Session 1 December 2018

Guess you are trying so say...?

Well the power of a clear channel and its receivers, said best.

As if things aren't bad enough in California with wildfires and power outages, the state Fire District has decided that Ham radio equipment in remote areas must be removed unless radio operators cough up a big fee to lease the land from the government. In an email to Ham operators, Lorina Pisi wrote:

I do understand and appreciate all of the service you have provided in the past. However, with constantly changing technological advances, there is no longer the same benefit to State as previously provided. Therefore, the Department no longer financially supports HAM operators radios or tenancy. If you desire to enter into a formal agreement to operate and maintain said equipment, you must complete and submit attached collocation application along with fee as outlined on page one of application. There is cost associated with getting an agreement in place. In addition to the technical analysis fee ($2500/application), there is DGS Lease admin cost associated (typically between $3000-$5000) with preparation of lease. Also, there will be an annual rent charge based upon equipment type/space.

Ham operators have been assisting fire and emergency services for free for years. Their contributions are well-documented. The equipment costs the state nothing, as it is operated by the owners. There is no benefit to removing it and, in fact, removing the only source of communication available when the power is out and the cell towers are down is downright criminal. Ham radio is a time-tested, low-cost, reliable means of communication when emergencies strike. OffGrid Survival reports, "What is infuriating here is people are going to die because of this decision. It costs the State of California nothing to allow these repeaters on public land; in fact, Ham Radio Operators pay for the equipment and maintain the equipment at their own cost. Ham Radio operators also make nothing from running these radio repeaters; they do so as a service to the public to help ensure the public’s safety during natural disasters and emergencies."

Instead of continuing to use a system that has worked for decades, the California government has instituted a cell communication plan that has already failed.

In 2012 the federal government launched FirstNet, a public safety nationwide broadband network that many in the government think will make Ham radio operators obsolete. In reality, its nothing more than a $47 Billion Federal Cell Phone Network that itself is already obsolete. In fact, it needs LOTS of infrastructure to function, and it creates multiple, single points of failure.

According to The Atlantic, "FirstNet is in such disarray that 15 years after the problem it is supposed to solve was identified, it is years from completion—and it may never get completed at all. According to the GAO, estimates of its cost range from $12 billion to $47 billion, even as advances in digital technology seem to have eliminated the need to spend any of it."

OffGrid Survival may have identified the actual issue:
The real story here is Ham Radio is a threat to the government. We make them look stupid! They spend billions on infrastructure that breaks down, while we can literally take a hundred bucks in equipment, some random wires, and in minutes set up a radio system that can communicate with anyone in the world. Hell, I’ve used my kid’s slinky, some Television Coax Cable, and a solar battery system to build a mobile rig that I’ve used to talk to people around the world — You can check out the Radio Rig Here. They don’t want the public to realize that we can take care of ourselves, and do a much better and cheaper job doing so![
They should also consider that the government hates watching anyone succeed at anything without the state getting its cut. Most likely, the fire district knows that Ham operators aren't going to watch their whole system dismantled and expects them to pay to keep it.

The list of emergencies where Ham operators have saved the day is extensive and can be read in this letter from operators to Pisi at the fire district.

Californians Stockpile Booze and Ice as PG&E Imposes Catastrophic Power Outages to Prevent Wildfires

Megan Fox is the author of “Believe Evidence; The Death of Due Process from Salome to #MeToo.” Follow on Twitter @MeganFoxWriter
 
(Pierre) Which song or type of music is closest to the tones and sub-tones that have those healing properties?

A: Gregorian chant.
In TRUTH HEALING: "Heal The Pineal & Sound Frequency From Heaven!" ~ GITHA BEN-DAVID [Age Of Truth TV] The singer, sound therapist educator and author Githa Ben-David explains in an interview how she discovered that sound and singing can have restoring and healing properties, and how some people also can use vocal sound to diagnose a person. This is mentioned quite early on in the vide, say first 20 minutes, of the more than 100-minute long interview.

When music like forms of Gregorian chant can heal, it is probably in part a result of the sounds produced, the vocal preparation of the singer as well as the talent of the singer.

They cover a fair amount of ground, and Githa expresses so much joy and laughter.
 
(Joe) Is the Oumuamua space rock an alien spaceship or probe?

A: Just wait a bit longer and all will become clear.

Q: (Joe) It's funny because they've been talking about it again and again. The speeding up and slowing down was reported by these Harvard people at the beginning of this year. They started talking about it again. So they keep bringing it up.

A: Recall that a spacecraft leaving your solar system experienced the same effect though at a greater distance?

Q: (L) And what spacecraft was that?

(Scottie) I don't remember exactly. Voyager or something? I remember reading about how it was speeding up and slowing down and they didn't know why.

(Ark) Pioneer.

(L) So it happened to our spacecraft against its programming. I guess what you're trying to say is that possibly the same effects that were acting on the Earth-based spacecraft that was sent out were also acting on this rock. So, it's not evidence of its alien source, but more evidence of some kind of forces in our solar system that we do not know about or understand. Is that what you're trying to say?

A: Yes

Q: (Pierre) Any object - spacecraft or rock - will experience the same anomalies.

(L) There are things out there that we just don't know about.

(Joe) And it could be related to its shape and size. It's an unusual shape and size. It's very flat and thin.

(L) But just because it was speeding up or slowing down doesn't mean it's an alien craft. Okay, next?

