Major wildfires hit Los Angeles

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I have been thinking back to Maui (and 911) a lot while seeing this. Here's a screenshot of a video I saw by a guy biking around the burnt area. Is it just me or is it super weird that that car burnt down so close to a bunch of green bushes. Imho a lot of this has mass arsony / energy weapons written all over it.

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WTF!!


NEW: Just spotted California National Guard on PCH in the #PalisadeFire burn zone.



She’s from a billionaire APARTMENT DEVELOPER family. Her only jobs have been LtGov (did 0), working for dad & Ambassador to Hungary (which her dad paid millions to Obama to buy for her to bolster her political future).

She is in office for ONE reason. And you can guess.

Kounalakis is the Democratic establishment pick to become next governor. Proof? At the Democratic National Convention, Newsom was only allowed to speak briefly from the FLOOR while totally unknown Kounalakis got a speech from the stage.

She cannot be allowed to become Governor. If Newsom resigns, she automatically does and then runs as incumbent. She’s worse than Newsom. Has the public speaking ability of 1/3 a Kamala. Had her dad buy her every job she’s had.

f Newsom is recalled, we get someone better. Guaranteed. As none of the establishment elites will be allowed to run against him in a recall.
 
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#BREAKING: LOS ANGELES COUNTY EMERGENCY ALERT SYSTEM HACKED?

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LA County LOSES ALL CONTROL over their emergency alert system saying "these messages are not being initiated by human action"

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The Emergency Management Director just admitted that FALSE ALERTS are being sent to MILLIONS of people warning them to evacuate

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Residents who need to know whether to evacuate or not will now be UNABLE to rely on their own county for evacuation alerts

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Just imagine the devastating consequences of what could potentially happen from this

So if it's not them, who the hell is controlling the government's EMERGENCY Alert System right now??
Source :

So the official website is this one : Emergency – COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES
 
Something I initially thought odd about the Los Angeles fires is that they struck so close to the city at a time when there haven't been other fires in the region.

But then, a fire-risk was forecast for the Los Angeles area before they occurred. Here's the National Weather Service's warning on January 6th:

Forecast-wise, attention remains on very strong and damaging Santa Ana wind event. Latest deterministic models, and their respective ensembles, all still point to a very strong event. Surface pressure gradients are forecast to peak in the -6.0 to -8.0 mb range while the upper level wind/thermal support is very good (45-65 knots). Also, the pattern is favorable for significant mountain wave activity across the foothills and valleys of LA and eastern Ventura county, similar to the 2011 Pasadena wind event, and any community in this area from around Simi Valley to Claremont could see gusts of 80 to 100 MPH with this wave activity. Also, wind gusts of 80 to 100 MPH will be possible across the mountains of Ventura and LA counties. HIGH WIND WARNINGS are in effect for many areas of Los Angeles county and eastern Ventura county Tuesday through Wednesday. Also, have issued WIND ADVISORIES for the Antelope Valley, the Ventura county coastal plain, western Ventura Valleys, the eastern Santa Ynez Range and the interior Santa Barbara county mountains.
US media duly reported this forecast, and the State of California took preemptive action:

The National Weather Service issued a critical fire risk alert for parts of Los Angeles and Ventura counties, with the storm beginning Tuesday afternoon and peaking early Wednesday. Winds will be above 60 mph, and gusts could reach 80 mph to 100 mph in mountains and foothills. The fire threat is expected to stick around through Friday.

Warm and dry Santa Ana winds and very low humidity have created the perfect conditions for spreading fire, triggering repeated red flag fire warnings, and authorities are taking no chances.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom said Monday he would pre-emptively mobilize state resources to tackle the storm, including assigning 65 fire engines, seven water tenders, seven helicopters and 109 specialized workers.

And:

Before the fire, all 114 tanks that supply the city water infrastructure were completely filled.

Whether enough was done is another matter, but this at least shows that local authorities were aware big fires could occur.
 
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