OF THE
TIMES
Like the writer, one questions why Israel is seemingly burning all its diplomatic bridges with the world... One point the writer left out (perhaps...
Commisioner for Values and Transparency That sounds so much better than "Bureau of Censorship and Blacklisting"... Is there no one in EUNATO with...
Dems F L A Y E D every aspect of DJT's life for the past 6 years - NOTHING was off limits - and here there is PROOF of crimes committed by the...
Le problème est que les sionistes délaissent la Thora ,vraie Révélation divine ,pour le Talmud ,livre démoniaque !
the wish for war with Russia and to become cannon fodder is getting stronger
To submit an article for publication, see our Submission Guidelines
Reader comments do not necessarily reflect the views of the volunteers, editors, and directors of SOTT.net or the Quantum Future Group.
Some icons on this site were created by: Afterglow, Aha-Soft, AntialiasFactory, artdesigner.lv, Artura, DailyOverview, Everaldo, GraphicsFuel, IconFactory, Iconka, IconShock, Icons-Land, i-love-icons, KDE-look.org, Klukeart, mugenb16, Map Icons Collection, PetshopBoxStudio, VisualPharm, wbeiruti, WebIconset
Powered by PikaJS 🐁 and In·Site
Original content © 2002-2024 by Sott.net/Signs of the Times. See: FAIR USE NOTICE
I began noticing in 2000, when I was living in coastal Orange County, that there was a rapidly spreading disease that was affecting the native Pacific Sycamore. I had several of these trees on my property and eventually the homeowners association landscapers started to remove them one by one as they died. There was no explanation put forth as to the cause of the disease.
Next to become "infected" were the imported Eucalyptus, which were the predominate tree in the low desert coastal regions due to their fast growth and low water needs. They really went fast.
Then the darling shrub of residential and freeway landscapers, the oleander began dying off in epidemic proportions. Again, the maintenance folk in my neighborhood began removing the dead plants from around the thick perimeter of vegetation that allowed some privacy at my home.
By the time I decided to get out of there, there was not much left of the traditional landscape plants. The desert was reclaiming the county.
To this day I can only speculate what was really happening. Since air pollution along the coast was minimal due to onshore airflow, I can only attribute it to the massive electromagnetic pollution that was prevalent from the forests of cell phone towers that were everywhere -to the powerful military radar and communication transmitters on every available hilltop and rise.
Something devastated the immune systems of the plants, leaving them susceptible to whatever parasites considered them hosts. It wasn't pretty and its implications for the future were clear.