Global alert news: Countless forms of anthropogenic damage to the climate system

MindWars

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Oct 14, 2016
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Though countless forms of anthropogenic damage to the climate system have all taken their toll, now the full fury of weather warfare is being released on the US population. Paradigm disintegration is not coming, it is here, and will continue to unfold. So many will only choose to wake up when there is no other option, such is the nature of humanity. Weather cataclysm is unfolding all over the world, this is just the beginning. Could the power structure also be waging biological warfare in the flooded aftermath of countless extreme weather events? How much of the power structure’s agenda is yet unknown? How dire is the equation we collectively face? The latest installment of Global Alert News is below.



Geoengineering Watch Global Alert News, September 9, 2017
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And this is also no secret

The Manhattan Project was a research and development undertaking during World War II that produced the first nuclear weapons. It was led by the United States with the support of the United Kingdom and Canada. From 1942 to 1946, the project was under the direction of Major General Leslie Groves of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Nuclear physicist Robert Oppenheimer was the director of the Los Alamos Laboratory that designed the actual bombs. The Army component of the project was designated the Manhattan District; "Manhattan" gradually superseded the official codename, Development of Substitute Materials, for the entire project. Along the way, the project absorbed its earlier British counterpart, Tube Alloys. The Manhattan Project began modestly in 1939, but grew to employ more than 130,000 people and cost nearly US $2 billion (about $27 billion in 2016[1] dollars). Over 90% of the cost was for building factories and to produce fissile material, with less than 10% for development and production of the weapons. Research and production took place at more than 30 sites across the United States, the United Kingdom, and Canada.

Manhattan Project - Wikipedia

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Kevin Shipp (author of "From The Company Of Shadows") was a decorated CIA officer who refused to look the other way in regard to government criminality and cover-up. At a very important public awareness event, held by GeoengineeringWatch.org in Northern California, on July 28th, 2017, Mr. Shipp presented a shocking and compelling presentation on numerous, horrific and ongoing government crimes. The total persecution of anyone who dares to tell the truth about rampant government tyranny is also fully exposed. The paradigm we have all known has been built on deception and the dark agendas of the global power structure. The courage Kevin Shipp has shown by doing his best to expose government criminality and tyranny serves as a stellar example to us all.


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When people learn to research and find just how real weather modification is, weather warfare is maybe reality will hit as to the real cause of our planet and it's climate.
Many are coming out admitting to it all, problem is many who come forward end up dead.
 
Shorter winter points toward climate change...
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Winter's Arrival, Departure Dates Reflect Changing Climate, Scientists Say
October 28, 2017 | WASHINGTON — Winter is coming ... later. And it's leaving ever earlier.
Across the United States, the year's first freeze has been arriving further and further into the calendar, according to more than a century of measurements from weather stations nationwide. Scientists say it is yet another sign of the changing climate, and that it has good and bad consequences for the nation. There could be more fruits and vegetables — and also more allergies and pests. "I'm happy about it," said Karen Duncan of Streator, Illinois. Her flowers are in bloom because she's had no frost this year yet, just as she had none last year at this time, either. On the other hand, she said just last week it was too hot and buggy to go out — in late October, near Chicago.

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Sun rays spill through a gap between the clouds and the White Mountains as the skies begin to clear above Bartlett, N.H., Sept. 22, 2017. The first weekend of autumn in the area was unusually warm — and across the nation, the year's first freeze has been arriving further and further into the calendar.​

The trend of ever later first freezes appears to have started around 1980, according to an analysis by The Associated Press of data from 700 weather stations across the U.S. going back to 1895 compiled by Ken Kunkel, a meteorologist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Centers for Environmental Information. To look for nationwide trends, Kunkel compared the first freeze from each of the 700 stations to the station's average for the 20th century. Some parts of the country experience earlier or later freezes every year, but on average freezes are coming later.

Average first freeze

The average first freeze over the last 10 years, from 2007 to 2016, is a week later than the average from 1971 to 1980, which is before Kunkel said the trend became noticeable. This year, about 40 percent of the Lower 48 states had a freeze as of October 23, compared with 65 percent in a normal year, according to Jeff Masters, meteorology director of the private service Weather Underground. Duncan's flowers should be dead by now. According to data from the weather station near her in Ottawa, Illinois, the average first freeze for the 20th century was October 15. The normal from 1981 to 2010 based on NOAA computer simulations was October 19. Since 2010, the average first freeze is on October 26. Last year, the first freeze in Ottawa came on Nov. 12.

