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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/1/2019 7:20:38 PM

5G To Transform The World—Are You Ready?

The video below is overwhelmingly unbelievable, plus frightening, with regard to statistics about the generations (1G thru 5G) supplying microwave telecommunications. They can make your head spin!

“Everyone will have a 5G transmitter on their hut [home], aka “fixed wireless access.”

The amount of radiation will be serious, as it passes thru drywall.


5G will take into consideration all spectrums available.
Tens of thousands of satellites will be launched over the next ten years to enable 5G




(activistpost.com)


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/2/2019 6:36:33 PM


VCG / Getty Images
CLIMATE DESK

Warming oceans have already harmed the world’s fish supply

This story was originally published by Mother Jones and is reproduced here as part of theClimate Desk collaboration.

While there are a lot of alarm bells sounding over how climate change will affect marine ecosystems and the world’s seafood supply in the future, there’s been much less attention paid to the effects it’s already had on them. In fact, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) estimates that more than 90 percent of the earth’s warming over the past 50 years has occurred in the ocean. Now, a new, first-of-its-kind study reveals that ocean warming has significantly affected fisheries worldwide, and it’s done more harm than good.

“Everyone wants to know what the future of our marine resources are — the problem is that getting even basic information is hard,” says Daniele Bianchi, an assistant professor in the Department of Atmospheric and Ocean Sciences at the University of California-Los Angeles. It’s a great starting point, he says, “that they can prove there is this influence, and to do that they had to do a lot of work, not just in this paper, but really collecting all the data.”

Published Thursday in Science, the study used temperature records and maximum sustainable yield data — a metric showing the most that a resource can be exploited without depleting it — from 1930 to 2010 to determine warming impacts on 235 fish and invertebrate populations around the world. (That sample included 124 species in 38 eco-regions, or about a third of the reported global catch.)

“Most people have been looking at forecasting what the anticipated impacts of climate change are going to be on the future of fisheries, but no one has actually looked at what the impact of climate change has already been,” says Chris Free, the study’s lead author and a researcher at the University of California-Santa Barbara. “It helps us figure out some of the factors that make populations more vulnerable to anticipated climate change.” It also highlights just how significantly future warming could affect the studied populations, since the already-observed changes resulted from about a half-degree Celsius in ocean warming. Projections for the future expect more than three times that increase.

Free and his peers from Rutgers University, the University of Washington, and NOAA found that overall, global sustainable fish and shellfish yields decreased by about 4 percent, with some species, like the Atlantic cod in the Irish Sea, faring worse than others. While 4 percent might not seem huge, it’s still a marked drop, and beyond that, the regional differences are especially striking. Alarmingly, yield losses reached almost 35 percent in some eco-regions.

Courtesy Chris Free

The global decrease “is fairly significant for the past 80 years,” Bianchi says. “Populations of fish that are negatively affected declined quite a lot, and I’m sure the people that rely on these resources might find these results quite worrisome, even more than someone taking the global perspective.”

The biggest losses occurred in the Sea of Japan and the North Sea, where the maximum sustainable yields dropped by over 34 percent. The East China Sea (8.3), Celtic-Biscay Shelf (15.2), Iberian Coast (19.2), South Atlantic Ocean (5.3), and Southeast U.S. Continental Shelf (5) also saw significant dips.

“To see these massive losses in the North Sea, which supports really important commercial fisheries, and also in the East Asian ecosystems that are home to some of the fastest-growing human populations and populations that depend on seafood is really concerning,” Free says.

Beyond the environmental impact, as fisheries change, many worry about the threat to global economics and nutrition. An estimated 3 billion people rely on seafood as their primary source of protein, and global marine fisheries bring inabout $100 billion in revenue a year; more than 10 percent of the world’s population depends on them for their livelihood. Moreover, seafood is a major global trade commodity, so the big declines above Northern Europe or in the Sea of Japan, for example, could create ripple effects in other areas as well. “The losses in those ecosystems aren’t just about those countries, but also about the countries they export seafood to,” Free notes. Take the United States, for example, whichimported 6 billion pounds of seafood in 2017, more than in any previous year. These imports accounted for more than 90 percent of the seafood Americans consumed. Notably, the data shows an increasing reliance on imports from places like Norway and China.

