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Jun 19, 2023Liked by Strange Sounds

thank you

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Jun 19, 2023Liked by Strange Sounds

Thanks 🙏❤️🇺🇸🐸

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The reason for the forest fires volatility is that the military industrial complex "secretly" sprays 50 million tons of aluminum (also barium and strontium) into the skies every year and it settles into the forest. Aluminum is also a dessicant, drying out the forests. Every firefighter who fights these ferocious blazes says the same thing; unquenchable, never seen (before recent years) how uncharacteristically they are burning, with never before seen fury. Imagine all the animals dying in these insane blazes. Also, satellite images made in mid May show that the fires in Eastern Canada all began burning AT ONE TIME as if intentionally set. Forest fires serve the military industrial complex in weather warfare, being waged on this planet and visible in "flash" floods, doughts, unseasonable snow, grapefruit size hail etc. https://www.geoengineeringwatch.org/wildfires-as-a-weapon-us-military-exposed/ and the spraying has been caught on video, turning on and off providing PROOF that this is occuring, that is, if the insane criss crossing lines in the sky all over the world aren't enough proof for anyone to see.

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I wonder if heat-related deaths in the U.S. are sometimes due to us not being acclimated to the higher temps because we spend so much time in temperature controlled artificial indoor environments.

My family didn't have A/C at home or in autos until I was in high school. I grew up in South Florida, Mississippi, Southern California, among others, where it was God-awful hot and sometimes suffocatingly humid. I remember my dad bringing fans to my 4th grade classroom in CA when the temps topped 100.

Nothing was ever cancelled or postponed due to heat and I never heard of heat-related deaths. Life went on as normal and we sat around fanning ourselves and housewives tried to plan meals that didn't heat up the kitchen for long periods. People commented on the heat but it wasn't that big of a deal - it was an accepted part of life.

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So over 40% of the Federal Government's assets are student loans? I find it even more startling that over 80% of the assets are receivables.

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As far as Texas "outlawing water breaks", i think the point is, is it really the government's role to decide when people are thirsty, tired, or overheated? This is a rollback of over-regulation, not another tyrannical overreach that so many of us are getting way too used to. Texas should be commended, not condemned.

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deletedJun 18, 2023Liked by Strange Sounds
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