Most Powerful Forces on Earth: Heatwaves | Fatal Forecast | Free Documentary

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Free Documentary

Free Documentary

Күн бұрын

Fatal Forecast: Heatwaves - Deadly Forces of Nature | Disaster Documentary
Fatal Forecast: Tornados - Deadly Forces of Nature: • Most Powerful Forces o...
In the 21st century, Planet Earth has been heating up, significantly, year after year. When it comes to the hottest temperature ever recorded, 2019 broke records across the globe while 2020 shattered them. What was once a naturally occurring seasonal event is now being attributed to the increase of carbon emissions that is wearing away at the Earth’s fragile atmosphere.
Unless the current trends are reversed, humanity is on a collision course to make more regions of the world uninhabitable, where boiling temperatures could be the new normal. It’s all due to one of the deadliest weather events ever known: the Heat Wave.
One of the hardest heatwave events struck Europe in 2003 with a death toll of about 70 000. The heatwave was especially hard in France, silently taking lives, putting stress on the healthcare services, and causing city infrastructure as well as agriculture in the rural areas.
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Пікірлер: 447
@lim8581
@lim8581 5 ай бұрын
The urgency of addressing the heatwave crisis is crystal clear in this documentary. It's a stark reminder of the consequences of climate change. Thank you for shedding light on this critical issue and encouraging us to take action to protect our planet.
@TaurusWitch29
@TaurusWitch29 5 ай бұрын
And yet the only thing most people leaving comments on other comments is "it'd go away if you just repent and take Jesus into your heart" and it's like, no...? That's not the reason? 😂
@lifeeasier3462
@lifeeasier3462 8 ай бұрын
I just watched “Kiss The Ground” on Netflix. Especially on desertification and the documentaries on all the forest fires especially in Maui and California. We are so vulnerable on the ground. I started planting more in my garden. If everybody plants a tree instead of more and more concrete, we could make a difference.
@williebeamish5879
@williebeamish5879 6 ай бұрын
Carcentric societies have destroyed us.
@christinearmington
@christinearmington 10 ай бұрын
Watching this in July 2023 I’m thinking we probably need another documentary. 🥺🔥🚨
@StopTh3Idiots
@StopTh3Idiots 10 ай бұрын
about solar storms and how it affects the increasing temperature on earth
@bornyesterday21
@bornyesterday21 9 ай бұрын
... i think you're right.
@GdpJapan
@GdpJapan 9 ай бұрын
If we live to make it.
@mscottmiracle1396
@mscottmiracle1396 9 ай бұрын
Maybe someone with a commitment to the truth could make the next one.
@darrelvega3001
@darrelvega3001 9 ай бұрын
Lol why??? This is a hint of truth mixed with so many lies! You really think that technology is going to save us, or that our world leaders really care about the environment that they themselves are destroying way faster than every human alone on this planet? Please you need to look up and see what’s going on and understand that they have been trying to mitigate the damage done so they can continue to loot, plunder, and pillage!! It’s now catching up faster than they anticipated and that’s the reason why they are quickly rushing to destabilize everything so they can push EVERYONE to their One World Digital Currency. We don’t need another video about what’s going on now. We need to stand up and ask why are we allowing them to destroy the planet for financial gains.
@ikennamadueke9131
@ikennamadueke9131 9 ай бұрын
I live in Dallas Texas and we have been getting weather of over 110 to 120 Fahrenheit about 42 Celsius over the past 1 month and continuing. It is terrible
@FreeDocumentary
@FreeDocumentary 9 ай бұрын
I know. I’m from the States and follow news closely.
@jillennis1883
@jillennis1883 9 ай бұрын
I live in Fort Worth, Texas, it is 107 degrees today🌡. Over 30 days of triple digits.. totally insane for sure😮.
@michaelschiessl8357
@michaelschiessl8357 9 ай бұрын
​@@jillennis1883yep in Arlington 109 today..I'm over it.
@tamekiaakins29
@tamekiaakins29 9 ай бұрын
Here in Louisiana too im 3 hours from Dallas
@lovisstewart2128
@lovisstewart2128 8 ай бұрын
Big up from Jamaica mankind is in trouble indeed
@sandponics
@sandponics 27 күн бұрын
Mankind has been in trouble with womankind for the last 70,000+ years.
@missmodern
@missmodern 9 ай бұрын
What ever happened to cross ventilation? Architects used to design houses that had cool breezes flowing through when the windows were open.
@grantandrew619
@grantandrew619 8 ай бұрын
yes that is the best action to cool the planet
@sharonsloan
@sharonsloan 8 ай бұрын
Houses in temperate places like the UK need to start thinking about shade for windows during hot summers. Our houses are built with bigger windows to let more sunlight in during winter, but during heatwaves that turns out houses into ovens. I've natural shade from trees at the front of the house, which is a good 4-5c cooler than the back of the house (no shade). We also make sure the doors and windows stay open to cool upstairs in particular.
@edwigcarol4888
@edwigcarol4888 7 ай бұрын
This is my experience from year to year that qualities of a house and its direct surroundings makes a great deal in preventing the rooms to get hot. My house was build in 1900. Trees around and the near earth-embankment of the railway keep it cool. I literally live in a very local micro-climate. As I live on the ground floor , there are up to 5 degrees Celsius difference between my home and the street! I love this house in the hot summers.
@elisabethcuriel
@elisabethcuriel 7 ай бұрын
​@@grantandrew619😅😅😅
@seismixx
@seismixx 2 ай бұрын
not in this economy!
@RickB50SS
@RickB50SS 9 ай бұрын
The world can't even agree on Celcius or Farenheight temp scale.
@grantandrew619
@grantandrew619 8 ай бұрын
wrong. the world has agreed. America and a few other "slow" countries have decided to remain in the past.
@josephchandra97
@josephchandra97 9 ай бұрын
Excellent scientific documentary on a potentially fatal global problem today. Those of us who live in tropical countries like me and are acclimatized to extreme heat in the summer season of every year are bewildered to see heatwave scorching even the temperate regions on earth. This summer right from April 2023 to July 2023 has been unbearable in parts of India where the South West Monsoon rains have not cooled the sun cooked parts of my country. Global Warming and Climate Change needs no more evidence than what we are experiencing right now.
@janebrown7231
@janebrown7231 9 ай бұрын
Well said.
@CT-vm4gf
@CT-vm4gf 9 ай бұрын
Yes, a person denying climate change is a person with their head buried in the sand.