All that said, there is something of a silver lining, at least in some regions. The study shows that fish in some areas, like the black sea bass off the Northeast U.S. Continental Shelf, have actually benefited from ocean warming. But even the good news comes with an asterisk: Many more of the populations studied had a negative versus positive reaction to the warming. And even for the species currently thriving in warmer waters, as the warming increases—as it’s expected to—these benefits could run out when species reach their temperature threshold. “It can’t be good forever,” Free says. “These populations that have been winning aren’t going to be climate winners forever.” Moreover, a number of other climate-fueled factors not included in this research, like ocean acidification and rising seas, have been wreaking more and more havoc on marine ecosystems, so the warming only reveals one piece of the puzzle.

Adding to the risks posed by a changing climate is the problem of overfishing, a persistent and increasing issue plaguing global fisheries, according to the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization, which found last year that a third of the world’s oceans are overfished, while fish consumption is at a record high. Significantly, the study reveals an important relationship between environmental change and overfishing (the act of fishing a species so much it cannot replenish itself): The researchers found that the populations that experienced heavy and prolonged overfishing were more vulnerable to the impacts of ocean warming, meaning overfishing could make species less resilient to climate change in the future, and climate change could in turn make it harder to rebuild overfished populations.

“A lot of what happens to fisheries depends on how well they are managed. The impact might be very different if the fishery is currently well-managed or if it’s going to be well-managed into the future,” Bianchi says. “That probably is even more important than climate change.”

With all the moving variables from human interference to complex ecosystem interactions, predicting global warming’s effect on the world’s fisheries is a particularly complicated task. Scientists have gathered huge amounts of data on weather patterns and marine processes via satellites and weather stations, and so have come to understand global warming’s print on the atmosphere and ocean fairly well. But these tools aren’t as helpful when it comes to monitoring ocean-dwellers. Satellites cannot track what’s going on underwater, and a lot of coordinated on-the-ground time and energy is needed to monitor the changing patterns of constantly moving sea critters, Bianchi notes. This makes forecasting the future extremely difficult. So Free’s backward-looking research also has implications for predicting the future.

“The models that we use are as good as the data that we have to constrain them,” Bianchi says. “That’s why I’m excited about these types of papers, because they take all these observations that we trust and that we understand and start extracting the signature of warming.”


(GRIST)

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/3/2019 6:35:20 PM

A Brutal Arctic Air Mass To Take Over The United States


By March 2, 2019U.S. News



Things were starting to warm up for most of the United States throughout last week, but for those hoping it would last into the weekend, I have some bad news. Temperatures are expected to be as much as 30 to 50 degrees below normal.

Although many Americans hope for warmer weather as we get into March, that is simply not the case. Throughout the weekend brutal temperatures are going to overtake the central portion of the country, from the Mexican to Canadian borders.

Currently, things are very cold in the northern Rockies, Plains, Midwest, and Northeast, temperatures are expected to drop by as much as 20 degrees below 0 in some places. This is thanks to the arctic air mass, which could continue well into the second week of March.

Saturday WeatherSunday Weather

A major winter storm will impact much of the country this weekend. The storm will cross California to the Rockies Saturday with heavy low elevation rain and heavy mountain snow. The storm quickly shifts across the eastern states Sunday with heavy snow, heavy rain & severe storms.

According to Fox News, This cold is due to a “block jet-stream pattern in the Arctic.” A high-pressure area from the Gulf of Alaska will push the cold air southward into the rest of the country.

