Climate Change Hoax – 2023 Hawaii Wildfires (Directed-Energy Warfare)

CLIMATE CHANGE HOAX (2023 HAWAII WILDFIRES)

2023

CLIMATE CHANGE HOAX


(Global Deep State Ecocide)

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

The Official Story

CLIMATE CHANGE HOAX
(Directed-Energy Warfare)


 

In common usage, climate change describes global warming—the ongoing increase in global average temperature—and its effects on Earth’s climate system. Climate change in a broader sense also includes previous long-term changes to Earth’s climate. The current rise in global average temperature is more rapid than previous changes, and is primarily caused by humans burning fossil fuels. Fossil fuel use, deforestation, and some agricultural and industrial practices increase greenhouse gases, notably carbon dioxide and methane. Greenhouse gases absorb some of the heat that the Earth radiates after it warms from sunlight. Larger amounts of these gases trap more heat in Earth’s lower atmosphere, causing global warming.

Climate change is causing a range of increasing impacts on the environment. Deserts are expanding, while heat waves and wildfires are becoming more common. Amplified warming in the Arctic has contributed to melting permafrost, glacial retreat and sea ice loss. Higher temperatures are also causing more intense storms, droughts, and other weather extremes. Rapid environmental change in mountains, coral reefs, and the Arctic is forcing many species to relocate or become extinct. Even if efforts to minimise future warming are successful, some effects will continue for centuries. These include ocean heating, ocean acidification and sea level rise.

Climate change threatens people with increased flooding, extreme heat, increased food and water scarcity, more disease, and economic loss. Human migration and conflict can also be a result. The World Health Organization (WHO) calls climate change the greatest threat to global health in the 21st century. Societies and ecosystems will experience more severe risks without action to limit warming. Adapting to climate change through efforts like flood control measures or drought-resistant crops partially reduces climate change risks, although some limits to adaptation have already been reached. Poorer communities are responsible for a small share of global emissions, yet have the least ability to adapt and are most vulnerable to climate change.

Many climate change impacts are already felt at the current 1.2 °C (2.2 °F) level of warming. Additional warming will increase these impacts and can trigger tipping points, such as the melting of the Greenland ice sheet. Under the 2015 Paris Agreement, nations collectively agreed to keep warming “well under 2 °C”. However, with pledges made under the Agreement, global warming would still reach about 2.7 °C (4.9 °F) by the end of the century. Limiting warming to 1.5 °C will require halving emissions by 2030 and achieving net-zero emissions by 2050.

Reducing emissions requires generating electricity from low-carbon sources rather than burning fossil fuels. This change includes phasing out coal and natural gas fired power plants, vastly increasing use of wind, solar, nuclear and other types of renewable energy, and reducing energy use. Electricity generated from non-carbon-emitting sources will need to replace fossil fuels for powering transportation, heating buildings, and operating industrial facilities. Carbon can also be removed from the atmosphere, for instance by increasing forest cover and farming with methods that capture carbon in soil.

 

DIRECTED-ENERGY WEAPONRY (DEW)


 

A directed-energy weapon (DEW) is a ranged weapon that damages its target with highly focused energy without a solid projectile, including lasers, microwaves, particle beams, and sound beams. Potential applications of this technology include weapons that target personnel, missiles, vehicles, and optical devices. In the United States, the Pentagon, DARPA, the Air Force Research Laboratory, United States Army Armament Research Development and Engineering Center, and the Naval Research Laboratory are researching directed-energy weapons to counter ballistic missiles, hypersonic cruise missiles, and hypersonic glide vehicles. These systems of missile defense are expected to come online no sooner than the mid to late-2020s.

China, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, Russia, India, and Pakistan are also developing military-grade directed-energy weapons, while Iran and Turkey claim to have them in active service. The first use of directed-energy weapons in combat between military forces was claimed to have occurred in Libya in August 2019 by Turkey, which claimed to use the ALKA directed-energy weapon. After decades of research and development, most directed-energy weapons are still at the experimental stage and it remains to be seen if or when they will be deployed as practical, high-performance military weapons.