@smelltheglove2038
@smelltheglove2038 6 ай бұрын
We are still in an ice age. The temperatures are below what they’ve been historically. It’s a fraud. A way to control easily manipulated people into doing what the powers that be want.
@Jogie100
@Jogie100 8 ай бұрын
This should be mandatory viewing. The 1st step to change is awareness. Awareness in EVERYONE! Including elected officials
@TaurusWitch29
@TaurusWitch29 5 ай бұрын
Right, they just scream "repent, repent" and it's like no? The last video I was watching from this channel had all these comments about how we need God and its like, hunny, that's not the problem? It's the ignorance and blatant disregard for the planet and the things we're doing to it.
@trmon8890
@trmon8890 9 ай бұрын
Hypothermia is a medical emergency that occurs when your body loses heat faster than it can produce heat, causing a dangerously low body temperature. Normal body temperature is around 98.6 F (37 C). Hypothermia (hi-poe-THUR-me-uh) occurs as your body temperature falls below 95 F (35 C). Heatstroke is a life-threatening condition that happens when your body temperature rises above 104 degrees Fahrenheit (40 degrees Celsius). It’s usually the result of overexertion in hot, humid conditions. Symptoms can include confusion, seizures or loss of consciousness. Untreated, heatstroke can lead to organ failure, a coma or death.
@samirmandal5741
@samirmandal5741 7 ай бұрын
Humans will only act when it's too late. We are melting ice caps to feed our industries, mainly the silicon-producing ones. The greed needs to stop. Our attitude also needs to change along with government policies.
@clebfelm4170
@clebfelm4170 Ай бұрын
The greed of will never stop
@SilverSrfer
@SilverSrfer 10 ай бұрын
my age is 35 years and in my entire life I never experienced the hottest day as yesterday 18/07/2023. it was extreme day in Asia.
@sputumtube
@sputumtube 10 ай бұрын
Sorry to hear about your plight in Asia. Here in the UK we had a taste of similar heatwaves last year when temperatures exceeded 40c for about a week. It was unimaginably awful. Perhaps you could could do what I did and sit with your feet in water/ice cubes and definitely drink plenty of water too. I also bought a portable air conditioning unit which helped a little. Good luck.
@maxgoodman5831
@maxgoodman5831 10 ай бұрын
Where exactly in Asia?
@voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885
@voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 9 ай бұрын
@@maxgoodman5831 just left to the Pagoda by the Banyan tree on the south side of Indochina.
@Achardfull
@Achardfull 9 ай бұрын
From an island South West Indian Ocean no winter this year 2023 . Last summer was very hot .🥵🥵
@Achardfull
@Achardfull 9 ай бұрын
@@voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 under the Banyan tree is the best to refresh
@roycarter2797
@roycarter2797 9 ай бұрын
They never mentioned the effect of animal agriculture on the environment and climate. And as we loose more arable land and the population goes up it will have an exponential negative impact as we try to feed the planet with an outdated food system that is more destructive than any other human endeavor.
@tiffanym4202
@tiffanym4202 8 ай бұрын
The film mentioned trees and transpiration followed by a picture of pastures rimmed by trees. Those pastures were once forests. We've been clearing forests bit by bit since the agricultural age kicked in and that greatly intensified during the industrial revolution and into today. It isn't just fossil fuels that are causing climate change. Few would argue that the earth would be heating up even if humans didn't exist, albeit, maybe a tad slower. The film also mentions the increase in industrial pollution as a contributing factor. Look at how society always wants the newest fad. We are a wasteful species. Few products are made to last anymore. And lastly, and I haven't seen this mentioned in any documentary, people actually cut down the trees that shade their homes to install solar panels! We are not addressing the problems, just making them worse.
@garlandstyle5797
@garlandstyle5797 7 ай бұрын
Totally agree. :)
@smelltheglove2038
@smelltheglove2038 6 ай бұрын
“Green” energy is far more destructive than oil and gas.
@JusticeAlways
@JusticeAlways 10 ай бұрын
Watching this in Georgia...no electricity for 2 days. No AC is not fun. A storm tore up electric power poles.
@rafalbuijs5061
@rafalbuijs5061 9 ай бұрын
Because the dumb founded US gov thinks it is a good Idea to have power lines not in the ground but in high on pole.
@lovisstewart2128
@lovisstewart2128 9 ай бұрын
Big up from Jamaica you to install a solar system for backup because in times like these the grid is not dependible
@FAS1948
@FAS1948 6 ай бұрын
Neurodiversity awareness: be very careful about adding music while people are speaking because you may make it inaccessible to those of us who cannot cope with multiple sensory inputs.
@WychardNL
@WychardNL 10 ай бұрын
Painting roads white and making roofs "green" by planting plants on roofs would help a lot to reduce the rural "heat bubble".
@Menoetia
@Menoetia 9 ай бұрын
What would likely help more is to open up more space to plant trees. A few studies done in the last 2-3 years, to figure out why neighborhoods just a few streets apart were hotter or cooler discovered this: areas with more open green space and trees, specifically, stayed a few degrees cooler on average than places that were (in comparison) mostly cement and asphalt.
@darrelvega3001
@darrelvega3001 9 ай бұрын
Lol wow.. why don’t you start with GeoEngineering first.
@ryandelatte3294
@ryandelatte3294 8 ай бұрын
Reflective roofing would be better than green roofing and would last longer. Use your yard as a medium for growth like I do. Don’t cut your grass and allow trees to grow when you see them arise. I have 6 new trees on my property that would have never grown otherwise if I cut my lawn like most Americans
@grantandrew619
@grantandrew619 8 ай бұрын
paint on roads makes them slippery, the colour would need to be IN the surface material. It is not easy to plant roofs that slope more than 15 degrees. Plus you mean, the urban heat bubble, not the rural.
@lifeeasier3462
@lifeeasier3462 9 ай бұрын
After experiencing the heat wave in Florida a couple years back, I am terrified!!!! And that was 102 degrees. 130 degrees is insane!
@LynxStarAuto
@LynxStarAuto 9 ай бұрын
With our humidity 🥵
@Mike80528
@Mike80528 9 ай бұрын
More people need to be terrified. We've entered a vicious feedback cycle of energy usage (let alone climate feedback loops). The higher heat increases our reliance on electricity for cooling driving every more energy usage. At some point the system will break and many thousands will die...it is only a matter of time now...
@trmon8890
@trmon8890 9 ай бұрын
Las Vegas has high temps 120 f in the summer and then ad in the urban heat effect and it's even higher. The scary part is your sweat evaporates and you dehydrate faster without even realizing it.
