…and you want to frack this…?

Only a heartless person would want to ruin this by fracking….

Documentary on Chem trails

Well, this is the most documented film on chemtrails that I’ve seen to date.  Lots of stuff to digest…if the nausea from sick feeling doesn’t get you first…

It’s the first segment of seven, so you’ll have to click on the rest at the site.  I recommend clicking on the youtube link to upload the others, as it seems there is a problem with the sound.

In video #3– the woman senator brings up the skyrocketing numbers of Alzheimers and the link to aluminum.  She mentioned the theory that people who drank a lot of soda pop from aluminum cans became ill with alzheimer’s.  She said her father had alzheimers and never drank soda pop.  My Mom didn’t either.   It was always a gripe of mine that my father was adamant against junk food and he never allowed pop in the house when we were growing up (but now I am thankful for his wisdom).

AND–this is a big AND–pop didn’t come in aluminum cans until later–it was manufactured with glass bottles in the 70s and I think early 80s.  If this theory is the case, then why are the pop manufacturers still allowed to use aluminum cans?? If it were true, why wouldn’t aluminum cans be banned?  For that matter, why is plastic still allowed to be used by food manufacturers when it is known that plastics disrupt the endocrine system and cause cancer?

You know, as I am listening to her talk, with the accumulation of aluminum in the brain cells over time, it pops into my head that it was the early 90s that Hughes Aircraft got the patent for spraying…it was about ten years ago–1993–when my Mom started to exhibit some symptoms of Alzheimers.  Like mercury, lead, and other heavy metals, it takes time for it to accumulate to a point that the person can no longer function.  It’s a gradual process of disabling someone….and animals, too.  The deer with neurological diseases popped into my head as I wrote that.

Given that gluten intolerance causes gut inflammation (leaky gut), that allows heavy metal poisoning….and deer love corn, which is GMO…well, it begs the question of whether the deer are suffering from gut inflammation….that nobody is testing for, naturally.  I did a quick search for animals and gut inflammation, and could find nothing.  I don’t know why this wouldn’t be an issue to explore–any animal with corn or soy as a primary diet food should be watched carefully–but we can’t have that–might dip into Monsanto’s profit margin to label their frankenfood as harmful to physical and neurological health.

Gut inflammation and heavy metal poisoning pretty much go hand in hand.  You’re likely to find one with the other.

The video mentions the spraying causing cancer—it is a known fact that mercury causes cancer.

One of the symptoms associated with aluminum toxicity is anemia.  I mentioned in my recent post that I was pale the morning after the skies being sprayed with 26+ chemtrails.  I was as white as a sheet.  I also had the swollen face with pain in my sinuses– a known reaction to aluminum (and mercury), too.  I was jogging the morning of, so I was taking in more air than normal.  This scares me with all the implications of it.  Farmers and anyone who works outside should be alarmed, as well….because the continued exposure will slowly build up.

I’m not sure of the accusations lobbed–there is a lot of money involved in spraying–that much is certain.  And it’s hard not to think about the money trail–who stands to benefit from this?  Who has the resources to pull this off?  Who doesn’t give a rip about the health effects nor have any qualms about killing people?  And if this is a harmless technology, then why deny it is happening?

This is hard to talk about.  It’s disturbing to say the least.  But I’ve seen changes in my health because of the spraying, and because I’m already suffering from mercury poisoning, I’m especially vulnerable to toxins from any source.  I have noticed in FW that there were sooo many people on oxygen, with difficulty breathing.  Most of them were only ten years older than me.  You just didn’t see so much illness as you see today.  I mean, it’s rare that a week goes by that I don’t hear about a young person getting cancer.  Young kids are getting heart attacks, for crying out loud.  You NEVER heard of that unless someone was very ill–it wasn’t a shock because they were in ill health.  Now they’re dropping dead playing sports.

Something is terribly, terribly wrong.

Other Posts:

Globs of gelatin dropping from the skies.

Hughes Aircraft patent granted for the technology.

Suzuki showing support for First Nations

David Suzuki is supporting the Elsipogtog protests.  Thank you, David!

Meanwhile, the trucks arrive in convoy. Another pic here.

Harper spies on the peaceful group. Note that their own intelligence says they do not see them as a violent threat….yet, they show up in riot gear and tear gas the peaceful protestors. I’m glad to read that they are also protesting Enbridge, which is in my own backyard.  “We want to keep the people and environment safe…”  bwahaha, that’s rich.  If you really cared about the environment, you wouldn’t be building a pipeline to begin with.

