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Deborah
Joined: 30 Jul 2000
Posts: 731
Location: East Coast |
Mon Jan 29, 2001 2:40 am
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From Rolando:
1/28/01
Here I go again.
To conclude this day here is a link of post to Viewzone from a Serbian citizen which states that, during the NATO attack on KOSOVO in 1999, they had the same heavy cloud, no-rain, electric weather as we had during the USS SAIPAN visit:
http://www.viewzone.com/serbiasky.html
It corroborates my conclusions in USS SAIPAN article about USAF 2025 weather control and VTRPE radar technology being born prematurely:
http://deepspace4.freeservers.com/pages/military/saipan/saipan.htm
You can forward this to Mr. Carnicom if You think that it can be of use to him.
Good night.
01-28-2001
IZAKOVIC
CROATIA
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Deborah
Joined: 30 Jul 2000
Posts: 731
Location: East Coast |
Mon Jan 29, 2001 4:49 am
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Additional research to support Rolando's submission of 1/28/01:
29 September 1998 - Serbia
HYPOCENTRE PARAMETERS
Date: 1998/09/29
Origin Time: 22:14:49.7 UTC
Latitude and Longitude: 44.194N 20.037E (NEIC)
Depth: 10.0 km (NEIC)
Magnitude: 5.1 ML
Maximum Intensity: 8 (5 in Hungary)
DISCUSSION
The Serbia earthquake of 29 September had intensity about 8 at the epicentral area. One person died from a heart attack, 17 injured and damage in the Valjevo-Belgrade area, Yugoslavia. Felt in much of central Yugoslavia and in the Vidin area, Bulgaria. Also felt in the Sarajevo area, Bosnia and Herzegovina as well as in parts of Croatia, Hungary and Greece. The event produced reports of intensity 5 EMS from the border region in Hungary...
http://georisk.seismology.hu/Bulletins/4.Significant/1998_09_29.html
Odraz Radio
B92
DAILY NEWS 30 SEPTEMBER 1998
EARTHQUAKE IN SERBIA
BELGRADE, SERBIA. Thousands of Belgraders slept out of doors, mostly in cars, last night after an earthquake hit the city at about 12.15 am. The quake, which registered 6 degrees on the Mercali scale, was centred between Valjevo and Cacak, about 100 kms south of Belgrade, where it registered 8 degrees. ANEM reports that Valjevo residents were panic-struck, and that one person died of a heart attack. There were no other casualties.
Sections of central Belgrade were left without power for about an hour after the earthquake. A number of older buildings suffered slight damage.
http://www.suc.org/news/b92/archive/SEPTEMBER_30_1998.html
SPECIAL REPORT
FAO/WFP CROP AND FOOD SUPPLY ASSESSMENT MISSION TO THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF YUGOSLAVIA (SERBIA AND MONTENEGRO)
10 August 2000
http://www.fao.org/WAICENT/faoinfo/economic/giews/english/alertes/2000/SRFRY80.htm
FAS Online
FEATURE COMMODITY ARTICLES
Eastern Europe: For 2000/01, Eastern Europe is forecast to produce 27.0 million tons of wheat, down 1.7 million tons or 6 percent from the lackluster 1999/00 crop. Harvested area is forecast at 8.6 percent, up 0.3 million hectares or 4 percent from last year's dismal season.
Area planted to wheat increased in 2000/01 primarily for two reasons. Less oilseed area was planted (due to low market prices), and a repeat of last season's wet spring that ruined much of the winter crop area did not reoccur. A dry, late winter in the Balkans was the beginning of an extensive period with little rain. A severe drought has gripped the entire region throughout the spring and summer with some regions of the Balkans averaging only 20 percent of normal rainfall. The countries of Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary and the former Yugoslavia were subjected to the worst of the weather. In the north, Poland, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia have fared somewhat better with slightly lower temperatures and rainfall approaching up to 70 percent of normal.
Although temperatures have averaged above normal throughout eastern Europe, the Balkans have set many records and have been consistently well above average...
http://www.fas.usda.gov/wap/circular/2000/00-07/wap2.htm
[Edited 1 times, lastly by Deborah on 01-28-2001] |
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sedona
Joined: 13 Oct 2000
Posts: 149
Location: Sedona, AZ 86339 |
Tue Jan 30, 2001 5:03 am
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Good thing I knew this might happen. I see I am far behind the curve in this subject, but I am now picking myself up off the ground where I recently fell off the turnip truck. Listening to Dr. Scott on Jeff Rense, I have been convinced by his research that mad cow etc. was not naturally occurring after all, but a deliberate introduction into those tribes by Japanede bioweaponeers. Dr. Scott has quite a surprising list of bioengineered diseases: and quite good documentation to back it up. |
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Deborah
Joined: 30 Jul 2000
Posts: 731
Location: East Coast |
Tue Jan 30, 2001 5:59 am
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I see I am far behind the curve in this subject, but I am now picking myself up off the ground...
This subject material is probably the toughest aspect of the Big Picture for me as I find it so inexpressibly disturbing. Paranoia? I don't think so. I actually break into a sweat reading and posting this stuff and am very grateful for the work of those who are braver than I am.
There are certain cultural issues, such as incest, for example, which elicit from the majority of people an instantaneous gut response called, "We do not go there - not a good idea." This is the exact response I have to issue(s) involving interference with delicately interdependent processes at the molecular level for purposes of manipulating/controlling human behavior, health, reproduction, etc.
[Edited 2 times, lastly by Deborah on 01-29-2001] |
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