire-breaks-out-at-worlds-biggest-produce-market-in-paris/2022/09/25/aef183a6-3ccd-11ed-8c6e-9386bd7cd826_story.html

A billowing column of dark smoke towered over Paris on Sunday from a warehouse blaze at a massive produce market that supplies the French capital and surrounding region with much of its fresh food and bills itself as the largest of its kind in the world.

Firefighters urged people to stay away from the area in Paris’ southern suburbs, as 100 officers and 30 fire engines battled the blaze at the Rungis International Market.

Capt. Marc Le Moine, a spokesman for the Paris fire service, said no one was injured. The fire was brought under control and there was no risk of it spreading from the soccer field-sized warehouse, covering an area of 7,000 square meters (1.7 acres), he said.

The cause of the blaze was unknown but will be investigated, he added.

The sprawling wholesale market is a veritable town unto itself, with more than 12,000 people working there and warehouses filled with fruit and vegetables, seafood, meats, dairy products and flowers from across France and around the world.

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VIETNAM WAR
Forest Fire as a Military Weapon
A June 1970 Report of study commissioned by the Department of Defense.

In 1965 the Joint Chiefs of Staff requested that the Secretary of Defense initiate research to determine the feasibility of measuring the flammability characteristics of forests and jungle growth, modifying flammability so that vegetation would readily support combustion and developing measures to destroy large areas of forest or jungle growth by fire. This research has been conducted by the Forest Service of the Department of Agriculture, under sponsorship of the Advanced Research
Projects Agency through ARPA Order 818. The primary research attention was given to the flammability characteristics of jungle growth in tropical and monsoonal climates where forest fires seldom occur
naturally.

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Geoengineering Videos

Geoengineering Videos

Wildfires Serve Geoengineering Agenda ( Dane Wigington Geoengineering Watch )...