Oumuamua apears to be in the news again. Now it is even being discussed on Forbes, albeit as an open critique of Harvard astronomer Avi Loeb.


He claims, just like was described in the session, that Oumuamua's strange behavior indicates intelligence, an extraterrestrial one. Obviously he is being ridiculed, and I stumbled upon the following snippet of Joe Rogan's talk with him, where he explains his theory.

When I listened to it, my impression was that his theory is an attempt to explain something based on the wrong premise and/or missing data. It is actually not unlike mainstream scientists that are trying to explain various cosmic phenomena while dismissing Electric Universe concepts.

But it is still interesting how the "alien" topic comes up now more and more. And there was also an interesting moment in the video when Avi Loeb shared how his colleague doesn't like how Oumuamua doesn't fit into an accepted narrative, and that he wished that it "didn't exist".

 
(Joe) What about the California fires? I'm not gonna ask about DEW.

(Niall) Do it for the forum!

(L) Were there any unusual anomalies going on with these fires? People were saying that houses burned down, but not the trees, and so on and so forth.

(Joe) Well, they're saying it was directed energy weapons.

(L) Directed energy weapons... Was there any such thing going on?

A: NO. [spelled slowly for emphasis]


Q: (Artemis) Well, they really wanted to make that point!

(Joe) That's just a commentary on the level of pattern recognition run amok among so many people.

(L) I tell ya...

(Andromeda) Fires just act weird.

(L) Yeah. If you've ever been in a really big fire...

(Joe) It was people who were nowhere near the fire looking at videos online deciding that because a house burned, but the trees didn't, it was targeted.

(L) And they don't think about the fact that many, if not most, houses are built from dry, pressure-treated lumber. And trees are loaded with water; at the same time, dry underbrush will burn like crazy. Not the trees though, because they have deep roots and are pulling up water. Plus wind can sweep a fire through an area so fast it can't ignite resistant objects. I've seen the end results of plenty of brush fires in Florida.

(Joe) Was there something at a mass consciousness level being expressed in the fact that this fire almost completely burned down a town called Paradise in California?

A: Yes. California is no longer "paradise" and will shortly look more like hell.
California Heat Dome raps up, as do other blue states.

Notice that while the state sleeps, cooler temps prevail until the cogency of the population awakes. Just say-in.

Wed 26 Jun 2024 01.16 CEST
A wildfire is threatening a community in rural northern California near Paradise, where the state’s deadliest wildfire struck six years ago.

The blaze, dubbed the Apache fire, broke out on Monday and had grown to more than 600 acres (243 hectares), prompting evacuation orders.

Firefighters battled the blaze on Tuesday with the aid of improved weather conditions, with containment levels reaching 15%, according to the fire captain Dan Collins. Winds subsided and marine air brought some cooling, which made “the conditions are favorable for us this morning”, he said.

A man with a ball cap and his face mostly covered with a handkerchief walks a horse down a highway road, with the sky behind him filled with smoke.

US wildfire season has arrived. Here’s why it could be an explosive summer
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/article/2024/jun/08/us-fire-season-wildfires
The cause of the wildfire was under investigation.

Evacuation orders were in effect for several local areas but Collins did not know how many people were affected. Two unidentified structures had been destroyed and one firefighter had a minor injury.

Palermo, with a population of 9,400 people, is located about 65 miles (105km) north of the state’s capital in Sacramento. It is part of Butte county, which has seen numerous catastrophic fires in recent years that have permanently altered the region.

The 2018 Camp fire leveled the town of Paradise, about 30 miles from Palermo. The fast-moving blaze, California’s deadliest, killed 85 people, destroyed 14,000 buildings and displaced the vast majority of the town’s 26,000 residents for years.

In 2020, the massive North Complex fire destroyed the mountain hamlet of Berry Creek – about 25 miles from Palermo – and left 16 people dead.

Elsewhere in California, lightning strikes sparked several new fires in the Fresno area on Monday, while in Oregon, a wildfire that grew to more than 1,000 acres over the weekend prompted evacuation orders for nearby homes and campsites.

A partly sunny sky is almost completely blocked by plumes of smoke rising amid fire from a low hillside, with homes in the foreground.

‘Multiple disasters all in one day’: New Mexico’s brutal week of fire and flood

In New Mexico, residents of a village that was destroyed by fast-moving wildfires last week returned to survey the damage, searching for the remains of people who are still missing.

Village officials estimate that several hundred homes were among the structures destroyed or damaged there. Images shared on social media showed charred vehicles and homes reduced to ash, only their foundations or fireplaces left standing.

While the area is no stranger to wildfires, Kerry Gladden, a spokesperson for the village of Ruidoso, described the scene as “a whole other level of devastation.”

“It kind of takes your breath away when you see it,” she told the Associated Press. “And you know, we are resilient and we will rebuild and we will absolutely come back from this. But, boy, it’s hard to see it at this point.”

In all, more than 100 new fires – most of them small – were reported in New Mexico and Arizona over the last seven days, according to the multi-agency Southwest Coordination Center based in Albuquerque. Nationwide, more than a dozen large fires that have not been contained are currently burning, according to the National Interagency Fire Center. Aside from the South Fork and Salt fires in Ruidoso, complex incident management teams are assigned to blazes in Washington and Colorado.

Experts have predicted this summer could be an especially active wildfire season in the US due to a convergence of forces, including a wet winter that fueled the growth of grasses that are now drying out, as well as challenging weather conditions such as extreme heat and wind.

Jun 29, 2024
 
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