@ruthmartinez4798
@ruthmartinez4798 9 ай бұрын
Florida heat Hot 🔥🥵🔥🥵 120 we older adults can't take so much heat feeling sick 🤢 exhausted feeling tire can't even go outside drink a lot of water stay safe ❤❤❤😅
@roughroadrunner88
@roughroadrunner88 8 ай бұрын
Health must be on top to take on extreme weathers
@kellyshomemadekitchen
@kellyshomemadekitchen 10 ай бұрын
I’ll never forget the heatwave Ohio got summer of 88. I was 14 at the time growing up on a cattle and horse farm. NC farmers were nice enough to donate hay to Ohio farmers. My Dad even got his picture on the front page loading bales of hay on his big log truck. When he got it home, I had a heat stroke helping him unload it into our barn.
@voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885
@voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 9 ай бұрын
Jul 25, 2023 Arizona has reported a spike in patients burnt due to falling on Asphalt. Meanwhile, wildfires continue to rage in Greece. Priyanka Sharma brings you the details.
@cintiapollock2486
@cintiapollock2486 9 ай бұрын
Oh I remember that it was all over the news that summer wow you were young to have a heat stroke 🥵
@grantandrew619
@grantandrew619 8 ай бұрын
Americans only seem capable of talking to Americans. there is a whole world outside your little borders
@smelltheglove2038
@smelltheglove2038 6 ай бұрын
@@cintiapollock2486probably because he had heat exhaustion. Heat stroke is rare. Also, the cold kills far more people each year than the heat. Also, the forest fires are caused by people lighting fires, not 100 degree temperatures.
@sifridbassoon
@sifridbassoon 3 ай бұрын
I live in Dallas. The condo I used to live in had large windows and sliding doors facing west (what architect thought up THAT smart idea?). In the afternoon the heat would get terrible. I went to Home Depot and got a couple of rolls of radient barrier (that shiny silver foil like stuff) and made hangings that I could tack up over the windows and doors (the doors and windows had blinds over them, so you couldn't see the hangings from inside. It was amazing the difference it made.
@carinwiseman4309
@carinwiseman4309 9 ай бұрын
The interesting thing is that now, 20 years after the Paris heatwave that killed so many, the temps from 2003 are a yearly occurance. We are getting habituated to them, and they are not now so deadly. Unfortunately, they are now just getting worse, and we will not be able to evolve fast enough to outlive them.
@petercricket
@petercricket 9 ай бұрын
there are people who are 95 and have never seen this kind of heat before..
@grantandrew619
@grantandrew619 8 ай бұрын
Habituated is NOT evolution and evolving is not any part of this problem or solution
@isaachunt5799
@isaachunt5799 10 ай бұрын
Too many of us. Too many of us want everything. The planet is doomed. withn 600 years the entire planet will be a ball of fire.
@sujansundas955
@sujansundas955 9 ай бұрын
That's true because of greed people want more of this more of that more of never ending more. If you have Jesus Christ in your heart trusting HIM as Savior of our sins and Lord of our life you have no worries because those who let Jesus Christ came into their heart, we will be with HIM in paradise forever and ever. Did you know that even death conquered by Jesus Christ when He died on the Cross of Calvary? John 1:12, John 3:16-17. Romans 3:23, Romans 6:23, Romans 5:8, Revelation 3:20. God bless you and prayers that you will believe Jesus Christ by faith.
@voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885
@voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 9 ай бұрын
@@sujansundas955 This book presents a critical evaluation of the doctrine of the Trinity, tracing its development and investigating the intellectual, philosophical and theological background that shaped this influential doctrine of Christianity. Despite the centrality of Trinitarian thought to Christianity and its importance as one of the fundamental tenets that differentiates Christianity from Judaism and Islam, the doctrine is not fully formulated in the canon of Christian scriptural texts. Instead, it evolved through the conflation of selective pieces of scripture with the philosophical and religious ideas of ancient Hellenistic milieu. Marian Hillar analyzes the development of Trinitarian thought during the formative years of Christianity from its roots in ancient Greek philosophical concepts and religious thinking in the Mediterranean region. He identifies several important sources of Trinitarian thought heretofore largely ignored by scholars, including the Greek middle-Platonic philosophical writings of Numenius and Egyptian metaphysical writings and monuments representing divinity as a triune entity. Why is this account of the development of doctrine from the Logos to the Trinity so critically important in our time? Because the public, as well as scholars, seems largely ignorant of the profound shifts in thinking which occurred when the essentially Jewish faith of New Testament times became severed from its roots and succumbed to the distorting influence of neo-Platonism. The churches have in general turned a blind eye to the somewhat embarrassing fact that a very strong pagan Greek influence adversely affected the Christian faith as it emerged after apostolic times. Marian Hillar is perhaps the first to put his finger on the detail of just how Biblical Christianity's decline into a philosophical form of religion came about. He shows us that the middle-Platonist Numenius quite evidently exhibits an extraordinary affinity with the thinking of the second-century Christian apologist, Justin Martyr. The mid-second century marks the transition, via a mishandling of John's logos teaching, from one theological paradigm to a new and very different one. By stages the unitary monotheism of Jesus and the apostles became the complex construction of the nature of God as Trinity. Now that this scholar has laid bare the evidence, we are all more able to reevaluate our own positions vis-a-vis Christianity as it originally stemmed from Jesus himself. Building on this ubiquitous understanding, Pythagoras (570 b. c. e), a noted theologian and philosopher, taught the “cosmological principles, Monad, Dyad and Harmony” (7). Hillar labels this a “trinity” which corresponds to the moral philosophy of Goodness, Truth and Beauty. (10). Men of that era believed these principles controlled the Universe and were a “philosophy of immanent order” (8). Hillar next discusses several philosophers who added concepts to the accepted philosophical thought on Logos. Among them was Alemaeon of Croton, who mingled the idea of Logos with medicine, thereby setting the precedent for the development of the Hippocratic Oath (9,10). Other early disciples included Heraclitus of Ephesus who equated “Mind” with Logos by discussing the force of Logos/Mind in creation, and Anaxagoras of Clazomenae who thought “Mind” more an impersonal force (11). The philosopher, Xenocrates of Chalcedon (d. 314 b. c. e.), agreed with Pythagoras and Plato that numbers represent universal regularities and melded “the ideal with the mathematical” (22). And, “Xenocrates philosophy constitutes an important transition to Middle Platonism” (22). Xenocrates discussed the ideal in terms of