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Morning dew covers berries in Bartlett, N.H., Sept. 18, 2017. Despite forecasts for brilliant foliage throughout the Northeast this year, longtime leaf watchers said the leaves this fall were dull and weeks behind schedule in their turn from green to the brilliant hues of autumn.​

Last year was "way off the charts" nationwide, Kunkel said. The average first freeze was two weeks later than the 20th century average, and the last frost of spring was nine days earlier than normal. Overall the United States freeze season of 2016 was more than a month shorter than the freeze season of 1916. It was most extreme in the Pacific Northwest. Oregon's freeze season was 61 days shorter than normal. Global warming has helped push the first frosts later, Kunkel and other scientists said. Also at play, though, are natural short-term changes in air circulation patterns, but they, too, may be influenced by man-made climate change, they said. This shrinking freeze season is what climate scientists have long predicted, said University of Oklahoma meteorology professor Jason Furtado.

Some plants suffer
 
Granny says climate change been makin' her rheumatiz worse...
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Climate change harming health
Wed, Nov 01, 2017 - TACKLING SMOG:Stockholm Resilience Centre director Johan Rockstrom said the report could bolster efforts to limit pollution in cities from Beijing to Mexico City
Climate change has caused severe harm to human health since the year 2000 by stoking more heat waves, the spread of some mosquito-borne diseases and undernutrition as crops fail, scientists said yesterday. Scant action to slow global warming over the past 25 years has jeopardized “human life and livelihoods,” they wrote in a report published in The Lancet, a British medical journal. “The human symptoms of climate change are unequivocal and potentially irreversible,” said the report, Lancet Countdown, drawn up by 24 groups, including universities, the World Bank and the WHO.

Many governments are now trying to cut their greenhouse gas emissions under the 2015 Paris climate agreement, though US President Donald Trump has weakened the pact by saying the US, the world’s second-largest greenhouse gas polluter after China, would pull out. “This [report] is a huge wake-up call,” said Christiana Figueres, chair of Lancet Countdown’s high-level advisory board and the UN climate chief at the Paris summit. “The impacts of climate change are here and now.” Among its findings, the report said an additional 125 million vulnerable people had been exposed to heat waves each year from 2000 to last year, with the elderly especially at risk. Labor productivity among farm workers fell by 5.3 percent since the year 2000, mainly because sweltering conditions sapped the strength of workers in nations from India to Brazil. The report, based on 40 indicators of climate and health, said climate change seemed to be making it easier for mosquitoes to spread dengue fever, which infects up to 100 million people a year.

The number of undernourished people in 30 nations across Africa and Asia rose to 422 million last year from 398 million in 1990, it said. “Undernutrition is identified as the largest health impact of climate change in the 21st century,” the report added. However, despite the overall gloom, Anthony Costello, a director at the WHO and joint chair of the Lancet Countdown study, said there were “significant glimmers of hope” in the situation. The number of weather-related disasters, such as hurricanes and floods, rose 46 percent since 2000, but the number of deaths remained stable, suggesting that societies were improving protection measures against environmental catastrophes. Almost 200 nations are to meet in Bonn, Germany, from Monday next week to Nov. 17 to work on a “rule book” for the Paris climate agreement for shifting from fossil fuels.

The Lancet Countdown study did not estimate the total number of deaths from climate change. The WHO has previously estimated there could be 250,000 extra deaths a year between 2030 and 2050 because of climate change. Lancet Countdown executive director Nick Watts said there could be a few benefits from warmer temperatures, such as fewer deaths from winter cold in nations from Russia to Canada. “But those numbers are ... almost negligible,” he said compared with the overall harm from global warming. The study also said that the air in 87 percent of all cities, home to billions of people, exceeded pollution guidelines set by the WHO. Fossil fuels release both toxins and heat-trapping carbon dioxide when burnt. Stockholm Resilience Centre director Johan Rockstrom, who was not involved in the study, said the report could bolster efforts to limit pollution in cities from Beijing to Mexico City.

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