Remember
those fires in California? You know, the ones that mysteriously
appeared seemingly from nowhere, and burned down buildings and cars and
rather strangely left nearby trees and shrubs ...well... "unburned"? And
that left property values in the tank and easy to pick up for pennies
on the dollar? And which, incidentally, there are now reports of people
suffering strange rashes, headaches, breathing problems and so on? And,
oh yea, that the military was called in to deal with?
Yes, those fires...
Well, oddly enough, this week my inbox
contained a few emails of pictures that people that had sent me,
pictures taken by Greeks of those recent fires in and around Athens and a
few nearby resort communities. And, oddly enough, these emails
contained pictures, and oddly enough, the people sending them could not
find any links for them. What the pictures showed, however, was the
strange "California" pattern all over again: completely melted cars,
while nearby trees and shrubs are...well... "unburned". So needless to
say, I went "looking" and found a few suggestive pictures like these
contained in an article at CNN:
Granted this is not much, and the cars
depicted are hardly puddles of molten metal. But there is that very odd
picture - the third major picture insert - taken near the town of Mati,
which shows some burned out houses, a few burned trees, but oddly
enough, some trees near the burned out houses that were not burned at
all, at least, to my eye.
Well, needless to say, I find that
"interesting," especially since (here comes a bit of high octane
speculation) Greece as we know was hit by Mad Madam Merkel's - and
Goldman-Sachs' - "austerity" plan, with Greece's assets in the
crosshairs; "Parthenon, for sale, cheap." Of course, countries like
France, Spain and so on have offered assistance and sent firefighters
and so on, and many of the pictures of these fires were taken by drones
(gee, I wonder who might be involved with that?), and as in the case of the California fires, the Greek military was called out to assist.
But still, nothing much to go on. But Mr.
B.H. found one photo on Facebook that resembles the other photos people
sent me (the ones without links):
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=2258157387532148&set=a.219302648084309.67599.100000137271778&type=3&theater
Curiously, the cars seem to have been the
victims of some high heat, as well as a nearby telephone pole, but the
trees and nearby buildings are oddly and seemingly unscathed. The
problem here, of course, is there is no public provenance for the
picture... we don't know if this is Athens or its environs or not. But I
can say, that the picture looks very much like the others sent to me.
And of course, our Facebook poster has already jumped to the conclusion
that the culprit was a directed energy weapon of some sort. Well, too
early for that conclusion, and based only on one picture. After all, one
can find plenty of pictures from the fire where shrubbery and trees were burned. Nothing to see here. Move along...
... maybe, because there have been reports
throughout the lamestream media that the Greek government is suspecting
arson. For example:
It seems Public Order Minister Nikos Toskas thinks the fire may have been arson:
Public Order Minister Nikos
Toskas told reporters that satellite image analysis and ground
inspections suggest the fire that broke out in multiple places over a
short period of time Monday likely resulted from arson.
"We have serious indications and
significant findings of criminal activity concerning arson," Toskas
said. "We are troubled by many factors, and there have been physical findings that are the subject of an investigation."
The Hellenic Fire Service's special arson
section, which probes all major fires, is investigating to determine the
exact cause of the blaze. The mayor of the area where it broke out
previously said it might have been sparks from a severed electricity
pylon cable.(Emphasis added)
So we have
1) "physical findings" that are "the subject of an investigation," the nature of which physical findings are unspecified;
2) except the Hellenic Fire Service is
indicating that "it might have been sparks from a severed electricity
pylon cable", which, in the context of Minister Toskas' remarks, would
seem to imply that someone had deliberately severed the
electrical pylon cable, a difficult and dangerous thing, and one
requiring some expertise; but wait, one severed cable will not explain
3) the fact that Minister Toskas indicated that the fires broke out in several places more or less simultaneously.
So, were several electrical cables
severed? Not likely, but if so, that would raise the stakes
considerably, since that would imply teams of experts to sever
said cables. Perhaps the fires were simply started the "old fashioned
way" by more or less simultaneous ignition, but that would again,
require a few teams or individuals to do so, and that again, implies
some sort of "arson conspiracy". And as in any crime, the real questions
are not simply who has the means and opportunity to do so, but the
motivation. The means here is the important question, for if
the pictures that people sent me should showing anomalous
"California-fires-style" damage, then that narrows the means down to
unconventional and "exotic" forms of arson, and implicates some very big
players. And of course, the motivation for doing so remains
conveniently unexplained in the Greek government's public explanations
so far as I can tell.
So for the moment, I'm not entirely
convinced of the "directed energy weapons" hypothesis, even though,
privately, I've received a number of suggestive photos which have no
provenance. There are some suggestive photos in the lamestream corporate
media, but they're only that. Nor am I willing to discount the
hypothesis entirely either. There is something suspicious about those fires in Greece, as the Greek government has admitted.
Time will tell... it always does when "narratives" are involved, and begin to unravel.
See you on the flip side...
This is happening all across the world.
Fires created by Direct Energy Weapons #DEW