Embedded video

Subtropical jet stream cirrus incoming >> weekend coming with heavy , thunderstorms, and a long swath of as an air mass comes in from the north

It is expected to be the coldest in Montana, Minnesota and the Dakotas. The National Weather Service in Glasgow, Mont., warned that people may experience symptoms of frostbite in 10 minutes and wind chills could “dip into the minus-50s by Sunday morning.”

Dangerously-cold wind chills will be plunging into the northern Plains again this weekend. Low wind chills will be pushing well south by Monday - when wind chill readings will drop into the single digits as far south at Dallas, Texas. http://weather.gov/safety/cold-wind-chill-chart


Subzero temperatures are anticipated as far south as Colorado, Kansas, Iowa, Illinois and even into Texas. By Tuesday, highs are expected to hover in the teens, except around freezing in the corridor from Washington to New York.

A major winter will race from the West Coast to East Coast this and one of the hazards will be heavy snowfall. Here are the probabilities of greater than 4 inches of for the next 2 days. Are you in the path of the storm and ?


An arctic air mass overtaking the whole country is not too common, mostly because the Rockies actually act as a blocking mechanism. The National Weather Service urged residents to stay indoors this weekend as the arctic air mass hits the areas bringing the “dangerously cold wind chills.”

(awarenessact.com)




"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/4/2019 11:14:34 AM
NPC

Mad Science: The history of misguided attempts to geoengineer Earth

earth
Harvard's Gernot Wagner wants to save the world from global warming. His method? Develop a new type of plane that will fly more than 4,000 missions a year dumping particulates into the stratosphere.

Wagner and his colleague Wake Smith call the proposed plane "SAI Lofter (SAIL)." Anonymous individuals at "Airbus, Atlas Air, Boeing, Bombardier, GE Engines, Gulfstream, Lockheed Martin, NASA, Near Space Corporation, Northrup Grumman, Rolls Royce Engines, Scaled Composites, The Spaceship Company, and Virgin Orbit" provided input.

Estimates for SAIL's design and operation seem sophisticated but are fabricated. Wagner and Smith admit, "No existing aircraft design-even with extensive modifications-can reasonably fulfill [their] mission."

Wagner and others believe that scientists can calculate how many particulates will be needed to cool the Earth to a desired temperature.

Wagner and Smith are not alone in their geoengineering dreams. As early as 2006, Paul J. Crutzen, Nobel laureate in chemistry, called for "stratospheric geoengineering research." Harvard professors David Keith and Frank Keutsch hope to experiment via balloons spraying "a fine mist of materials such as sulfur dioxide, alumina, or calcium carbonate into the stratosphere." Wagner, Keith, and Keutsch are all part of the Solar Geoengineering Research Program at Harvard.

Geoengineering is gaining global traction. Last fall, the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change issued a report saying geoengineering could be used as an emergency "temporary remedial measure."

Spraying aerosols in the stratosphere would "mimic what large volcanoes do."

In 1815, Mount Tambora in Indonesia erupted, spewing "millions of tons of dust, ash, and sulfur dioxide into the atmosphere, temporarily changing the world's climate and dropping global temperatures by as much as 3 degrees." As the particulates moved around the global atmosphere, "1816 became the year without a summer for millions of people in parts of North America and Europe, leading to failed crops and near-famine conditions."

No doubt, Wagner and others will tell you careful calculations will limit global cooling to just the right degree. Skeptics might conclude otherwise: scientists blinded by unlimited hubris are partnering with crony capitalists to threaten humanity.

To be sure, some scientists warn geoengineering will have unintended consequences. MIT's Daniel Cziczo, an atmospheric scientist, warns that geoengineering could destroy the ozone layer. Without the ozone layer, photosynthesis would be difficult, the food chain would be destroyed, and life on Earth would perish. In this case, unintended consequences would be apocalyptic.

In his book The Fatal Conceit, F.A. Hayek observed, "The curious task of economics is to demonstrate to men how little they really know about what they imagine they can design." Is Hayek's statement equally applicable to scientists imagining they can safely modify the biosphere?