Operational advantages

Directed energy weapons could have several main advantages over conventional weaponry:

  • Directed-energy weapons can be used discreetly; radiation does not generate sound and is invisible if outside the visible spectrum.
  • Light is, for practical purposes, unaffected by gravity, windage and Coriolis force, giving it an almost perfectly flat trajectory. This makes aim much more precise and extends the range to line-of-sight, limited only by beam diffraction and spread (which dilute the power and weaken the effect), and absorption or scattering by intervening atmospheric contents.
  • Lasers travel at light-speed and have long range, making them suitable for use in space warfare.
  • Laser weapons potentially eliminate many logistical problems in terms of ammunition supply, as long as there is enough energy to power them.
  • Depending on several operational factors, directed-energy weapons may be cheaper to operate than conventional weapons in certain contexts.

Source: Wikipedia

Drone footage of devastation in Maui after deadly fire

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

SECTION INDEX

CLIMATE CHANGE HOAX

(Wildfires & Directed-Energy Warfare)


TO END “CLIMATE CHANGE”

> DISMANTLE THE GLOBAL DEW NETWORK <

(ON THE SURFACE, IN THE AIR & IN ORBIT)

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

THE TRUTH (GLOBALLY)

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

TREASON

“Whoever, owing allegiance to the United States, levies war against them or adheres to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort within the United States or elsewhere, is guilty of treason.”
(Official US definition)

Any US official has sworn to uphold and defend, never to subvert, the Constitution of the United States, and this is defining the US, itself, as being the continued functioning of the US Constitution. Treason is thus the supremely illegal act under US law, the act that violates any US official’s oath of office. (When treason is perpetrated by someone who is not a US official, it is still a severe crime, but less severe than it is for any US official.) The phrase “levies war against them” means war against the functioning of the Constitution that is their supreme law. “Or” means alternatively, and “adheres to their enemies” means is a follower of any person or other entity that seeks to impose a different constitution. “Enemies” is not defined — it need not be a foreign opponent; it may be a domestic opponent of the US Constitution. Thus, an American can be an enemy of the United States of America. In fact, the official definition explicitly refers ONLY to an entity “owing allegiance to the United States.” (Obviously, that especially refers to any US official.) This is how a “traitor” is understood, in US law. Obviously, the worst traitor would be one who committed the treasonous act(s) while a US official.

THE BLACK SUN

2023 Hawaii Wildfires – 10.1 – Camp Fire (2018) Paradise Aftermath

2018 CAMP FIRE — CALIFORNIA

2018

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

2018 CAMP FIRE


Camp Fire (2018)

Note: Only houses destroyed, trees untouched by “fire”.

The Official Story

CAMP FIRE (2018)
(Butte County, California)


 

The Camp Fire was the deadliest and most destructive wildfire in California’s history, and the most expensive natural disaster in the world in 2018 in terms of insured losses.

Named after Camp Creek Road, its place of origin, the fire started on Thursday, November 8, 2018, in Northern California’s Butte County. Ignited by a faulty electric transmission line, the fire originated above several communities and an east wind drove the fire downhill through developed areas. After exhibiting extreme fire spread, fireline intensity, and spotting behaviors through the rural community of Concow, an urban firestorm formed in the foothill town of Paradise. Drought was a factor: Paradise, which typically sees five inches of autumn rain by November 12, had only received one-seventh of an inch by that date in 2018. With the arrival of the first winter rainstorm of the season, the fire reached 100 percent containment after seventeen days on November 25.

The Camp Fire caused 85 civilian fatalities, with one person still missing as of August 2, 2019, and injured 12 civilians and five firefighters. It covered an area of 153,336 acres (620.5 km2; 239.6 sq mi), and destroyed more than 18,000 structures, with most of the destruction occurring within the first four hours. The towns of Paradise and Concow were almost completely destroyed, each losing about 95% of their structures. The towns of Magalia and Butte Creek Canyon were also largely destroyed. By January 2019, the total damage was estimated at $16.5 billion; one-quarter of the damage, $4 billion, was not insured. The Camp Fire also cost over $150 million in fire suppression costs, bringing the total cost of the fire to $16.65 billion.

The same month, Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E), the utility company responsible for the faulty power line, filed for bankruptcy, citing expected wildfire liabilities of $30 billion. On December 6, 2019, the utility made a settlement offer of $13.5 billion for the wildfire victims; the offer covered several devastating fires caused by the utility, including the Camp Fire. On June 16, 2020, the utility pleaded guilty to 84 counts of involuntary manslaughter.

The Camp Fire was the deadliest wildfire in the United States since the Cloquet fire in 1918 until it was surpassed by the Lāhainā fire’s 115 fatalities in 2023. It is also the fourteenth-deadliest wildfire in the world and the seventh-deadliest U.S. wildfire overall.

