Are You Safe - The Biggest Threat to You And Your Family

1 year ago
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https://nutrientsurvival.com 92,000 dams. That's what we have across the US. And the frightening thing is that 76% of them are high hazard potential. And that means if one fails or is destroyed and you happen to be the unlucky soul in this destructive path, it will kill you. It will kill your family. It will kill your animals. It will kill your plants and gardens and anything else in its way. 76%. So chances are you live next to one of these dams, and you may not even know it. Look at all these dots. Each one of them is a dam, and most are just waiting for an accident to happen.

Maybe this is why we've seen so many observational flights happening, 7,500 in the past 75 days alone. We expected at the time that the US government was putting these up in the air to watch something, that they knew something that we didn't. Well, sure enough. Now, this was when we learned of the 60,000 pounds of ammonium nitrate that went missing back in May. Remember that? It was from an explosive manufacturer in Wyoming. Guess what? It's still not been accounted for. It's still out there. So it seems a good reason that the government was a little more nervous than usual.

You see, 60,000 pounds of this stuff, when mixed with common ingredients like fuel oil, can make one serious boom. Or if it was divvied up, make several serious booms. It's the same stuff that McVeigh used on the federal building in Oklahoma City, except 60,000 pounds is 12 times more than he used. And because those explosive ingredients went missing in the West, we've especially been busy keeping our eyes and ears open out here, and not just me and the community, but the government has been too. And they've been especially watchful over our dams out here.

Most of you know that I live out in Western Northern Nevada, right next to the California border. And with the help of some inside information, local intel, I've been watching one dam out here in particular, the Oroville Dam. It's in Northern California, in the Sierra Nevada. You see, folks, at 770 feet high, the Oroville Dam is the tallest dam in the entire United States. It serves mostly for water supply, hydroelectricity, flood control, etc. The dam holds back Lake Oroville. It's the second-largest reservoir in California. And it's capable of storing more than three and a half million acre-feet of water. And storing water, it has. This year's record snow out West, and now the ensuing melt, has left Lake Oroville surging. And it's just hit the highest it's been, the fastest it's been compared to as many years of data as I could find. Look at this chart, just showing the water level, raised to the top.

So the scary question that you're led to now is this: What happens if some of the missing ammonium nitrate showed up at the dam and goes boom? The answer is devastation.

Now, this map is produced by the California Department of Water Resources. It's called an inundation map, which means it shows what gets covered with water if a dam fails. In this case, it's the Oroville Dam. You can see the impact would be apocalyptic. That little blue circle to the right is Lake Tahoe, the sixth largest lake in America after the five Great Lakes. But the large blue area to the west, or left of Lake Tahoe, is what would be covered with water if the Oroville Dam fails. It would flood the entire northern Central Valley and not stop until it reaches Susson Bay, which connects to San Francisco Bay and eventually the Pacific Ocean.

And as every good farmer knows, the Central Valley is known for its agriculture, providing more than half of the fruits, vegetables, and nuts grown in the United States. If this area is flooded, all those crops would be gone. Not to mention the cities in the flood path: Oroville, Thermolito, Palermo, Biggs, Gridley, Live Oak, Calusa, Yuba City, Olivehurst, Arbuckle, Williams, Wheatland, Woldent, Rio Vista, Davis, and even California's capital of Sacramento. By my count, we're talking about over two million people. I'm not kidding, do the math.

Now, you might be thinking I've completely lost it, and that's entirely possible. But tell me this: Why, as I was researching the situation and came across the national inventory of dams website, maintained by my friends at the US Army Corps of Engineers, did the website greet me with a warning? A warning that said the site was for official government use only and that my actions were being monitored. It seems like I'm not the only one who's paranoid. Someone else thinks that maybe someone is casing our dams. The government clearly suspects something's up; otherwise, why would they try to scare site visitors off by telling me they're watching me? They're watching my every keystroke.

@FoxNews @oann @NewsmaxTV @NewsNationTV
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