Regardless of your beliefs about global warming, Nassim Taleb's "precautionary principle" would rule out plans altering the biosphere. Taleb writes:
The precautionary principle (PP) states that if an action or policy has a suspected risk of causing severe harm to the public domain (affecting general health or the environment globally), the action should not be taken in the absence of scientific near-certainty about its safety.
Learning How Little We Know

In the late 1980s, outside Tucson, Arizona, scientists built a closed ecosystem (all food and water had to be obtained from inside the dome) to replicate the Earth's biosphere. Eight humans resided in the biosphere for a short period of time. Not long into the experiment, project organizers had to open the sealed doors of Biosphere 2: "Oxygen levels got so low halfway through the first year that they had to put more in over fear for the safety of the Biosphere residents."

John Adams, deputy director of Biosphere 2, clearly states the takeaway: "What they did learn, and in my opinion the single most important lesson, was just how little we truly understand Earth's systems." I suspect that Wagner won't be calling Adams soon.

The Crazy Atlantropa Project

If you think Wagner's plan to cool the atmosphere by mimicking the effects of volcanoes is bonkers, consider the Atlantropa project-"the craziest, most megalomaniacal scheme from the 20th century that you never heard of."

After World War I, German engineer Herman Sörgel had a plan to prevent mass starvation in Europe. Sörgel called his plan the Atlantropa Project. The heart of the Atlantropa madness was to block the Atlantic Ocean from entering the Mediterranean by damming the Strait of Gibraltar. Deprived of a significant source of water flow, the Mediterranean would drain.

Sörgel imagined the dams would produce almost unlimited energy and the reclaimed land used for farming. World peace would reign when Europe and Africa were linked as a giant continent-Atlantropa.

Sörgel's mad scheme had the enthusiast support of many expert engineers and the German public.

Yet, problems with Sörgel's mad scheme were endless. An enormous amount of concrete would be required to build a dam across the Strait of Gibraltar. If the dam would fail, millions might die by floods. As for the reclaimed land, salt left behind on the seabed would prevent farming and turn the land into a desert.

Herman Sörgel's crazy scheme is not so different from Gernot Wagner's-both imagine they know how our biosphere works. In Sörgel's case, dams would have altered the Gulf Stream with catastrophic global cooling the result.

Without government support, Sörgel had no power to impose his crazy dream on others. Humanity averted disaster when the Nazis rejected Sörgel's engineered "utopia." In another instance, the Soviets were not as lucky.

How Communists Destroyed the Aral Sea

Consider the Aral Sea. The Aral Sea-once the fourth largest body of water on the planet-is now a vast wasteland that has shrunk to less than 25 percent of its former size.

The Aral Sea in Uzbekistan (formerly part of the Soviet Union) stands as a tragic monument to the environmental carnage that often occurs under socialism. How could this have happened? Was it a change in weather? No, the destruction of the Aral Sea was the consequence of the Soviet decision to divert waters that flowed into the Aral Sea to irrigate land for cotton farming.

In their book World Politics: International Politics on the World Stage, John Rourke and Mark Boyer write of the Aral Sea:
Then, beginning in the 1960s, Soviet agriculture demands and horrendous planning began to drain water from the sea and from the two great rivers that feed it (the Amu Darya from the north and the Syr Darya from the south) faster than the water could be replenished.

The sea started to shrink rapidly. As it did, the level of its salinity rose, and by 1977 the catch from the once-important fishery had declined by over 75 percent. Still the water level continued to fall, as the sea provided irrigation for cotton fields and for other agricultural production. The same Soviet planning that brought the world the Chernobyl nuclear plant disaster in Ukraine, stood by paralyzed as the Aral Sea began to disappear before the world's eyes.