Impact

Fatalities and injuries

There were a large number of fatalities in the first several hours of the fire, but they were not found quickly. Discovery of these early fatalities took place over the course of the following two weeks. In the first week, nearly ten victims per day were found. In the second week, that lowered to several victims per day. Victims were still being found in the third week and beyond.

  • November 10, fourteen bodies were discovered, bringing casualties to 23.
  • November 11, casualties increased to 29 after another six bodies discovered.
  • November 13, casualties increased to 48, making it the single-deadliest wildfire in California history, surpassing the 1933 Griffith Park Fire, which killed 29 people.
  • November 14, casualties increased from 48 to 56.
  • November 16, casualties increased from 63 to 71.
  • November 17, An additional five deaths brought the total to 76. President Donald Trump, Governor Jerry Brown, Governor-elect Gavin Newsom, and Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) director Brock Long toured the Paradise area, and they held a short conference in the afternoon.
  • November 18, casualties raised to 77.
  • November 19, casualties raised to 79.
  • November 20, casualties raised to 81.
  • November 21, casualties raised to 83.
  • November 23, casualties raised to 87.
  • December 3, casualties revised to 85 after human remains in three separate bags were identified to be the same victim.

Identification of the deceased was hampered by the fragmentary condition of many bodies. Ten of 18 dentists in Paradise lost their offices and patient records in the fire. Two of the dead were identified from the serial numbers on artificial joints, 15 from dental records, five from fingerprints and 50 from DNA. Funerals and benefits were delayed by the identification difficulties. As of 2022, a few victims are still unidentified and are undergoing testing and identification by the DNA Doe Project.

Traffic jams on the few evacuation routes led to cars being abandoned while people evacuated on foot, but did not contribute to any deaths. At least seven deaths occurred when the fire overtook people who were trapped in their vehicles, most on Edgewood Road, as well as one person outside a vehicle and two on ATVs. Some residents who were unable to evacuate survived by sheltering in place at the American gas station and the Nearly New antique store across the street. Others gathered in the nearby parking lot shared by a KMart and a Save Mart. The survival of some of those who sheltered in place has raised the question of whether in some scenarios last-minute mass evacuations provide the best outcomes, with some pointing to Australia’s policy discouraging them, instituted following the 1983 Ash Wednesday brushfires in which many of the 75 dead were killed while trying to evacuate. However, 70 of the 84 fatalities listed in the Butte County District Attorney’s Camp Fire investigation summary occurred inside or immediately outside the victim’s residences, indicating that failure to evacuate contributed to many more deaths (70) than occurred while evacuating (8).

Many seniors were evacuated by passersby and neighbors, with at least one account of dozens of evacuees jumping into a reservoir to escape the flames.

Butte County Sheriff’s Department initially reported a partial death count for each community (total 67): 50 in Paradise, 7 in Concow, 9 in Magalia, and 1 in Chico.

Source: Wikipedia

2018 Camp Fire Statistics

Dates(s):November 8–25, 2018
Burned Area:153,336 acres, 240 square miles,
621 square kilometres, 62,053 hectares
Cost:$16.65 billion (2018 USD)
(Costliest worldwide)
Cause:Electrical transmission fire from a PG&E power line
Buildings Destroyed:18,804
Deaths:85
Non-fatal Injuries:17
Missing People:1
Evacuated:52,000 people

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

AWAKEN HUMANITY

SUBLIMINAL
adjective

(of a stimulus or mental process) below the threshold of sensation or consciousness; perceived by or affecting someone’s mind without their being aware of it.

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

HOLOCAUST TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

2023 Hawaii Wildfires – 10.2 – Camp Fire (2018) Paradise Community Village Sign

2018 CAMP FIRE — CALIFORNIA

2018

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

2018 CAMP FIRE


Camp Fire (2018)

The Official Story

CAMP FIRE (2018)
(Butte County, California)


 

The Camp Fire was the deadliest and most destructive wildfire in California’s history, and the most expensive natural disaster in the world in 2018 in terms of insured losses.

Named after Camp Creek Road, its place of origin, the fire started on Thursday, November 8, 2018, in Northern California’s Butte County. Ignited by a faulty electric transmission line, the fire originated above several communities and an east wind drove the fire downhill through developed areas. After exhibiting extreme fire spread, fireline intensity, and spotting behaviors through the rural community of Concow, an urban firestorm formed in the foothill town of Paradise. Drought was a factor: Paradise, which typically sees five inches of autumn rain by November 12, had only received one-seventh of an inch by that date in 2018. With the arrival of the first winter rainstorm of the season, the fire reached 100 percent containment after seventeen days on November 25.

