Tuesday, 20 November 2018

Abrupt climate change, Fukushima and geoengineering: the cascading triggers that are leading to the near-term extinction of humans


California soils are STERILE from the super-hot fires and from Fukushima radionuclides

Right now I can think of little that is more important for that part of the world apart from the rapid loss of habitat due to rapid warming of the planet.

I have been most affected by listening to a discussion from last week between Jeff Rense and Dane Wigington on the fires in California.

Forget any distaste you might have and listen to the following excerpt:


 
Wigington more or less places his date for when the human race loses its habitat for different reasons - 2025 or 2026.

Without any bacteria etc. in the soil nothing can grow and doesn't.

Wigington describes his own experience with having about 90% success rate in growing planets 8 or so years ago: now he reports having zero success.

Nothing will grow.

He points out here that Fukushima has been with us for 8 years. It is, in itself, a slow-moving human extinction event that is only getting worse.  During that time it has been entering the soils as described in short clip.


All of the above has shocked me as much as anything I have heard.

Whether one thinks that geoengineering is a primary driver of our move to extinction (and I cannot agree with that) it seems quite possible that the authorities are already trying to put off the evil day when the wider public at last understands what is happening by carrying out short-term cooling through manipulation of the weather at the expense of slightly longer-term heating of the planet leading to the cessation of higher life on the planet.


It makes sense to be arguing what is driving this warming if you still harbour the illusions that it can be 'solved'.

I agree with Wigington that abrupt anthropogenic climate change, the catastrophe at Fukushima and geoengineering are all parts of the puzzle and what we have is a cascading problem with many heads all of which indicate the demise of the human species in the near-term.


Listen to the following interview.  In my view it is worthwhile

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