One reader thought that I was saying here that we should prepare for an earthquake. I just wanted to clarify that I’m not.
What I actually suggest we do is scrutinize what happens in the next while – something we didn’t do before 9/11 – so that this time, if the cabal works its dark designs, we have evidence of it. Especially if the cabal moves to remove evidence after the fact as they did with 9/11.
There are people coming forward now who are devising ways of detecting HAARP’s use. That is an excellent development. So let’s find more ways of watching the cabal now so they can’t get away with their mischief any more.
After having caused an earthquake and tsunami in Japan, are the Illuminati now preparing to cause “the big one” in the United States? Or simply wanting to make us afraid?
Once I would have welcomed FEMA’s participation but not any longer. And remember any other drills that went live? Can you spell 9-1-1? Can you say “Lon-don bomb-ing”?
Well, without becoming either fearful or panicky, which will not help anything, I suggest we may wish to begin reading the signs of the times: Hundreds of tornadoes in mid-America this past week; severe weather of other types. I am becoming concerned, myself. Time to begin blogging the research that many dedicated volunteers are now starting to carry out on HAARP and posting to Youtube.
Remember that the cabal operates on the principle that if their terror alerts and earthquake drills cause enough fear in the public, they don’t need to go ahead with the actual attack. I suggests that instead of becoming either fearful or panicky, we simply roll up our shirtsleeves, do the research, and post the results. Publicity is what kills the secretive Illuminati. They shrink in the Light.
Preparing for the Big One – In Central US? Earthquake Drill April 28
Stephen Rickerl, The Southern Sun, 17 Apr 2011
https://www.sott.net/articles/show/227365-Preparing-for-the-Big-One-In-Central-US-Earthquake-Drill-April-28
A Japanese worker gets on his earthmover in the area devastated by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami in the town of Ishinomaki, Miyagi Prefecture, Japan, Friday, April 15, 2011.
A first-of-its-kind drill in the central U.S. will have millions of people simulating the shaking of “the big one.” The Great Central U.S. ShakeOut is an earthquake drill that will be at 10:15 a.m. April 28 and is being organized by the Central U.S. Earthquake Consortium, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the U.S. Geological Survey and dozens of partners. The ShakeOut is modeled after a similar drill that California has conducted the past three years.
Brian Blake, earthquake program coordinator with the Central U.S. Earthquake Consortium, said the earthquake drill will have 1.9 million people participating in 11 states – about 100,000 Illinoisans have pledged to participate. He said anyone can participate in the self-guided drill by taking a couple of minutes to Drop, Cover and Hold On – the recommended action to protect yourself during an earthquake. At the designated time April 28, participants practice what their reaction would be if an earthquake struck.
Blake said protecting yourself during an earthquake is as simple as dropping to the floor before the earthquake drops you, taking cover under a sturdy desk and holding on until the shaking stops.
Scientists estimate there is a 25 to 40 percent probability of a damaging earthquake occurring in our region within the next 50 years. The ShakeOut is intended to help individuals and communities in the central U.S. prepare for an earthquake by practicing how to protect themselves.
“The ShakeOut is important to teach people what to do when the ground shakes,” Blake said. “We don’t have a lot of earthquake reminders in this region, and we don’t get a lot of practice at it. Studies show that when people are prepared for disasters and have practiced what to do, they’ll do it when the time comes.”
Blake said the hope is that people who participate in the ShakeOut will have an instantaneous reaction if a real earthquake occurs.
Jody Johnson, Johnson County director for the University of Illinois Extension, is organizing the drill locally. Johnson said it’s not only important to know what to do during an earthquake, but to have a disaster kit prepared and a plan of action to implement.
“I think it’s important that we try to prepare for the event and be able to sustain ourselves rather than relying on someone else, an agency or government to take care of us,” he said. “I think what people fail to realize is the magnitude, the amount of geography that this disaster will cover.”
“We’re attuned to tornadoes, the derecho, flooding – some of these localized disasters – disasters where communities next door can help out,” Johnson added. “This disaster’s going to be so great that we can be assured that St. Louis, Memphis and even Chicago are going to receive a majority of those government services that people are going to be looking for.”