The Camp Fire caused 85 civilian fatalities, with one person still missing as of August 2, 2019, and injured 12 civilians and five firefighters. It covered an area of 153,336 acres (620.5 km2; 239.6 sq mi), and destroyed more than 18,000 structures, with most of the destruction occurring within the first four hours. The towns of Paradise and Concow were almost completely destroyed, each losing about 95% of their structures. The towns of Magalia and Butte Creek Canyon were also largely destroyed. By January 2019, the total damage was estimated at $16.5 billion; one-quarter of the damage, $4 billion, was not insured. The Camp Fire also cost over $150 million in fire suppression costs, bringing the total cost of the fire to $16.65 billion.

The same month, Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E), the utility company responsible for the faulty power line, filed for bankruptcy, citing expected wildfire liabilities of $30 billion. On December 6, 2019, the utility made a settlement offer of $13.5 billion for the wildfire victims; the offer covered several devastating fires caused by the utility, including the Camp Fire. On June 16, 2020, the utility pleaded guilty to 84 counts of involuntary manslaughter.

The Camp Fire was the deadliest wildfire in the United States since the Cloquet fire in 1918 until it was surpassed by the Lāhainā fire’s 115 fatalities in 2023. It is also the fourteenth-deadliest wildfire in the world and the seventh-deadliest U.S. wildfire overall.

Structural damage and displacement

The fire forced the evacuation of Paradise, Magalia, Centerville, Concow, Pulga, Butte Creek Canyon, Berry Creek and Yankee Hill and threatened the communities of Butte Valley, Chico, Forest Ranch, Helltown, Inskip, Oroville, and Stirling City.

The community of Concow and the town of Paradise were destroyed within the first six hours of the fire, losing an estimated 95 percent of their buildings. The town of Magalia also suffered substantial damage, and the community of Pulga, California suffered some. Nearly 19,000 buildings were destroyed, most of them homes, along with five public schools in Paradise, a rest home, churches, part of Feather River hospital, a Christmas tree farm, a large shopping center anchored by a Safeway, several fast food chains, such as Black Bear Diner and McDonald’s, and numerous small businesses, as well. The Honey Run Covered Bridge over nearby Butte Creek, the last three- span Pratt-style truss bridge in the United States, was incinerated on November 10.

In May 2019, NPR reported that more than 1,000 families who were displaced by the fire were still looking for housing six months later. Rural northern California had been experiencing a severe housing shortage and growing homelessness crisis, compounded in part due to the fire. Prior to the fire, Chico had a housing vacancy rate of less than 3 percent. The loss of several thousand residences placed additional strain on Butte County’s housing market. Average list prices for homes were reported to have increased by more than 10 percent.

Summary of structural damage reported by Cal Fire:

Estimates of Damaged and Destroyed Structures

Structure TypeDamagedDestroyedTotal by Type
Single Family
Residential
~465~9,87910,344
Multiple Family
Residential*
~22~276298
Mobile home
Residential*
~6~3,6953,701
Mixed Commercial
/Residential*
~0~1111
Commercial~105~514619
Other~77~4,2864,363
Total67518,66119,336

Note: Cal Fire damage updates do not contain categories tagged with *,
however, a count was given November 17; also, ‘~’ denotes an estimate.

Source: Wikipedia

2018 Camp Fire Statistics

Dates(s):November 8–25, 2018
Burned Area:153,336 acres, 240 square miles,
621 square kilometres, 62,053 hectares
Cost:$16.65 billion (2018 USD)
(Costliest worldwide)
Cause:Electrical transmission fire from a PG&E power line
Buildings Destroyed:18,804
Deaths:85
Non-fatal Injuries:17
Missing People:1
Evacuated:52,000 people

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

AWAKEN HUMANITY

SUBLIMINAL
adjective

(of a stimulus or mental process) below the threshold of sensation or consciousness; perceived by or affecting someone’s mind without their being aware of it.

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

HOLOCAUST TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

2023 Hawaii Wildfires – 10.3 – Camp Fire (2018) Overhead View (Paradise, California)

2018 CAMP FIRE — CALIFORNIA

2018

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

2018 CAMP FIRE


Camp Fire (2018)

Note: Only houses destroyed, trees surrounding untouched by “fire”.

