Earth Changes
All I can say is: that is just PATHETIC!
Anyway, the only reason I'm writing this late is because something is bugging me.
What struck me tonight were a number of strange juxtapositions. First off, there are the items about weather and earthquake weapons that made the rounds over the past week or so. The first one was about former Defense Secretary Cohen openly referring to HAARP when he admitted to programs that could "alter the climate, set off earthquakes, volcanoes remotely through the use of electromagnetic waves." Search for it on the net, you'll find it on a bunch of conspiracy sites (not that we don't think there's a whole bunch of conspiring going on ourselves here on SOTT.net).
Admitting to programs that can alter climate, set off earthquakes, etc., is a bit ambitious and really has nothing to do with HAARP. HAARP is for mind control.
However, earthquakes can be set off with EMP weapons from satellites.
I think these clowns would love people to think that they can control climate - and maybe they can if they set off a volcano. But what they are really trying to do is blow smoke around REAL Earth Changes; changes that they have no weapons to stop. And these Earth Changes are what could, conceivably, destroy most of life on Earth.

Oceans could quickly reach a hypoxic tipping point for marine life, according to recent climate change research.
The fossil record pinpoints a mass mortality in the oceans at a time when the Earth was experiencing a greenhouse effect. High levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and rising temperatures depleted oxygen in the oceans and created large-scale changes in a very short time span - within just a few hundred years.
That mass extinction of marine life in the oceans during prehistoric times is a warning that the same could happen again due to high levels of greenhouse gases.
The study was conducted by professor Martin Kennedy from the University of Adelaide (School of Earth & Environmental Sciences) and professor Thomas Wagner from Newcastle University, UK, (Civil Engineering and Geosciences).
Radar estimates that south-central Nebraska, north-central Kansas, and southwestern Oklahoma have seen rains of more than three inches. For the major reporting stations, topping the list of rainfall totals would be exactly five inches at Lawton, with just under five inches at Hobart, 4.70 inches at Oklahoma City, 2.42" at Clinton, and Altus reporting 1.54" (all of those stations in Oklahoma). In Kansas, the best totals I can find are 1.80 for both Great Bend and Russell (some flash flooding was seen in the Russell area). In Nebraska, there was 1.34" at Imperial and 2.77" at Lincoln.
We will probably fire more storms in the Plains this afternoon, and it looks like more rain chances for Monday/Tuesday for Kansas and nearby areas so we are really looking at significant moisture improvement for northeastern Colorado, Nebraska, northern/eastern Kansas, eastern Oklahoma, and central through northern Texas.
This rain may be coming too late to help out a lot of the wheat crop (though we do still have a lot of heading wheat in Nebraska) but is certainly of benefit to summer row-crop prospects. Getting short-changed in all of this is far southwestern Kansas southward through the panhandles, which is bad news especially for dryland cotton planting prospects in West Texas.

DESTRUCTIVE: A Mini-tornado has left a trail of damage through Canning Vale early today.
Several houses have lost roofs and at least one house has lost a pergola which was propelled through a neighbour's car.
McLean Rd, Canning Vale appears to have borne the brunt of the destructive, but small min-tornado.
No major hurricane has made a U.S. landfall in five years, but Lubchenco warned U.S. coastal residents that odds are diminished that they can't expect a sixth straight year without a major landfall on either the Atlantic or Gulf coasts.
As many as 18 named tropical storms may develop during the six-month Atlantic hurricane season that begins June 1, according to forecasters at the National Ocean and Atmospheric Administration. Six to 10 of those storms could strengthen into hurricanes with top winds of at least 74 mph, the agency said. Three to six could become major hurricanes, with maximum winds of 111 mph and up.
Last year's hurricane season was one of the busiest on record with 19 named storms, including 12 hurricanes. The 2011 season was not expected to be as extreme, partly because ocean temperatures were only two degrees warmer than normal, instead of four degrees warmer as they were last year, said NOAA administrator Jane Lubchenco.
According to the director, just last week his organization was signalled regarding the presence of another 7 dead dolphins on the sea shore.
Friday, May 20, 2011 at 20:03:27 UTC
Saturday, May 21, 2011 at 04:03:27 AM at epicenter
Location:
23.412°S, 119.324°E
Depth:
12 km (7.5 miles)
Region:
WESTERN AUSTRALIA
Distances:
1008 km (627 miles) NNE (21°) from Perth, Australia
1779 km (1105 miles) SSW (201°) from DILI, East Timor
As of Friday morning, EDT, the center of Tropical Storm 04W (which had yet to be given a name) was located approximately 200 miles east-southeast of the small island of Yap.
Due to light winds aloft, this storm will move very slowly over the next several days. The center of the storm will pass over or very close to Yap Sunday, EDT.
Early next week, the storm will be over the warm waters of the Philippine Sea, and should be able to strengthen into a typhoon.
The future track of the storm remains quite uncertain through the middle to end of next week. An upper-air trough of low pressure will dive southeastward over southeastern China. This upper-air trough will eventually steer the storm to the northeast.
The high peak, which is one the country's most active volcanos, also triggered a series of small earthquakes last week.
Marine animal experts are preparing for a potential mass stranding by up to 100 pilot whales in South Uist in the Western Isles.
The whales were spotted in Loch Carnan on Thursday afternoon and about 20 were said to have had cuts to their heads.
It is thought the injuries may have been caused by the whales' attempts to strand themselves on the rocky foreshore of the sea loch.
Sick and injured whales are known to beach themselves to die.
However, at times, dying whales have been followed to shore by healthy animals.
Conservationists have also suggested the whales may have got lost, or entered the loch following prey.
Rescuers said inflatable pontoons for refloating whales were on the way.
The pod had been moving back and forth from the shore and rescuers said the animals were "very vocal", which may be a sign of distress.
The whales, a deep water species, have since moved from the loch back to a nearby bay, where they were seen earlier on Thursday.
Members of the British Divers Marine Life Rescue (BDMLR) fear the whales could die in a massive beaching - which could be Scotland's largest stranding.
BDMLR Scottish organiser Alasdair Jack said preventing the mammals from stranding would cause unnecessary suffering and the animals would only move on to another shoreline.











Comment: The debate about global warming is far from settled. For a more balanced perspective on Climate Change see:
Climate Change Swindlers and the Political Agenda