- Joined
- Jul 3, 2021
I wonder which builders are lining that Congressman’s pockets?
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no make it really late and really heavy like my ex's periodRain is the only thing that's going to slow the tempo of fires getting out of hand. Hopefully it starts out gentle enough burn scars don't start slides.
Me too. It's enough that he has to very visibly clean up their mess. Suspending CA zoning regs is basically a "Sit down and shut up" moment.Actually, I think Trump is being magnanimous.
Politicians are just short of prostrating themselves before President Trump they are begging so hard.Live stream of the President in California.
I can sperg all day about this, but I will just say that the Emperor chosen by Heaven has been enthroned. After 8 years of tribulation a mortal has been raised beyond mortality. I am thrilled watching this press conference. We are watching in real time the true King bringing his own enemies to his side.Politicians are just short of prostrating themselves before President Trump they are begging so hard.
Splendid. Couldn't happen to a more deserving lot.This isn't slowing down until April. Minimum.
These fires are pretty small in the grand scheme of things and they've been contained relatively quickly.At which point do we start calculating the fires in terms of percentage of California's landmass?
This. The camp fire destroyed Paradise, CA and there was nowhere near the amount of handwringing and media spectacle that this got. Because Paradise was full of regular people and not the freak legion that regularly gets paraded in front of cameras nowadays.These fires are pretty small in the grand scheme of things and they've been contained relatively quickly.
The only reason they're headline news is because they're near major cities and have destroyed a bunch of overpriced houses.
It can't rain the Hollywood sign hasn't burnt down yetIt looks like you guys could get rain tomorrow. Fingers crossed.
Even if it did burn down the city would just rebuild it since it's critical part of LA's identity.It can't rain the Hollywood sign hasn't burnt down yet
So your saying there's a chance I might get to see it burn twice?Even if it did burn down the city would just rebuild it since it's critical part of LA's identity.
January 24, 2025
Is the LA Firepocalypse Part of the Great Reset Gameplan?
By Janet Levy
Are the L.A. wildfires — which have razed more than 38,000 acres (57 sq. miles), the equivalent of a midsize city like Minneapolis — a chance outbreak? Or is there a design behind this Firepocalypse? More specifically, is it part of a concerted attempt by the global elite to use fire, floods, and fear to push so-called “sustainable” goals for the Great Reset?
Many may dismiss those suspicions as alarmist. But a look at the big picture — including fires from recent years, weather manipulation programs, and plans for depopulation and rewilding — shows they are not unfounded. The unpreparedness for the L.A. fires, the mismanagement of fire-fighting ops, and the expertise the government has in weaponizing forest fires — the degree of each of these factors is so high, it points to deliberate action. Let’s look at the big picture first, then closely examine the L.A. fires.
Wildfires in recent years have been extremely widespread and intense. Consider these figures:
The average acreage destroyed yearly by wildfires in America was 3–4 million from the mid-1980s to 2000. It has shot up since 2014 to 7 million acres. Three of the wildfires mentioned above burned down a million acres each, and the smallest — the Lahaina fire — resulted in 100 casualties.
- August Complex (2020): 44 fires raged from August to November, scorching more than a million acres across six counties of northern California. Over 900 structures were destroyed, and the damage was estimated at $315 million.
- Dixie Fire (2021): a single fire raged from July to October, affecting 983,000 acres in northern California. It destroyed or damaged about 1,400 structures, causing losses of $1.15 billion. The fire-fighting cost $637 million.
- Lahaina Fire (2023): A series of fires in Hawaii, chiefly on Maui island, destroyed 17,000 acres and killed 102 people, making it the deadliest in over a century. It burnt down Lahaina, to the northwest of the island, almost completely. Over 2,200 structures were destroyed. Losses were estimated at $5.5 billion.
- Smokehouse Creek (2024): Caused allegedly by a downed power line, the fire raged from the end of February to mid-March, destroying over 1 million acres in the Texas panhandle and neighboring Oklahoma. Losses were estimated at $1 billion.
Doubtful, if anything trump probably did the whole "sorry guys I tried" bs.does this mean cali gave into trumps demands like a bunch of quivering faggots?