The Official Story

CAMP FIRE (2018)
(Butte County, California)


 

The Camp Fire was the deadliest and most destructive wildfire in California’s history, and the most expensive natural disaster in the world in 2018 in terms of insured losses.

Named after Camp Creek Road, its place of origin, the fire started on Thursday, November 8, 2018, in Northern California’s Butte County. Ignited by a faulty electric transmission line, the fire originated above several communities and an east wind drove the fire downhill through developed areas. After exhibiting extreme fire spread, fireline intensity, and spotting behaviors through the rural community of Concow, an urban firestorm formed in the foothill town of Paradise. Drought was a factor: Paradise, which typically sees five inches of autumn rain by November 12, had only received one-seventh of an inch by that date in 2018. With the arrival of the first winter rainstorm of the season, the fire reached 100 percent containment after seventeen days on November 25.

The Camp Fire caused 85 civilian fatalities, with one person still missing as of August 2, 2019, and injured 12 civilians and five firefighters. It covered an area of 153,336 acres (620.5 km2; 239.6 sq mi), and destroyed more than 18,000 structures, with most of the destruction occurring within the first four hours. The towns of Paradise and Concow were almost completely destroyed, each losing about 95% of their structures. The towns of Magalia and Butte Creek Canyon were also largely destroyed. By January 2019, the total damage was estimated at $16.5 billion; one-quarter of the damage, $4 billion, was not insured. The Camp Fire also cost over $150 million in fire suppression costs, bringing the total cost of the fire to $16.65 billion.

The same month, Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E), the utility company responsible for the faulty power line, filed for bankruptcy, citing expected wildfire liabilities of $30 billion. On December 6, 2019, the utility made a settlement offer of $13.5 billion for the wildfire victims; the offer covered several devastating fires caused by the utility, including the Camp Fire. On June 16, 2020, the utility pleaded guilty to 84 counts of involuntary manslaughter.

The Camp Fire was the deadliest wildfire in the United States since the Cloquet fire in 1918 until it was surpassed by the Lāhainā fire’s 115 fatalities in 2023. It is also the fourteenth-deadliest wildfire in the world and the seventh-deadliest U.S. wildfire overall.

Structural damage and displacement

The fire forced the evacuation of Paradise, Magalia, Centerville, Concow, Pulga, Butte Creek Canyon, Berry Creek and Yankee Hill and threatened the communities of Butte Valley, Chico, Forest Ranch, Helltown, Inskip, Oroville, and Stirling City.

The community of Concow and the town of Paradise were destroyed within the first six hours of the fire, losing an estimated 95 percent of their buildings. The town of Magalia also suffered substantial damage, and the community of Pulga, California suffered some. Nearly 19,000 buildings were destroyed, most of them homes, along with five public schools in Paradise, a rest home, churches, part of Feather River hospital, a Christmas tree farm, a large shopping center anchored by a Safeway, several fast food chains, such as Black Bear Diner and McDonald’s, and numerous small businesses, as well. The Honey Run Covered Bridge over nearby Butte Creek, the last three- span Pratt-style truss bridge in the United States, was incinerated on November 10.

In May 2019, NPR reported that more than 1,000 families who were displaced by the fire were still looking for housing six months later. Rural northern California had been experiencing a severe housing shortage and growing homelessness crisis, compounded in part due to the fire. Prior to the fire, Chico had a housing vacancy rate of less than 3 percent. The loss of several thousand residences placed additional strain on Butte County’s housing market. Average list prices for homes were reported to have increased by more than 10 percent.

Summary of structural damage reported by Cal Fire:

Estimates of Damaged and Destroyed Structures

Structure TypeDamagedDestroyedTotal by Type
Single Family
Residential
~465~9,87910,344
Multiple Family
Residential*
~22~276298
Mobile home
Residential*
~6~3,6953,701
Mixed Commercial
/Residential*
~0~1111
Commercial~105~514619
Other~77~4,2864,363
Total67518,66119,336

Note: Cal Fire damage updates do not contain categories tagged with *,
however, a count was given November 17; also, ‘~’ denotes an estimate.

