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Title: Conditions Are “Drier Than The Dust Bowl Years” In The Heartland Of America
Source: [None]
URL Source: https://citizenwatchreport.com/cond ... s-in-the-heartland-of-america/
Published: Nov 15, 2023
Author: Staff
Post Date: 2023-11-15 16:25:10 by Horse
Keywords: None
Views: 29
Comments: 1

The seemingly endless drought in the heartland of America is not going to be good for food production. For years, I have been relentlessly warning my readers that Dust Bowl conditions would return to the middle of the country. And now, Dust Bowl conditions have returned to the middle of the country. In fact, as you will see below, it is being reported that conditions are “drier than the Dust Bowl years” in some parts of Iowa. If the heartland of America doesn’t start getting more precipitation, we are going to be facing some enormous problems in the years ahead.

According to drought. gov, half of the Midwest is experiencing drought right now, and things are particularly dire in the state of Iowa…

94% of Iowa is currently in drought, with 24% in extreme drought (D3). Despite decent improvement over the last month, drought is still impacting 68% of Wisconsin and 58% of Minnesota.

Needless to say, the heartland of America produces much of our food.

So it should deeply concern all of us that communities all over the Midwest are starting to run out of water…

The southeast Kansas city of Caney will run out of water by March 1 without rain, officials said. Its school district has moved to a four-day week to conserve water. Four wells in Belle Plaine, Iowa, are producing 40% as much water as usual. Residents of Osceola, near Des Moines, can be fined $65 or more if they defy water restrictions.

Residents in many towns aren’t allowed to wash their cars. Port-a-potties have replaced some public bathrooms.

“We’re hoping it just rains,” said James Rainbolt, manager of a wholesale water plant that supplies parts of four counties in southern Kansas. “We’re at the mercy of the weather.”

Ultimately, we are all at the mercy of the weather. See also San Francisco high-rise apartment building NEMA loses half its value - $264MILLION - in the last five years

Despite all of our advanced technology, we remain highly vulnerable to shifting weather patterns.

And at this moment we are being told that some parts of Iowa are literally “drier than the Dust Bowl years”…

Two counties in Iowa have had the driest three-year period on record, going back at least to the 1890s, he said.

“Drier than the Dust Bowl years,” he said.

Dozens of other communities are “carefully watching well levels and streams,” Hall said, “trying to make sure they don’t end up in the same situation as Belle Plaine or Osceola,” which are experiencing water shortages.

As a result of the extremely dry conditions, major dust storms are becoming increasingly common in the Midwest.

Earlier this year, a colossal dust storm in Illinois actually caused a vehicle pileup that involved dozens of motorists…

Gusting winds in the Midwestern United States have kicked up a fatal dust storm, reducing visibility to zero and triggering a major vehicle pileup that killed at least six people on an Illinois highway.

More than 30 additional motorists, from ages 2 to 80, were hurt in the crash as a result of Monday’s storm, according to Illinois state police. Their injuries ranged from minor to life-threatening.

The lack of precipitation is also causing enormous headaches all along the Mississippi River, and authorities are warning that this is not likely to change any time soon…

Lack of rain brought drought to much of the Mississippi River basin early this summer, and it’s likely going to linger into winter, Army Corps of Engineers leadership said during a press conference on Nov. 8 in Memphis, while a dredge was working nonstop to keep the river channel open a few miles south.

It’s the second year in a row that extreme drought has caused a shrinking channel, forcing the Corps to dredge later in the season than normal. Last year, low river levels lingered into the winter, and dredging continued until January.

It’s shaping up to be the same this year.

Welcome to the “new normal” along the Mississippi River. See also US National Debt Soars to $33 Trillion, Raising Concerns of Unsustainability and Default in 20 Years

And considering the fact that so much of our food is transported on vessels that use the Mississippi River, this is a big problem for all of us.

Of course drought is just one of the factors that has been depressing food production in this nation. Overall, natural disasters “caused $21.5 billion in agricultural losses” in the United States last year…

Research from the American Farm Bureau Federation suggests that nationwide, natural disasters caused $21.5 billion in agricultural losses last year. Only about half of those were protected by insurance, the majority of which is sold through federally-backed programs. Their payouts to farmers have increased over 500 percent in the last two decades.

That number is almost certainly going to be even larger this year.

And this is one of the reasons why food prices are going to continue to go up no matter what our leaders choose to do.

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#1. To: Horse (#0)

Virginia and surrounding areas are experiencing drought and what seems like unprecedented wildfires. I lost count at 30 spread all over a little map someone sent me. Saw this at Dane Wigington's site:

Wildfires As A Weapon: US Military Exposed

August 11, 2022

Dane Wigington

GeoengineeringWatch.org

Is the military industrial complex insane enough to incinerate Earth's last remaining forests in order to achieve the objectives of the global controllers? The short answer is yes. A formerly classified US military document titled "Forest Fire As A Military Weapon" is a truly shocking exposé of planned scorched Earth destruction. The US Forest Service actually participated in the research and planning that went into this military instruction manual for carrying out orchestrated forest fire catastrophes. What part have climate intervention operations played in the preparation of forests for extreme and unprecedented incineration all over the world? The short video report below reveals the shocking degree of research that the US military and the US Forest Service has put into preparing forests for extreme incineration. ...

Click the PDF image below to view the entire formerly classified US military document "Forest Fire As A Military Weapon":

The climate engineering atrocities are a primary factor in the equation of exponentially increasing forest fires and fire intensity. ...

Geoengineering operations are completely disrupting the global hydrological cycle, drying out forests and driving record wildfires around the world. Climate engineering is fueling global incineration. ...

www.geoengineeringwatch.o...apon-us-military-exposed/

www.geoengineeringwatch.o...A%20Military%20Weapon.pdf

sounds like part of George Washington's vision?

moseshand.com/studies/vision.html

watch.pairsite.com/death-phoenix.html

"...as long as there..remain active enemies of the Christian church, we may hope to become Master of the World...the future Jewish King will never reign in the world before Christianity is overthrown - B'nai B'rith speech http://www.biblebelievers.org.au/luther.htm / http://bible.cc/psalms/83-4.htm

AllTheKings'HorsesWontDoIt  posted on  2023-11-17   11:25:51 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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