but who's ready for that, riiiiite? .. [addie the 3rd of may]: It's immediately wasted, no sooner than given ... cause unprepared for. My urgent call to take tractors off tarmacs leading to protest congests and have the dig water catchments all over swale ditches ... i heard a funny way to say that in german the other day but the glyphosate i have given refuge is makin strategic moves to get me early alzheimer / dementia whenever i just do not get the mobilize : eliminate ingredients and timing right ... and none of the greats seem to wanna take pride in fixin me and repairing my optimism to the point i'd once again try to show how simple and heavenly all heavenly simple solutions are .. and as immediately at as to hand besides. Jesus had the simplest job in the world but even his socalled supporters and 'dependents' can't seem to manage their time better than hold up an idol stuffed with impossible miracles wearing his skin or likeness by proxy or relayed across as well as routed thru .. sunk n synced into labyrinthine detours with all their sublimies to tarry at along the way
14/04 ---- 9WorlBrid --- k126 ----- 11/10: {lot}
Hawaii's Massive Flood Crisis: Video Captures Moment Giant Wave Swallows Billions in Damages!
DeCryptify
6.72K subscribers
Apr 13, 2026 #Hawaii #Kilauea #VolcanoEruption
Hawaii isn’t facing just one disaster — it’s dealing with multiple crises at the same time. Record-breaking rainfall, widespread flooding, and renewed volcanic activity have created a situation where recovery hasn’t even begun before the next threat arrives.
In this video, we break down how a stalled weather system known as a Kona Low triggered historic rainfall across the islands, overwhelming infrastructure and saturating the ground completely. You’ll learn how flooding isolated entire communities, damaged airports, and disrupted supply chains across one of the most geographically remote states in the U.S.
We also examine the eruption of KÄ«lauea — one of the world’s most active volcanoes — and how lava fountains, ash plumes, and hazardous air conditions added a second layer of danger while the islands were still dealing with flood damage. Scientists monitoring activity at USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory warn that the system is already showing signs of reactivation, raising concerns about continued eruptions.
Beyond the physical damage, this situation highlights how overlapping disasters strain emergency response systems, infrastructure, and recovery efforts — especially in isolated regions where resources and supply routes are limited. It also raises important questions about how communities prepare for and respond to multiple extreme events occurring at once.
Understanding this matters because it shows how natural systems can interact in ways that amplify risk — turning separate hazards into a compounding crisis that is far more difficult to manage.
#Hawaii #Kilauea #VolcanoEruption #Flooding #ExtremeWeather #NaturalDisaster #ClimateImpact #USGS #WeatherNews #DisasterResponse
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