the three perfect triangles: equilateral, representing unity; isosceles, representing unity and variety; and scalene representing “descending souls with material elements” (23), i. e., human beings. Adding to this foundation, the Stoics of the third century b. c. e. developed the thought on Logos which became the accepted teaching of early Christians. The Stoics taught that the principle of Logos governed the structure of the world. It was a “celestial fire, intelligent breath” (26). They believed several “world cycles began and ended with fire” (31), and that warm, intelligent breath, pneuma, held the elements of the universe together. The equivalent Hebrew concept of Logos, davar, was considered to be “the speech of God”. It is often seen in the Old Testament as “And God said,” (36). From this Hillar directs the reader in a discussion of the Hebrew personification of Wisdom, and subsequently of the union of Logos and Wisdom in John 1. Philo (20 b .c. e-50 c. e.), another philosopher of importance, added significantly to the theological underpinnings of Christianity. Philo used allegory to interpret Hebrew religious traditions. In this manner he looked for hidden meaning in the text and read back into it new interpretation (45). This method had implications for Philo’s thoughts on Logos. Philo “fused Greek philosophical concepts with Hebrew religious thought” (55), providing more intellectual foundation for the acceptance of Christian writings than was produced in the first and second centuries. Hillar believes that Philo spent more time developing his ideas on Logos than on his other intellectual interests. For example, Philo defined Logos as “utterance of God” and “divine mind” (56), “the agent of creation and transcendent power” (57), “Universal bond and immanent reason” (60), “the immanent Mediator” (62), and the “Angel of the Lord which is the Revealer of God” (63). In guiding the reader toward understanding the development of thought leading to the trinity, Hillar elaborates regarding the messianic tradition of the Jews in which eschatological and apocalyptic themes were emphasized in Judaic writings, worship and culture. The Jews believed God acts on behalf of the righteous of Israel (102). Further, the ideas of messianic and apocalyptic eschatology were carried through to Hellenistic Christian thought. “Christianity” was first an early Jewish messianic movement (112). Members were first identified as “Nazoraeans” before being called “Christians” because their Messiah would be a Nazarene as stated in Matthew 2:23 (114). In the historical journey of discovery guided by Hillar’s research, the reader is next given a thorough tour of the works of Justin Martyr. Martyr was influenced by Numenius’ Middle Platonic thought on the soul (148), and also by his thought on Logos as First God and Second God (147). To Martyr belongs the distinction of being the first church father to label the theological ideas of Pythagoras, the Monad, Dyad and Harmony, as “triad”. This is significant because it was the Latin layman, Tertullian, who finally translated “triad” to the Latin trinitas, or “trinity”.
@mari3602
@mari3602 9 ай бұрын
Agreed. Yet all governments talk about is economic growth and larger immigration to make more stuff and increase their taxation base.
@vsstdtbs3705
@vsstdtbs3705 8 ай бұрын
your right, men have lost their rights to put their wives down. Traditionally they were his property. Today women dominate voting so there is bias custody, employment and healthcare laws. Also womens rights, human rights, immigration rights, so there is 8 billion.
@frankstone3809
@frankstone3809 8 ай бұрын
I believe we need to start looking at developing underground housing.
@jessegee179
@jessegee179 8 ай бұрын
The worst place to be is a modern UK hospital. My client nearly died in one, not because of a fall, but because of heat stress. I managed to get her into a wheelchair and took her to a corridor with a window, she revived. We took her home asap.
@sharonsloan
@sharonsloan 8 ай бұрын
True. I kept opening the windows in the maternity ward when I was in one. Nurses kept shutting them 🙄
@edwigcarol4888
@edwigcarol4888 7 ай бұрын
May I add that I suspect elderlies die sooner than they might have because of Malnutrition? The food on hospitals is generally so b.a.d... how could they eat anything ? A silent killer too..
@jessegee179
@jessegee179 7 ай бұрын
@@edwigcarol4888 yes that too I’m sure, but this was simple heat stress.
@jasonolinger7585
@jasonolinger7585 10 ай бұрын
I remember he climate activists told us in 2012 that we had 5 years until we all dried up and the oceans would rise 20 ft taking the beach front houses around the world with it, meanwhile, wealthy people still buy beach front houses to this day and insurance companies still insure them. I think the truth is somewhere in the middle, as always.
@MattyEngland
@MattyEngland 10 ай бұрын
Yep, Al Gore and his BS.
@joshwescott9809
@joshwescott9809 10 ай бұрын
I remember being taught early in school (late 80s) that acid rain was going to kill us all before 2000. Its hard to fully take scientists serious when there's been so many doomsday scenarios since the 1970s plus.
@gtRELIC
@gtRELIC 10 ай бұрын
The truth is we’re all gonna be dead before the worst arrives. It’s our great great grandchildren that are gonna be saying wtf!!
@AdakStillStands
@AdakStillStands 10 ай бұрын
And middle-class buys the damaged property, fixes it to code, insures it and after the next (expected, anticipated, predicted) disaster, they become "new" millionaires. Rinse repeat. Greed. Another way to legally create wealth.
@JusticeAlways
@JusticeAlways 10 ай бұрын
Nobody really knows.
@malectric
@malectric 7 ай бұрын
We are living in a new age - he age of annually set new records in recorded history just about everywhere. In New Zealand, increasing windspeeds, flooding events, atmospheric rivers and summer temperature records etc. etc. The telling factor is the increasing frequency of radical events. And sustained heat is a particular problem. You can always put on more clothing if it's cold but there is little you can do if it is really hot. Air conditioning is self-defeating. Not only does it consume more energy but it pumps heat from indoors to the outdoor environment contributing to the warmth outside. What a wonderful world the young of today have been bequeathed by us. I wonder whether any will mount an annual pilgrimage to dance on the graves of oil company moguls and politicians.
@tinyfrog919
@tinyfrog919 7 ай бұрын
👍
@TheVkaz
@TheVkaz 9 ай бұрын
the end has begun already
@richardstephens3642
@richardstephens3642 7 ай бұрын
I'm afraid it is too late we should have started saving the planet a hundred years ago, now it'll take a few thousand years for the planet to recover and she doesn't want US around to delay that recovery
@felixfynn-prah9932
@felixfynn-prah9932 8 ай бұрын
The cost of living is spiralling out of control because those who produce fossil fuel want to put a dent in out pockets so there won't enough money to invest in green energy, hence if the temperature increases less money will be spent on heating our homes, this seems to be the plan of the few instead of heating now money has to be spent on refrigeration and air conditioning.
