Heavy snow, freezing rain, and ice hit much of the Central, Eastern, and Southern U.S. this month. Hundreds of thousands suffered power outages, and 5,200 flights got canceled.
Brazil was hit by an unprecedented amount of rain during February, affecting millions. Mudslides and floods hit the city of Petropolis killing at least 152, flooding rivers in Rondônia displaced thousands, and roads turned into rivers in Umuarama.
A cold front brought heavy rain and strong winds to Haiti and Dominican Republic. Rain fell for 36 hours, and several rivers have broken their banks. Nearly 3,444 homes were affected, and 2,500 families were displaced.
Parts of Quito, Ecuador, were devastated by the heaviest rain in almost 20 years. 40 times more rain fell than predicted by the forecasts. The deluge triggered a landslide that destroyed houses, carried away dozens of vehicles, and claimed 24 lives.
At least 20 people died, and more than 55,000 others were displaced after Cyclone Batsirai slammed into the eastern coast of Madagascar. The widespread floods damaged the main road linking the north and south areas of the island, destroyed 8000 houses, and displaced 131,000 people.
Cyclone Batsirai killed at least ten people and displaced nearly 48,000 in Madagascar. Parts of the country were affected by heavy rains and strong winds that uprooted trees and destroyed houses. All this while the island was still reeling from a deadly tropical storm earlier this year.
Storm Eunice wreaked havoc across the UK with 122 miles per hour winds that uprooted trees, blown-off roofs, and knocked out power lines. It is now considered the strongest storm in the history of England.
Eunice caused four deaths in the Netherlands, two in the UK, two in Belgium, and one in Ireland.
Later this month, Storm Franklin caused heavy floods in the northern UK, triggering the evacuation of thousands of people.
In Argentina, wildfires out of control have scorched almost 800,000 hectares of the province of Corrientes, 9% of the province's area. The fires have acutely affected wildlife in the area.
A strong and shallow earthquake shook Indonesia's Sumatra island on Friday. The tremor damaged buildings, killed seven people and injured 85. More than 5,000 people fled their homes to temporary shelters.
All this and more in our SOTT Earth Changes Summary for February 2022:
Comment: This is in line with our thoughts on the matter. Russia went into Ukraine now because it had to. It was no whimsical decision, no 'conquest of fancy'. Putin did it because right action was needed now. Whether that right action has indirect positive effects, such as derailing the global bio-security police state agenda, or the overlapping 'greening of the economy' agenda, remains to be seen. His intentions towards those are unstated, but it's not difficult to deduce his real views on those topics given his publicly expressed disdain for gender-bender ideology.
What is clear to us now is that Putin was only ever paying 'the pandemic' lip service. Lukashenko of Belarus was courageous to call it for what is was - complete BS to clothe otherwise naked globalist greed - but Putin opted instead to lay low in 2020 because, as we see now, he had other battles he had to fight. As for Putin's apparent embrace of the 'green' agenda, it's clear that he is also merely paying it lip service. He has said on numerous occasions over the years that he thinks climate change is natural, cyclical, and regulated by planetary and cosmic forces.