Laron
QHHT & Past Life Regression
Staff member
Administrator
Creator of transients.info & The Roundtable
Starting sometime back in 2013 I remember the webbot IDIRs mentioning people migrating north in mass numbers, in the US, but it wasn't clear what the reason was behind that.
I think Hurricane Irma may be that outstanding prediction back then, and that this forecast was simply caught up in the time dilution / manipulation that was going on, which I spoke about in detail in an article in 2014: The Stretching of Time and the Imminent Shift.
Below is the main story on The Daily Mail.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4863996/Florida-Georgia-brace-arrival-Hurricane-Irma.html
Here is the current path of Hurricane Irma as of today:
There are five nuclear reactors at three locations in Florida: Progress Energy's Crystal River plant, 80 miles north of Tampa; Florida Power & Light's St. Lucie 1 and St. Lucie 2 in Jensen Beach, 10 miles southeast of Ft. Pierce, and FPL's Turkey Point 3 and Turkey Point 4, just 25 miles south of Miami.
Two of them are currently considering a shut down. It can take more than 24 hours to shut down a nuclear power plant. There may be additional reasons for people to flee after the storm arrives, based on damage done to the power plants.
I think Hurricane Irma may be that outstanding prediction back then, and that this forecast was simply caught up in the time dilution / manipulation that was going on, which I spoke about in detail in an article in 2014: The Stretching of Time and the Imminent Shift.
Below is the main story on The Daily Mail.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4863996/Florida-Georgia-brace-arrival-Hurricane-Irma.html
Here is the current path of Hurricane Irma as of today:
There are five nuclear reactors at three locations in Florida: Progress Energy's Crystal River plant, 80 miles north of Tampa; Florida Power & Light's St. Lucie 1 and St. Lucie 2 in Jensen Beach, 10 miles southeast of Ft. Pierce, and FPL's Turkey Point 3 and Turkey Point 4, just 25 miles south of Miami.
Two of them are currently considering a shut down. It can take more than 24 hours to shut down a nuclear power plant. There may be additional reasons for people to flee after the storm arrives, based on damage done to the power plants.
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