@nottenvironmental6208
@nottenvironmental6208 8 ай бұрын
Economic collapse coming from current policy. Exponentially accelerating changing climate is here but denied by our insane governance
@eastfrisianguy
@eastfrisianguy 4 ай бұрын
I remember the heatwave of 2003 very well. My father turned 50 in the middle of the heatwave and we had a party with a big buffet in the local pub at lunchtime. I was 15 and we were all dressed very officially and then the air conditioning in the restaurant broke down when it was 34 degrees outside. We all lost our appetite 😂 We had temperatures of 29-34 degrees for a fortnight, between 18-22 degrees at night. A very dry heat, incredibly rare and unusual in north-west Germany. Drained swamp areas were on fire and my room was under the roof, where the heat built up incredibly, it was almost unbearable. 2018 and 2019 were also very bad and there was a lot of humidity for weeks, it wasn't really cooling down at night and my flat only has south-facing windows and no air conditioning. Unfortunately, I will probably have to buy a mobile air conditioning unit in the future. 😵‍💫
@user-pv9tl4wz5l
@user-pv9tl4wz5l Ай бұрын
When scientists say the Earth will warm by 3'c by 2060 that is not the temperatures we will see. They mean the Global Average Temperature (GAT) which is representative of Sea Surface Temperature (SST). Land temperature will be 2-4x that temperature increase. So 3'c will be 6-12'c on many land areas.
@Michael_swc
@Michael_swc 9 ай бұрын
😢this will be a nightmare.
@stacey7529
@stacey7529 6 ай бұрын
We had a heatwave warning yesterday for the next 4 days 😂
@sifridbassoon
@sifridbassoon 3 ай бұрын
would have been nice if there had been a link to the study mentioned in the beginning.
@georgehagstrom1461
@georgehagstrom1461 16 күн бұрын
The traditional life style and it's consumption economy is energy dependent. An ecological lifestyle is totally different. Encouraging and more fun.
@johnalver
@johnalver 9 ай бұрын
This is been so f****** hot lately!
@everythingsunderthesun7337
@everythingsunderthesun7337 19 күн бұрын
April 30,2024 Now were experiencing this im from southeast asia philippines..today 2:30pm 51'c is too hot in my place
@mostawesome9610
@mostawesome9610 9 ай бұрын
In Jamaica right now it is suffering hot with no rain 🌧️. Trees are drying up
@nicolatesla5786
@nicolatesla5786 8 ай бұрын
Yeah I'm sorry you're going through that you're close to the equator you might want to think about emigrating
@akashThe99
@akashThe99 8 ай бұрын
Every summer we live in +40°C every year for almost 6 months.. here in my hometown we are already adapted to this temperature 😂
@marvib100
@marvib100 9 ай бұрын
I need more updated documentary. This one is talking about the past heatwaves, like 2003. What we need is the now, what's going on in the most recent and present yrs. and the future forecasts.
@nicolatesla5786
@nicolatesla5786 8 ай бұрын
50000 Europeans died in summer of 2023
@lonnywilliams7523
@lonnywilliams7523 9 ай бұрын
1998 we had over 70days over a 100° in Texas
@gilberttello08
@gilberttello08 8 ай бұрын
Hello from Philippines
@vsstdtbs3705
@vsstdtbs3705 8 ай бұрын
hello from budgeiwaka.
@HellcatMad
@HellcatMad 9 ай бұрын
Exactly what Texas is dealing with now. Over 3 weeks of over 100° every day
@ruthmartinez4798
@ruthmartinez4798 9 ай бұрын
Here in Florida 120 hot 🔥🔥🥵🥵 soon or later we will get a fire because we are extreme heat feeling sick 🤢 exhausted feeling tire can even breathe sweating like hell your body burning from the sweat a heat sad 😢😔😢 that we can do it
@HellcatMad
@HellcatMad 9 ай бұрын
@ruthmartinez4798 wow. With the humidity in Florida not surprising. Prayers for well being and health Ms Ruth.
@nicolatesla5786
@nicolatesla5786 8 ай бұрын
Yep now Western Texas is cooling off and now it's Louisiana Alabama Mississippi in Florida that's sea temperatures over 100°
@nicolatesla5786
@nicolatesla5786 8 ай бұрын
@@ruthmartinez4798 well for 60 years scientists have been warning the United States government, corporations and the oil companies that burning coal oil and natural gas releases carbon dioxide which is a greenhouse gas the greenhouse gases are piling up in the atmosphere on a global scale and continues to trap more eat. But 90% of that heat is absorbed in the world's oceans 2021 the total thermal uptake was 17 x 10 to the 22nd Jewels heat energy or equivalent of 5 Hiroshima thermal nuclear bombs per second
@Jc-ms5vv
@Jc-ms5vv 8 ай бұрын
How do your crops/ plants look?
@leannestaal4325
@leannestaal4325 10 ай бұрын
I'm from London last year we saw temperature's in the 40s UK ain't use to that I feel sorry for the people in the other countries with the deadly heat and fire's first we had COVID now we are sitting on a time bomb😢
@julesjazzie
@julesjazzie 10 ай бұрын
I sure remember that. I am an American living here in England and I know the Brits and I are not use to hot weather . 2022, Britain had hot summer. This year 2023, it is hot and humid although at least we have rains and cloudy days which really cool it down. We are the one who caused it all so we are paying the high price for it.
@johnbell9069
@johnbell9069 9 ай бұрын
True story. I must have caught a bug or something, not covid, on the first day of the heatwave here in the UK. I sitting on the patio wear trousers, teeshirt and thin jumper and I only felt warm! Everyone is wearing swimsuits under the parasol drinking buckets of cold water and there I am fully clothed in direct sunlight drinking tea! I MUST be British, who else would do such a thing! : )
@cintiapollock2486
@cintiapollock2486 9 ай бұрын
those who wear light cotton long sleeves and pants cool off better from their own sweat thats what its for to cool your body down naturally, but best to stay in shady areas with good air flow if possible
@christinearmington
@christinearmington 8 ай бұрын
@@johnbell9069 Mad dogs and Englishmen . . . 🥵😆
@grantandrew619
@grantandrew619 8 ай бұрын
@@cintiapollock2486 thanks for saying that which everybody with common sense already knows, well done
@NawaituTiantum
@NawaituTiantum 10 ай бұрын
Salam dsri indonesia🇮🇩
@CT-vm4gf
@CT-vm4gf 9 ай бұрын
I sure wouldn’t want to be a future generation, living in the dump left by previous generations.