(DN also covered this happening in the U.S. towards nonprofit groups that big business perceives as threats. Big Brother has arrived.)

Lastly, this pic of a smiling female Warrior.

My other blogs on energy and fracking here, here, and here, and here.

 

We’re okay

I was going to make a crack about it being a slow news day when CNN covers stuff happening in Indiana….but thought better of it when I heard of how devastating the storms were–

They aren’t exaggerating when they say the storms passed very quickly.  Five minutes total.  The winds were ferocious–and a family member heard the dreaded “freight train” sound associated with tornadoes.  We were in the bathrooms for the worst of it, and then came out to see it after the worst had passed.  A chair was blown into the yard and lawn furniture tossed around, but other than that, we sustained minimal damage.

They say that three are dead in Illinois and Peoria took a big hit. Kokomo, Indiana is in a state of emergency.

My family is okay, though.  Blessings to those who suffered a loss.

Oh, beautiful, for spacious skies…

I saw recently where James Taylor was supposed to sing the Star Spangled Banner, and started singing “America, the Beautiful”…God Bless him.  I want to put  a vote in for America, the Beautiful for our national anthem.  The Star Spangled Banner sings of war and bombs but America the Beautiful sings of the beauty of our country, the abundance, and the brotherhood (as yet to be realized, but a worthy goal).

A beautiful, crisp morning as the sun rises….now moved across the horizon for the winter sleep…

I saw six deer this morning.  Sometimes they will stop and just observe me, but mostly they just run off, with white tails bobbing up…it never ceases to amaze me how they can be standing still in front of a four foot tall fence and leap over it with such athletic grace.    They like apples, by the way.  A momma deer and baby were seen nibbling apples one morning while they hung from the tree.  You’ll see a half-eaten apple on the ground and know that it was lunch for a deer.

I went out the other morning, and the birds were singing as if it were a Spring day.  It caught me off guard….this is Fall, right…? :p

There were cardinals singing, Blue Jays sounding the warning, and another bird I couldn’t identify singing its little heart out.  Funny.

I’ve seen a bird that is mostly grayish black that at first I thought was a junco, but it’s tail looked like a sparrow’s and it was too big to be a junco.

The hummingbirds have long since sought warmer climates.  I miss their antics.  They spend more energy fighting over the food, when there is plenty there, rather than conserving the energy they used fighting so they wouldn’t need so much food….I know there is a lesson for mankind in there, somewhere….

You remember the hornet’s nest I mentioned?  Something happened to it–we had about three days of rain (no chemtrails to interfere), and then we had really windy days….so it may have been the combination that caused the nest to lose its outer wrap (for want of a better word).  It literally had torn off the wrap down to the honeycomb-like inner chambers.  I guess birds could have gotten to it, too, but I’ve never seen that. Not that I’ve seen that many hornets’ nest….in my youth, when I lived around the woods, but not since moving to the city.

Here’s an informative blog on hornet’s nests.  I learned something today–I saw the honeycombs of the torn hornet’s nest but I did not realize they actually made honey! It makes perfect sense, though, because they need something for the pupae. However, I wanted to double check this, and another site said they did not make honey.

Continuing the search, I found this:

I also learned that the Maya believe hornets/wasps learn the hut owner’s scent and leave them alone….but may go after visitors.  Interesting.  Hornets generally do leave people alone….unless they mess with them.  There was one story of my childhood where one of the neighborhood kids thought it would be funny to poke a hornet’s nest.  Um-hmm….you can guess what happened…hornets mad as hell swarmed him.  They had to get a hose to get them off.  Yep, he never did that again…

I found this interesting blog on hornet nest destruction.  Apparently, bears will tackle anything.  This site is pretty interesting with discussions on biodiversity.  Someone posted a video on biodiversity but it advocates eco-tourism, and setting aside small tracts of land for preservation.  I think both of these ideas send the wrong message.  Tourism is tourism and the more people that trample the ground, disturbing the wildlife, the more stress they bring to resources and the life forms there–not to mention more pollution by using motorized vehicles.  I shake my head at folks who drive up in SUV’s to the parks….the irony seems lost on them on the damage their vehicles cause by consuming gas and polluting with exhaust, which are destroying the nature that they seek.

And the setting aside tracts of land is a noble idea–but in my view, it absolves the rest of the occupants of the land their responsibility to take care of the land they’re on.  In other words, it’s like they’re saying “we have this land over here that is being preserved, therefore, you can pollute the hell out of the other land that isn’t in the preserve.”   It’s still missing the HUGE point that we cannot separate the land by lines….as much as we have been brainwashed into thinking that it is possible to do just that.