Now, in reality, geographical name Aral Sea is a fiction, because it has shrunk in size and depth so much that a land bridge separates the so-called Greater Sea to the north from the Lesser Sea to the South. What was a single sea has lost 75 percent of its water and 50 percent of its surface area in the past 40 years. That is roughly equivalent to draining Lake Erie and Lake Ontario. The Uzbek town of Munak was once the Aral Sea's leading port, with its fishermen harvesting the sea's abundant catch. Now there are few fish, but even if there were many, it would not help the people of Munak. The town is now in the middle of a desert; the shoreline of the Lesser Sea is 50 miles away.
Let's put all of this together. Human hubris and madness will always exist. Scientists can dream of controlling the uncontrollable, but they need an agent of coercion to implement their dangerous schemes. Their tool of coercion can only be government.
About the Author

Barry Brownstein is professor emeritus of economics and leadership at the University of Baltimore. He is the author of The Inner-Work of Leadership. To receive Barry's essays subscribe at Mindset Shifts.


(sott.net)



"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/4/2019 5:31:20 PM
Ice Cube

Scientists puzzled as atmospheric methane levels continue increasing

Frozen methane bubbles in Abraham Lake, Alberta, Canada

Frozen methane bubbles in Abraham Lake, Alberta, Canada
Scientists love a good mystery. But it's more fun when the future of humanity isn't at stake.

This enigma involves methane, a potent greenhouse gas. Twenty years ago the level of methane in the atmosphere stopped increasing, giving humanity a bit of a break when it came to slowing climate change. But the concentration started rising again in 2007 - and it's been picking up the pace over the last four years, according to new research.

Scientists haven't figured out the cause, but they say one thing is clear: This surge could imperil the Paris climate accord. That's because many scenarios for meeting its goal of keeping global warming "well below 2 degrees Celsius" assumed that methane would be falling by now, buying time to tackle the long-term challenge of reducing carbon dioxide emissions.


Comment: As if Our Dear Western Leaders could do anything to stop it! The methane is coming from within the planet, primarily from under the sea floor, and escaping from permafrost.


"I don't want to run around and cry wolf all the time, but it is something that is very, very worrying," said Euan Nisbet, an Earth scientist at Royal Holloway, University of London, and lead author of a recent study reporting that the growth of atmospheric methane is accelerating.

Methane is produced when dead stuff breaks down without much oxygen around. In nature, it seeps out of waterlogged wetlands, peat bogs and sediments. Forest fires produce some too.


Comment: That's the 'fossil fuel theory'. Most of it the methane - like oil and other minerals - is probably produced within the planet. Oceans of methane have been found within moons in our solar system...


These days, however, human activities churn out about half of all methane emissions. Leaks from fossil fuel operations are a big source, as is agriculture - particularly raising cattle, which produce methane in their guts. Even the heaps of waste that rot in landfills produce the gas.


Comment: They do, but they're but a tiny fraction of what the planet outgasses.


Agriculture, including growing rice in flooded fields, is one of the biggest sources of human-caused methane emissions.


Comment: See, if you humans would just stop eating...


The atmosphere contains far less methane than carbon dioxide, which is the primary driver of climate change. But methane is so good at trapping heat that one ton of the gas causes 32 times as much warming as one ton of CO2 over the course of a century.

Molecule for molecule, methane "packs a bigger punch," said Debra Wunch, an atmospheric physicist at the University of Toronto.

For 10,000 years, the concentration of methane in Earth's atmosphere hovered below 750 parts per billion, or ppb. It began rising in the 19th century and continued to climb until the mid-1990s. Along the way, it caused up to one-third of the warming the planet has experienced since the onset of the Industrial Revolution.

Scientists thought that methane levels might have reached a new equilibrium when they plateaued around 1,775 ppb, and that efforts to cut emissions could soon reverse the historical trend.

"The hope was that methane would be starting on its trajectory downwards now," said Matt Rigby, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Bristol in England. "But we've seen quite the opposite: It's been growing steadily for over a decade."

That growth accelerated in 2014, pushing methane levels up beyond 1,850 ppb. Experts have no idea why.

"It's just such a confusing picture," Rigby said. "Everyone's puzzled. We're just puzzled."


Read the rest
here

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