Take this for what you will.
Below, a couple is preparing for Milton, including their honeybees.
Not just up there in your neck of the woods. Article below addresses both types of misinformation: (1) FEMA money and hurricane relief; and (2) the weather being controlled. I have seen a number of news outlets talking about this.
These presstitutes never waste a crisis . . .
And it’s misinformation and disinformation that officials say have resulted in hampering the relief and recovery efforts.
Yes, that’s the ticket . . . Federal government action and inaction couldn’t be to blame . . . no, no. It’s those darn conspiracy theorists! They kept government helicopters from swarming North Carolina to try and save drowning people.
“It is absolutely the worst I have ever seen,” FEMA administrator Deanne Criswell told reporters on a Tuesday morning call, as reported by Politico.
“It’s creating distrust in the federal government, but also the state government, and we have so many first responders that have been working to go out and help these communities.”
So the people don’t trust the government?! Well, it’s about time!
There has also been misinformation about funding for hurricane relief efforts, false claims that some areas, based on political demographics, are being purposefully neglected, or that relief funds are being diverted to migrants or to Ukraine.
Oh, pardon me . . . All the billions for illegal immigrants and the Ukrainian laundromat don’t even begin to compare to the trillions that have been spent trying to save lives in N. Carolina . . . Yeah, right.
Such misinformation is dissuading survivors from seeking help and has created a sense of fear and mistrust from residents against the thousands of FEMA employees and volunteers on the ground, Criswell said on ABC’s This Week.
So they’re expecting us to believe that someone who’s about to drown, or is buried beneath rubble, is going to have a sense of “fear and mistrust” toward somebody who’s coming to their house to try and save them? Or toward those who have saved the lives of their relatives, friends, and neighbors? Hmm . . . If the locals have a beef with FEMA, there’s probably a good reason.
[Sorry, I broke my rule of not reading mainstream media articles. I need to do better in future . . .]
While I agree that our government has been shown to be evil, I don’t believe that the use of the ID system has to be pure evil as well. When disasters hit, it is entirely possible that this collection of individual ID markers could be helpful in identifying people, dead or alive, and ultimately such data could be beneficial in the form of medical help: identifying specific toxins/parasites, dietary requirements, etc. It doesn’t HAVE to be bad all the time.