Portrait of a Cult
By Rebel Siren TROLLS are everywhere, even the word “troll” is offensive. They have been systematically infiltrating social media, hiding in the shadows like rats. Many of them are paid, hired by PR companies to spin an issue, sway public opinion, and cause debate and controversy where none previously existed, nor should. Check online employment venues for “forum poster” jobs. Trolls contribute to the ills of our society and are a virtual plague upon the planet by perpetuating everything that is destructive from promoting GMOs to geoengineering, to marketing, spamming, and selling us stuff we don’t need.
The Desperation of the Human Race
We are all living in a real life science fiction movie. Our skies are sprayed with toxic metals and chemicals for the stated purpose of “controlling the weather”, there are nuclear plant meltdowns, massive fish and animal die offs, etc. The implosion of Earth’s life support systems is confronting us on all sides. Ever more elaborate and colossal efforts are being undertaken as man’s struggle to survive increases in scope, scale, and intensity. The effort to survive itself causes yet more damage to the planet. The reality we have all known is rapidly unraveling, this fact will become clearer by the day to any that are even slightly awake. “The Greenhouses of Almeria” is a glaring example of man’s desperate attempt to cope with an increasingly harsh and inhospitable environment of his own creation. The science fiction movie is now. This is the future for us all as man struggles to feed increasing populations on a dying planet. Climate engineering is the epitome of human insanity. The attempt to mediate the damage done to the planet by a further escalation of the same activities that helped create the damage in the first place is a textbook example of insanity. Dane Wigington geoengineeringwatch.org
Dane Wigington Geoengineering on The Hundredth Monkey Radio June 22 2014 Hour One
Canada Struggles with Melting Permafrost as Climate Warms
In 2006, reduced thickness of ice roads forced the Diavik Diamond Mine in Northern Canada to fly in fuel rather than try to transport cargo across melted pathways, at an extra cost of $11.25 million. The mountain pine beetle outbreak in British Columbia—fueled by higher winter temperatures that allow insects to survive—expanded in recent years to be 10 times greater than any previously recorded outbreak in the province. Mortality rates of sockeye salmon, meanwhile, have increased because of higher water temperatures in the Fraser River.