Saturday, March 17, 2018

Why is it important to develop your intuitive and instinctual gifts?

Because without them you are not going to survive the rest of this century the way things are going!

This might disturb many or most of you.

But, I'm a precognitive psychic (I often see the future) and those without knowing what is coming often will not survive what is coming.

What is the worst thing I see?

People whether from Russia or China are not the worst of it.

The worst of it are the increasing winds all over the earth.

If you cannot be present enough to know what is coming on a given day, often you just won't survive that day the rest of this century.

Winds over 100 mph are the main problem I see. Governments both Democracies and Dictatorships will be incompetent in dealing with the winds fast enough to save your lives.

Imagine snow storm whiteouts with winds blowing 100 to 200 mph where on icy roads your cars just starts sliding blown like a sail in the wind until it hits another car or bridge or tree maybe at 60 to 100 mph.

Imagine Tornadoes with winds inside them going 300 to 500 mph some places on earth where no wooden building (of any kind) survives if it is built above ground.

Imagine hurricanes with winds 200 to 400 mph being a normal winter hurricane hitting Texas to Florida to Maine.

Imagine California with 20 to 25 inches of rain falling in 3 days time on the Sierras and what that would do to life in the San Joaquin and Sacramento Valleys.

All these things are coming to the U.S. lower 48 and much worse things are coming overseas.

All governments won't save you. Only you will be able to save yourselves by knowing WHEN these things are coming.

If you don't save your families no one will!

This is this century folks worldwide.


What is the cause of all this?


Global Warming and Global Climate change and Trump is just speeding it all up by pretending it isn't going to happen.

So, the faster the stock market rises now from no ecological controls at all the faster people are going to start dying in droves all over the world from these wind calamities.

Why aren't people from Russia and China the worst of it?

Because their governments will be destroyed by global warming even faster than the U.S. and European Union governments will by winds over 100 miles per hour in many different forms.

By the end of this century one weather event likely will take out 1 million people or more somewhere on earth.

Earth changes have already taken out 250,000 people in the 2004 Tsunami and I believe about 15,000 people already died in the Japanese Tsunami in 2011.

And then with events like 2011 in Japan you also have Fukushima nuclear power plant that will be venting plutonium radiation for the next 50,000 to 100,000 years into all oceans on earth through the water table there because of the meltdown of one of the reactors was reprocessing weapons grade plutonium.

So, earth events are already killing large amounts of people.

begin quote from:

The Deadliest Tsunamis in History - ThoughtCo

https://www.thoughtco.com › ... › American History › Crimes & Disasters
The tragedy has resulted in numerous tsunami watches when earthquakes have occurred near oceansever since. ... This Indonesian volcano erupted in August 1883 with such violence that all 3,000 peopleon the island of Sebesi, 8 miles away from the crater, were killed. But the ... More than 18,000 peoplewere killed.

World's Worst Tsunamis

When an ocean or other body of water experiences a displacement of water due to an earthquake, volcano, underwater explosion, or other altering event, giant deadly waves can rocket toward shore. Here are the worst tsunamis in history.

Boxing Day Tsunami - 2004

Boxing Day tsunami wreckage
 Aceh, Indonesia, the most devastated region struck by the tsunami. (U.S. Navy/Wikimedia Commons/Public Domain)
Even though this was the third greatest magnitude earthquake in the world since 1990, the magnitude 9.1 temblor is remembered for the deadly tsunami that the undersea quake let loose. The earthquake was felt in Sumatra, parts of Bangladesh, India, Malaysia, Maldives, Myanmar, Singapore, Sri Lanka, and Thailand, and the ensuing tsunami hit 14 countries as far away as South Africa. The death toll was 227,898 (about a third of those children) -- the sixth deadliest recorded disaster in history. Millions more were left homeless. The fault line that slipped has been estimated at 994 miles long. The U.S. Geological Survey estimated that the energy released by the quake that triggered the tsunami was equivalent to 23,000 Hiroshima-type atomic bombs. The tragedy has resulted in numerous tsunami watches when earthquakes have occurred near oceans ever since. It also resulted in a massive outpouring of $14 billion in humanitarian aid to the affected countries.

Messina - 1908

tsunami wreckage
 Victims' bodies lying outside badly damaged and destroyed buildings in Corso Vittorio Emanuele which fronts the port of Messina. (Luca Comerio/Wikimedia Commons/Public Domain)
Think of the boot of Italy, and down to its toe where the Strait of Messina separates Sicily from the Italian province of Calabria. On Dec. 28, 1908, a 7.5 magnitude quake, massive by European scales, struck at 5:20 a.m. local time, sending 40-foot waves crashing into each shoreline. Modern-day research suggests that the quake actually triggered an undersea landslide that touched off the tsunami. The waves devastated coastal towns including Messina and Reggio di Calabria. The death toll was between 100,000 and 200,000; 70,000 of those in Messina alone. Many of the survivors joined a wave of immigrants to the United States.

Great Lisbon Earthquake - 1755

At about 9:40 a.m. on Nov. 1, 1755, an earthquake estimated between 8.5 and 9.0 on the Richter scale was epicentered in the Atlantic Ocean off the coasts of Portugal and Spain. For a few minutes, the temblor took its toll on Lisbon, Portugal, but about 40 minutes after the shaking the tsunami hit. The double disaster sparked a third wave of devastation with fires throughout the urban areas. The tsunami waves had a wide reach, with waves as high as 66 feet striking the coast of North Africa and other waves reaching Barbados and England. The death toll from the trio of disasters is estimated at 40,000 to 50,000 across Portugal, Spain, and Morocco. Eighty-five percent of Lisbon's buildings were destroyed. The contemporary study of the quake and tsunami gave rise to the modern science of seismology.
This Indonesian volcano erupted in August 1883 with such violence that all 3,000 people on the island of Sebesi, 8 miles away from the crater, were killed. But the eruption and its fast-moving waves of hot gas and rock plunging into the sea set off waves that reached as high as 150 feet and demolished entire towns. The tsunami also reached India and Sri Lanka, where at least one person was killed, and the waves were even felt in South Africa. An estimated 40,000 were killed, with most of those deaths attributed to the tsunami waves. The explosion of the volcano was reportedly heard 3,000 miles away. More »

Tōhoku - 2011

tsunami wreckage
 Aerial photo of Minato, devastated by both the earthquake and subsequent tsunami. (Lance Cpl. Ethan Johnson/U.S. Marine Corps/Wikimedia Commons/Public Domain)
Sparked by an offshore magnitude 9.0 earthquake on March 11, 2011, waves reaching as high as 133 feet crashed into the east coast of Japan. The destruction resulted in what the World Bank called the most expensive natural disaster on record, with an economic impact of $235 billion. More than 18,000 people were killed. The waves also set off radioactive leaks at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant and sparked a global debate on the safety of nuclear energy. The waves reached as far as Chile, which saw a 6-foot surge.

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