Saturday, April 1, 2023

If you actually study what is happening weather wise on earth:

 You basically can see the human race is committing suicide (Slowly or quickly). The ONLY thing I can presently see that could stop or slow this down at present is mass human deaths from strange weather and earthquakes around the world.

So, if you and your children and grandchildren want to be some of the survivors at the end of this century, you likely have to start now in your planning for this. Because otherwise, most people aren't going to make it.

I suppose you could see this a little like a war for survival where the weather some places is going to be killing people more and more. So, where you choose to live on earth (right or wrong) is going to determine likely whether you survive this century (or your children or grandchildren do). 

Thinking like this might take some planning and the poorer one tends to be the more important it is to choose wisely where one lives and sends down roots because a wrong choice now could be fatal for your whole family later this century.

Where not to live (at least during the present phase of Global Climate changes:

1. anywhere near the equator (unless you are rich).

2. Anywhere too near the ocean (unless you are rich).

3. Anywhere tornadoes are getting worse by the day (unless you are rich and build cement escape places under the ground and have good tornado monitoring equipment for all members of your family.

Places where you might better survive:

Near where there is a running river or lake (so you have a water source even if you have to boil it or distill it to drink it).

Close to the ocean maybe within a mile or two (so you have a water source in an emergency) Because droughts (huge droughts some places will get much worse over time) whereas other places will basically wash away or become lakes like large parts of Pakistan did this last year.

If you are living some place like Bangladesh where the ocean water is rising very quickly and most of the land is only less than 10 to 20 feet high this will be a problem. If you are living on an island that doesn't have much altitude (this will be a problem). 

If you are living where hurricanes are getting worse (unless you build underground shelters like people near tornadoes) you might not survive the next hurricanes (or tornadoes) when they come.

Having water to drink is one of the most important things that can be boiled or filtered in some way is likely the biggest thing to think of. Because one can survive without food for up to 40 days or more and people have done this that I know of many times (as a health cleanse) and likely even lengthened their lives by not eating any food for 40 days. But, if you are older and your body isn't used to do this it also might kill you especially if you are older than 70 when you begin fasting like this this length of time. If you are going to do 40 day water fasts start when you are a teenager or young adult to begin with not at 70.

Storing canned or non-perishable goods (wherever you are on earth) is a good idea for unforseen emergencies.

For example, I never could have predicted the last 3 months in California in a million years. I could have told you one of these winters was coming but I couldn't say when.

And if you want to know how bad flooding can be in California study the 1862 floods in California where the Sacramento River was 20 miles wide (sort of like looking out to sea from Los Angeles the Distance to Catalina Island which is 26 miles). In 1862 the steamboats were picking men off of barns and out of trees as they traveled north on the Sacramento River to Redding, California on a little Steamship that was flat bottomed called "The Gem".

Here is more on this:

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The Great Flood of 1862 was the largest flood in the recorded history of California, Oregon, and Nevada, inundating the western United States and portions ...
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Great Flood of 1862

The Great Flood of 1862 was the largest flood in the recorded history of California, Oregon, and Nevada, inundating the western United States and portions of British Columbia and Mexico. It was preceded by weeks of continuous rains and snows that began in Oregon in November 1861 and continued into January 1862. Wikipedia
End date: January 1862
Start date: December 1861
Deaths: >4,000
Property damage: $100 million (1861 USD); $3.117 billion (2021 USD)
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