Water runoff polluted with pesticides, herbicides, genetically modified forms, mercury, etc., will migrate from the unprotected land to the protected land.  Toxic air will flow over the protected land.   There is no way to keep a tract of land pristine while the land surrounding it is poisoned.  Just like we see with the nuclear accident in Japan–what happens in one area affects another that has nothing to do with it.  We have to see that everything we do affects another–to take care.

Another link someone posted is something near and dear to my heart–natural water filtration a la natural swimming pools.  Pretty cool, eh?  Last one in is a rotten egg! 🙂

Also, there is a thread on endangered invertebrates. Interesting read.

Have a great Sunday. 🙂

Solar in Canada

Global News features a homeowner who installed solar panels and is now seeing the benefits.    He requested a meter that would feed the excess energy he doesn’t need back into the utility grid, but didn’t see it for months.  The power company exec offers no explanation, only to say that the problem has been fixed.  And the reporter stated that someone refused to be interviewed…I’m assuming it’s the power company’s representative? 

Anyway, I thought about all the excuses used for not pushing solar energy for the northern states–that there’s just not enough sunlight to make it economically feasible—and here we have someone in Canada, which has even less sunlight and because of the shape of Earth, is less intense energy from the sun, and yet they are still able to absorb enough energy to power their homes and have more to send back to the utility company.  Kind of blows that excuse, doesn’t it?

There are others here in the U.S. who go completely off-grid, where they’re not attached to the public utility, and they use batteries to store the excess energy for days that the sun doesn’t shine. 

The time has come for solar.  Cheap–when you factor in environmental damage by all other means of producing energy:  coal (mercury, lead, arsenic), oil (cancer), nuclear (cancer), gas (fracking–mercury, cancer, and God only knows what else).—plus their detrimental effects on climate change.

Clean.  Unlimited power source.

I did a web search and found a national geographic video on a solar farm–but the narrator states that unlike solar panels, they use mirrors that reflect light upward, and then a tube with synthetic oil captures the heat, to transport it.  With that information, I clicked off the video.  Why on Earth would they use synthetic oil??  It just seems that we are so creatively challenged that we can’t think outside the oil box. 

It’s just so harrrrd to think sustainably!!     /said with dripping sarcasm

Strokes and youth

This is sobering news.  Note that the article doesn’t go into diet, but if GMO’s were introduced in the 90s, and strokes started increasing at that time….is anyone going to look into the connection?

Also, colorectal cancer has increased in youth at the rate of 13%  from 1992-2005.  The article goes for the easy blame of fast food….without exploring the GMO connection or toxic environment.   I’m not saying that fast food isn’t a factor, because it is not healthy, but they need to go more deeply.

Also, neither of these articles explore economic factors where the families buy processed food because it’s cheaper, and the family’s health suffers because of it.

Breast cancer rates among the young, and especially young black women, are rising, too–tripling from 1976 to 2009.  Red flags all over the place, folks.

For me personally, one of my lumps has shrunk, the other has stayed the same, a little over a year after discovery.  Interestingly, I had read somewhere that women with fibrocystic breast disease respond well to iodine.  If you recall, last year, about this time,  I had three breast lumps and they were increasing in size.  After increasing my iodine, one disappeared and the other stayed the same size.

Within the mercury poisoning group, there is great debate about low thyroid and iodine.  Some folks are adamantly against iodine, saying if one has Hashimoto’s (which I suspect I have because it is autoimmune and goes with Celiac), that iodine will make it worse.  That hasn’t been my experience.  With the shrinking breast lumps, I would say that my intuition has been right in increasing the iodine.

Mercury interferes with iodine absorption.  the Barium sprayed from chem trails interferes with iodine absorption.    These are most likely factors in the increases in cancer, since the thyroid is a master gland controlling nearly every important body function, from the pituitary to the adrenals, to the gut, to brain function.  This is serious stuff, and messing with the environment is coming around to bite us in the arse.

 

Oil from sunken ships

Global News has this up on the recovery of oil from sunken ships.  At first, I wondered at all the sunken ships and if they might be a resource for oil instead of drilling the Earth….and then they say the price tag for this is $50 million.

You would think with all the technology out there that they could come up with some system that would allow for easier recovery of oil from sunken ships.  Why couldn’t it be contained in some sort of rubber “balloon” that could more easily be recovered if a ship sank?  Surely they could come up with something like that?