@johnnybgood3909
@johnnybgood3909 9 ай бұрын
Been living with same heat for 60 years in australia. Bloody sooks overseas
@terenceiutzi4003
@terenceiutzi4003 6 ай бұрын
And cold injury kill 20 times as many people. We are now having seniors die of hypothermia in their homes because they can't afford to heat them.
@sharongoodsell9341
@sharongoodsell9341 9 ай бұрын
Our winter in Australia has been mildly warm ! Have only !iMssed one year in 63 years
@user-qo8bj4sb4w
@user-qo8bj4sb4w 10 ай бұрын
To us in Indonesia, 92+ F is considered normal😊
@AdakStillStands
@AdakStillStands 10 ай бұрын
In Washington State 🇺🇸, 65° F is considered average. 90° F and up only lasts a few weeks July-Aug!
@Menoetia
@Menoetia 9 ай бұрын
Except... your infrastructure is built to handle it. If Indonesia had homes built like the UK, Canada, northern US, and northern Europe? 92F would become pretty deadly. Hell, even the more southerly parts of some countries, with homes built FOR the heat, are struggling with these record-smashing temps because nothing was built for WEEKS of 38C heat.
@thevindictive6145
@thevindictive6145 9 ай бұрын
Errrr that's for now, in a few years its gonna be much higher like 130. Be prepared.
@gcb4763
@gcb4763 8 ай бұрын
In Indonesia it's very humid, but the people have ways of adapting without it being too expensive. I haven't been able to do that yet, just as Indonesians find 10 celcius very cold.
@dennismendez947
@dennismendez947 9 ай бұрын
Now humanity knows how to control the weather.
@Stash186
@Stash186 8 ай бұрын
Been doing that for decades, chat with North Vietnamese
@grantandrew619
@grantandrew619 8 ай бұрын
Now humanity will believe any drivel put out there by ignorant people, such as yourself
@Jc-ms5vv
@Jc-ms5vv 8 ай бұрын
😂
@carinwiseman4309
@carinwiseman4309 9 ай бұрын
August 2023, only getting hotter. Much hotter than 2020 in central Florida.
@kevin-xx4te
@kevin-xx4te 9 ай бұрын
So by adding thousands of trees and grass rooftops, wait, don't tree's produce CO2?
@UnknownPascal-sc2nk
@UnknownPascal-sc2nk 9 ай бұрын
No.
@onedominant
@onedominant 9 ай бұрын
No. Trees take in CO2 and produce oxygen. All plants do. You're breathing it.
@sherlynair2842
@sherlynair2842 20 күн бұрын
Just give a pause for everything & for all research to getStopable certain periods to maintain heat from earth
@LuisSang
@LuisSang 9 ай бұрын
Great documentary
@artcats88
@artcats88 9 ай бұрын
Everyone was on holiday!!! Of course they were!!!! 😢
@cristinehoffman482
@cristinehoffman482 7 ай бұрын
Will you do a documentary on how war contributes to climate change?
@roberthornack1692
@roberthornack1692 9 ай бұрын
Future generations? Isn't this the problem! Too many generations create too much heat!
@vsstdtbs3705
@vsstdtbs3705 8 ай бұрын
too much population create too much heat Men have lost their rights to put down their wives. Traditionally they are his property. Today most voters are women, so bias custody, employment and healthcare laws for them. Also womens rights, human rights, immigration rights, so we have 8 billion people.
@smokymcpot5917
@smokymcpot5917 8 ай бұрын
I don't know how our ancestors lived without air conditioners.
@mutoidliz2320
@mutoidliz2320 5 ай бұрын
We still barely have it anywhere in the UK ,expect inside shops near the doors.
@johnarlycapulong3035
@johnarlycapulong3035 11 күн бұрын
Fossil fuel companies be like: who cares!
@guy7088
@guy7088 9 ай бұрын
It's all too late ,we are gonna be forced to live on the moon.....
@rafalbuijs5061
@rafalbuijs5061 9 ай бұрын
Wich moon the moon is not real it is fake it is a hologram
@scottperine9820
@scottperine9820 7 ай бұрын
Can't get my head around how these scientists figure all this out ??? Could there be a power greater that created this be regulating it ?
@deruntergangvannederland1868
@deruntergangvannederland1868 9 ай бұрын
Its already to late , just watch what will happen in the next 10 years.
@Amocles
@Amocles 10 ай бұрын
We'll be living underground in a century
@jasonolinger7585
@jasonolinger7585 10 ай бұрын
The climate people said our oceans would have risen 50 ft by now, wrong.
@MattyEngland
@MattyEngland 10 ай бұрын
Absolute BS
@Amocles
@Amocles 10 ай бұрын
@@jasonolinger7585 oh okay I see so because they were wrong about the timeline or the amount of water rising the whole concept of global warming, climate change, and our contribution towards it is invalid?
@Amocles
@Amocles 10 ай бұрын
@@MattyEngland we're going to put people on the moon in a couple of decades and they're going to place them underground so yeah not really BS... Maybe we'd even have to do it some places on earth...
@NoGufff
@NoGufff 10 ай бұрын
They already do in Coober Pedy.
@yousifatobiya7279
@yousifatobiya7279 9 ай бұрын
I give you the reasons, and the solutions... Who knows the reasons, knows the solutions... Any natural phenomenon must be balanced naturally... I am very sorry to say that the time is going to be over, and on some phenomenons is over... There is a lot around sciences, but very few of them scientists... This kind of people will lead people to the loss of land and their future... Yousif A Tobiya Forcibly displaced
@PatrickFoley-vf3lr
@PatrickFoley-vf3lr 5 ай бұрын
There are just too many people all needing everything produced by expending energy which causes heat.
@missmodern
@missmodern 9 ай бұрын
I don't have air conditioning. 😢
@theamerican7080
@theamerican7080 10 ай бұрын
We all know what an educated, factual comment will only bring censorship so...we just have to start keeping the money to ourselves.
@garlandstyle5797
@garlandstyle5797 7 ай бұрын
Automobile emissions aren't the leading cause of CO2 and Methane rises. Do a little more research my friends and you'll find the leader in that area. Nicely done video. Thank you.
@reggiebald2830
@reggiebald2830 8 ай бұрын
Perhaps if society pays attention for a couple decades & we quit paying fossil fuels ($Bs every year), we'll help prevent the Worst of the Worst.
@scottstone948
@scottstone948 9 ай бұрын
Gee I guess if we had listened to Al Gore 20 years ago, and let him assume the Presidency, that he won, then we might hsve had a chance.
