DaddySatyr
Posts: 9381
Joined: 8/29/2011 From: Pittston, Pennsyltucky Status: offline
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My uncle lived in Mahwah, one house away from the confluence of two rivers. He didn't "lose" his house, per se but everything was a loss except the second floor. What's interesting is that it is common knowledge, to people that live in that area (I lived about 60 miles South, at the time), is that Sandy wasn't the "Super Storm" that the powers-that-be want us to believe it was. How so? Well, that weekend, there was another event that occurred. About two miles up-river, in New York State (Mahwah is, literally, on the border. The next town to the North is Suffern, NY), there was a dam upon which the Army Corps of Engineers had been doing work for years. That particular weekend, the dam, gave way and caused most of the flooding into the local valley. There has been a fight going on up there about whether or not the dam giving way was as a result of human error/poor engineering. Rumor Control has it that the failure had absolutely nothing to do with the storm and the storm, in-and-of-itself, would not have caused the damage that happened that weekend. I don't claim to know facts, but it raises some interesting questions: Fact: The dam DID fail/give way/whatever That weekend. Fact: That area has weathered worse storms than Sandy before and after that weekend. Based upon these facts: Was the dam purposely sabotaged in order to allow the "SuperStorm" narrative? Was the dam human error, making flood insurance a moot point since it wasn't an act of God that did all the damage? Was the storm really that destructive all on its own and the failure of the dam is being brought up to mis-direct the government having to pay on that insurance? Just some questions ... Michael ETA: Shit! I confused Irene and Sandy! I will leave this here because it may be germane but I will make another post about Sandy, since I was one of the people affected by that one. Sandy caused me and my neighbors to be without power for nine days. I lived less than a mile from the Raritan River (New Brunswick, NJ), at the time. I had NO FLOODING. NO ONE in the surrounding areas that I talked to had so much as a leaky basement. Since I no longer live there, I will give the address for the people who wish to perpetually dismiss things out-of-hand. I lived at 378 Comstock Street, New Brunswick, NJ 08901. You can Google it and see how close to the river I was. None of the streets were flooded. There was an old tree, right down the block that was directly hit by a lightening strike that damaged one house, in particular but contributed nothing to the wide-spread "damage" that was reported, nation-wide. Personally, I think we were used as a way to advance the "Global Warming" narrative because I had certainly seen worse storms there (Irene, obviously, comes to mind). I think the whole thing was mass hysteria bullshit that was propped up by the memories of Irene (which, as I explained earlier, was also enhanced by facts that weren't widely disclosed). M.P.C.
< Message edited by DaddySatyr -- 3/1/2015 9:50:02 AM >
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A Stone in My Shoe Screen captures (and pissing on shadows) still RULE! Ya feel me? "For that which I love, I will do horrible things"
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