@kevin-xx4te
@kevin-xx4te 9 ай бұрын
The fourth angel poured out his bowl on the sun, and it was allowed to scorch people with Fire.
@MrFreshbreeze50EnjoyLife
@MrFreshbreeze50EnjoyLife Ай бұрын
Showing water vapor from cooling towers as polluting the atmosphere is disingenuous.
@catsmeow4264
@catsmeow4264 9 ай бұрын
The only way to slow it is to implement the parasol project to by time for the energy transition!
@mvsmvs8428
@mvsmvs8428 7 ай бұрын
lol if you drop the co2 by just 30 ppm you can see a reduction in yeild from just about all fruiting plants so if you like to eat i would not drop the co2 at all.
@TheDAT9
@TheDAT9 9 ай бұрын
Adapt or die. The Evolutionary Imperative.
@tubecated_development
@tubecated_development 9 ай бұрын
Right now the human race is a man with his head in the sand pouring hot water from a kettle onto that sand, murmuring “adapt or die”
@TheDAT9
@TheDAT9 9 ай бұрын
@@tubecated_development A very small percentage of us have come to realise what we are, and that we have been lied to for centuries.
@clivepierce1816
@clivepierce1816 9 ай бұрын
Some useful interviews from experts, notably Michael Mann, but the narration is inaccurate and misleading in some places.
@kingCroc467
@kingCroc467 9 ай бұрын
I there is truth to Aliens .....then I think climate change needs to be looked at differently ...
@user-je2tk1mv4e
@user-je2tk1mv4e 4 ай бұрын
2024 needs to update
@DefianceCrow-ji1rr
@DefianceCrow-ji1rr 10 ай бұрын
What about the aerosol masking effect? If we take out the particulates in the atmosphere as a result of stopping burning fossil fuel and coal, will the heat of the earth trapped by green house gasses escape fast enough before the increase of solar radiation, now not being blocked by these particulates, heats up the planet even faster. Fossil and coal burning emmissions have a lag time and the effects will continue for years even if we stopped all carbon emmissions right now. Will life adapt fast enough to make it until we are able to see the results of not releasing carbon emmissions? We have to try of course, but should be cautious and be clear that the cure isn't worse than the disease.
@annieannderson
@annieannderson 10 ай бұрын
I understand what you are saying, but to just keep pumping out fossil fuels is not the answer. There will definitely still be a warming effect after the end of mass fossil fuel use, but the sooner we stop, the sooner we start cooling. There is lots of research going into ways to reflect solar radiation, but I'm of the opinion that if we implement it before the world is onboard with greenhouse gas reduction, governments and organisations will see it as a green light to keep emitting and continue as they have, to the detriment of most living things.
@voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885
@voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 9 ай бұрын
The Aerosol Masking Effect is twice as bad as previously thought, as Daniel Rosenfeld proved. So a 40% decrease of sulfur particulates (mainly coal burning) heats up EArth another 1 degree Celsius global average. Then there's the 1200 gigatons of pressurized methane coming out of the world's largest ocean shelf - ESAS. oops. Over 400 zettajoules of "Extra" heat has accumulated into the oceans since 1995 - we've done a great job of "biological annihilation" indeed!
@janebrown7231
@janebrown7231 9 ай бұрын
Yes, the practical application of aerosol masking removal has been seen during the pandemic due to travel reduction, and particularly through sulphur reduction in shipping. You may be interested in the paper entitled Global reduction in ship-tracks from sulfur regulations for shipping fuel Several studies link the large reduction in aerosol masking caused by shipping, to current increased global temperatures. There is, unfortunately, no way out of this.
@jeffdunnell6693
@jeffdunnell6693 9 ай бұрын
You sure can spew the media bulsht perfectly
@WFPBFORLIFE
@WFPBFORLIFE 7 ай бұрын
Do not discount the profound effects of animal agriculture!
@FreeDocumentary
@FreeDocumentary 10 ай бұрын
Unless the current trends are stopped, humanity is on a collision course to make more regions of the world uninhabitable, where boiling temperatures could be the new normal. It’s all due to one of the deadliest weather events ever known: the Heat Wave. Oh, and back in 1988, James Hansen testified before Congress with a warning about Global Warming. It’s not new. But like the forever procrastinator, humans wait until the last minute.
@thetravellingtokers6385
@thetravellingtokers6385 10 ай бұрын
LIAR LIAR i think your brain is on FIRE🔥🔥🔥💩
@kissthesky40
@kissthesky40 10 ай бұрын
BS
@Amocles
@Amocles 10 ай бұрын
​@@kissthesky40 do you really disbelieve the science and history of our climate? We are a young and ignorant species and just like a young teenager we will probably have to learn a few lessons the hard way.
@MattyEngland
@MattyEngland 10 ай бұрын
​@@Amocles Reliable thermometers have only existed for a couple of hundred years 🙄 Ice cores and the like are pure speculation... Braindead
@leighz1962
@leighz1962 10 ай бұрын
Amockucles, do you believe the pathological liars on private planes saying what global cooling.. I mean warming.. I mean change is.. and they are the ones who can solve it? The documentary literally outlines how gubt incompetence is responsible and they keep dropping the ball harder and harder.
@lifeeasier3462
@lifeeasier3462 9 ай бұрын
What kind of planet are we leaving for our children?
@onedominant
@onedominant 9 ай бұрын
We're not.
@vsstdtbs3705
@vsstdtbs3705 8 ай бұрын
@@onedominant agreed, as soon as women started voting we were doomed. Now they dominate voting, and men have lost their rights to put wives down. Traditionally they were his property. Instead there is womens rights, human rights, immigration rights, and now 8 billion people wrecking the planet for the children.
@morganheberling
@morganheberling 10 ай бұрын
here in the death valley/mojave desert area, what yall call heat waves, we simply call summer... 120 to 125 here is normal
@voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885
@voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 9 ай бұрын
depends who "we" is - It's global warming - not local weather. Globally Resolved Surface Temperatures Since The Last Glacial Maximum" Matthew B. Osman, Jessica E. Tierney, Jiang Zhu, Robert Tardif, Gregory J. Hakim, Jonathan King & Christopher J. Poulsen published November 10, 2021 Nature volume 599, pages 239-244 (2021) ----------- Analysis of global mean surface temperature (GMST) the last 24,000 years by combining several hundred previous published paleo analysis from all over Earth, took 7 scientists 7 years to do the work of combining hundreds of previous published paleo analysis and filling in the areas of Earth between the analyses using advanced statistical methods, and calculating the uncertainty in those statistical methods for the infill. "Climate changes across the last 24,000 years provide key insights into Earth system responses to external forcing. Climate model simulations and proxy data have independently allowed for study of this crucial interval; however, they have at times yielded disparate conclusions. Here, we leverage both types of information using paleoclimate data assimilation to produce the first observationally constrained, full-field reanalysis of surface temperature change spanning the Last Glacial Maximum to present. We demonstrate that temperature variability across the last 24 kyr was linked to two modes: radiative forcing from ice sheets and greenhouse gases; and a superposition of changes in thermohaline circulation and seasonal insolation. In contrast with previous proxy-based reconstructions our reanalysis results show that global mean temperatures warmed between the early and middle Holocene and were stable thereafter. When compared with recent temperature changes, our reanalysis indicates that both the rate and magnitude of modern observed warming are unprecedented relative to the changes of the last 24 kyr". Time to grow up people - industrial CO2 induced abrupt global warming was first analyzed in detail in 1890 by Svante Arrhenius! Current CO2 levels are already well above anything in the past 3 million years! There's already over 400 Zettajoules of EXTRA heat in the oceans accumulated since 1995. The Arctic will soon be ice-free with 1200 gigatons of pressurized methane hydrates being released as an "abrupt eruption" - just a 5 gigaton release will double global warming temperatures on Earth.
@Menoetia
@Menoetia 9 ай бұрын
Your home were probably built to deal with that kind of heat. I live in the high altitude desert in Utah and even our infrastructure, built to withstand the desert heat, is failing. For the first time in 20+ years we're witnessing temps so high that highway pavement has buckled and power substations are being fried.
@Jc-ms5vv
@Jc-ms5vv 8 ай бұрын
Shutoff your ac unit and let us know how things go
@morganheberling
@morganheberling 8 ай бұрын
DOT HAVE A.C A HOLE@@Jc-ms5vv
@benjaminnevins5211
@benjaminnevins5211 8 ай бұрын
"Under a biden administration we will see the united states re-engage with our global partners" You sure ate those words.
@_jstatic
@_jstatic Ай бұрын
In the bible it did not rain for 3 and a half years in egypt. And they had 7 years of famin and 7 years of plenty.
@yousifatobiya7279
@yousifatobiya7279 9 ай бұрын
60% of the(land)breeze and the(sea)changed in Iraq and this difference arrived at other countries of the world... This difference caused the change of the directions of winds,which needs to balance... You spend more than 100 years to study the age and the thickness of the ice at the poles(north and south ),but you didn't spend one day to return ice to his place... The people plan their future , but you do not plan the future of the earth... The world made sins, when he didn't study and read the studies and the advices of the others... I think that science is for the Americans and the Europeans !!! ??? ... Yousif A Tobiya Forcibly displaced
@yashveersingh1795
@yashveersingh1795 10 ай бұрын
🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩🥰😍
@miaji1963
@miaji1963 21 күн бұрын
Freezing to death
@briandawson3330
@briandawson3330 4 ай бұрын
Mid documentary re planting trees in cities , great sen timent but roots spread damaging buildings , where in a drought does the extra water needed come from ? Look at most housing developments in Scotland and the dominant colour for the exterior walls is - white , reflecting heat, not a natural colour in nature on earth apar t f ROM the Poles or on top of mountains above snow lines😮
@nancyearickson5412
@nancyearickson5412 10 ай бұрын
How much of our climate change has also to do with the degrees in change in our axis due to tidal waves and other causes remember one third of the Earth Waters moved in 2011
@Menoetia
@Menoetia 9 ай бұрын
Very, VERY little. Statistically speaking, absolutely nothing at all. If shifts in axial tilt did have such a dramatic effect on climate, we would have proof of it in paleoclimatology and we just don't.
@rafalbuijs5061
@rafalbuijs5061 9 ай бұрын
Finaly after some minutes of scrolling some normal comment that makes sence
@carltonpiercey9220
@carltonpiercey9220 5 ай бұрын
I'm old. No air conditioner in Virginia summer could kill me. Sustainable development is a damn scam
@carinwiseman4309
@carinwiseman4309 9 ай бұрын
You have to stop farming in monocultures where land is not covered at all times. India, and indeed all of us need to look to those fixing the problems, yhose like the Paani Foundation.
@dennismendez947
@dennismendez947 9 ай бұрын
It's time for underground cities plan ! What is electromagnetic?! , climate cycle not change.
@sithlordhibiscus9936
@sithlordhibiscus9936 9 ай бұрын
Greece: Sorry France had ONE bad year. It’s just the normal two months of the whole nation of greece burning but pls do visit Crete!
@pawshands9706
@pawshands9706 10 ай бұрын
It's a slow burn apocalypse
@nottenvironmental6208
@nottenvironmental6208 8 ай бұрын
No, it's an exponentially accelerating changing climate. Look it up. The new norm is records broken by more each time.
@yousifatobiya7279
@yousifatobiya7279 9 ай бұрын
Abstract : The energy that dominates the earth is very great, some of it is natural, like the heat of the sun and volcanoes, and some of it is human action, by cutting down trees, without replacing them and cultivating in their place... There are five forces that control or dominate the planet... 1- The first theory (horizontal dynamic movement) and its end... The occurrence of storms, rain, floods and snow, at unexpected times and places, is because of the expiration of this theory, which needs to be balanced... 2- The second theory (vertical dynamic movement) and its end... This movement or force controls or dominates the earthquakes, earth cracks, drying up of rivers and lakes, earth openings, mountain collapses, and the emergence of drinking water springs on the ground... It becomes out of control... These phenomena increased due to the end of this theory... The third theory: it is water that rotates the earth... The fourth theory: the Earth's axis of rotation has tilted 2° degrees... The fifth theory: The Earth has a new orbit... These studies had completed and sent on July 26th 2000 YOUSIF A TOBIYA FORCIBLY DISPLACE
@yousifatobiya7279
@yousifatobiya7279 9 ай бұрын
The occurrence of stoms,rains,ice, and floods at times and in unexpected places,confirms my theory the end of the (dynamic horizontal movement )which needs to balance and it sill under control to balance... But about earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, sinkholes, tsunami, dry lakes and rivers, flow of water from the mountains and hills,explodeand of eyes water from the ground, formation of new mountains or islands, collaps of mountains ,and cracks on ground,& ,& ,&,they are out of control or balance... Note :The earth will become like Venus... Yousif A Tobiya Forcibly displaced
@jarrodyuki7081
@jarrodyuki7081 9 ай бұрын
positve punishtment and illegla cross sections.
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