Source: Wikipedia

2018 Camp Fire Statistics

Dates(s):November 8–25, 2018
Burned Area:153,336 acres, 240 square miles,
621 square kilometres, 62,053 hectares
Cost:$16.65 billion (2018 USD)
(Costliest worldwide)
Cause:Electrical transmission fire from a PG&E power line
Buildings Destroyed:18,804
Deaths:85
Non-fatal Injuries:17
Missing People:1
Evacuated:52,000 people

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

AWAKEN HUMANITY

SUBLIMINAL
adjective

(of a stimulus or mental process) below the threshold of sensation or consciousness; perceived by or affecting someone’s mind without their being aware of it.

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

HOLOCAUST TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

2023 Hawaii Wildfires – 10.4 – Camp Fire (2018) Paradise Destruction (November 17th)

2018 CAMP FIRE — CALIFORNIA

2018

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

2018 CAMP FIRE


Camp Fire (2018)

(Original Image)

The Official Story

CAMP FIRE (2018)
(Butte County, California)


 

The Camp Fire was the deadliest and most destructive wildfire in California’s history, and the most expensive natural disaster in the world in 2018 in terms of insured losses.

Named after Camp Creek Road, its place of origin, the fire started on Thursday, November 8, 2018, in Northern California’s Butte County. Ignited by a faulty electric transmission line, the fire originated above several communities and an east wind drove the fire downhill through developed areas. After exhibiting extreme fire spread, fireline intensity, and spotting behaviors through the rural community of Concow, an urban firestorm formed in the foothill town of Paradise. Drought was a factor: Paradise, which typically sees five inches of autumn rain by November 12, had only received one-seventh of an inch by that date in 2018. With the arrival of the first winter rainstorm of the season, the fire reached 100 percent containment after seventeen days on November 25.

The Camp Fire caused 85 civilian fatalities, with one person still missing as of August 2, 2019, and injured 12 civilians and five firefighters. It covered an area of 153,336 acres (620.5 km2; 239.6 sq mi), and destroyed more than 18,000 structures, with most of the destruction occurring within the first four hours. The towns of Paradise and Concow were almost completely destroyed, each losing about 95% of their structures. The towns of Magalia and Butte Creek Canyon were also largely destroyed. By January 2019, the total damage was estimated at $16.5 billion; one-quarter of the damage, $4 billion, was not insured. The Camp Fire also cost over $150 million in fire suppression costs, bringing the total cost of the fire to $16.65 billion.

The same month, Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E), the utility company responsible for the faulty power line, filed for bankruptcy, citing expected wildfire liabilities of $30 billion. On December 6, 2019, the utility made a settlement offer of $13.5 billion for the wildfire victims; the offer covered several devastating fires caused by the utility, including the Camp Fire. On June 16, 2020, the utility pleaded guilty to 84 counts of involuntary manslaughter.

The Camp Fire was the deadliest wildfire in the United States since the Cloquet fire in 1918 until it was surpassed by the Lāhainā fire’s 115 fatalities in 2023. It is also the fourteenth-deadliest wildfire in the world and the seventh-deadliest U.S. wildfire overall.

Structural damage and displacement

The fire forced the evacuation of Paradise, Magalia, Centerville, Concow, Pulga, Butte Creek Canyon, Berry Creek and Yankee Hill and threatened the communities of Butte Valley, Chico, Forest Ranch, Helltown, Inskip, Oroville, and Stirling City.

The community of Concow and the town of Paradise were destroyed within the first six hours of the fire, losing an estimated 95 percent of their buildings. The town of Magalia also suffered substantial damage, and the community of Pulga, California suffered some. Nearly 19,000 buildings were destroyed, most of them homes, along with five public schools in Paradise, a rest home, churches, part of Feather River hospital, a Christmas tree farm, a large shopping center anchored by a Safeway, several fast food chains, such as Black Bear Diner and McDonald’s, and numerous small businesses, as well. The Honey Run Covered Bridge over nearby Butte Creek, the last three- span Pratt-style truss bridge in the United States, was incinerated on November 10.

In May 2019, NPR reported that more than 1,000 families who were displaced by the fire were still looking for housing six months later. Rural northern California had been experiencing a severe housing shortage and growing homelessness crisis, compounded in part due to the fire. Prior to the fire, Chico had a housing vacancy rate of less than 3 percent. The loss of several thousand residences placed additional strain on Butte County’s housing market. Average list prices for homes were reported to have increased by more than 10 percent.

Summary of structural damage reported by Cal Fire:

Estimates of Damaged and Destroyed Structures

Structure TypeDamagedDestroyedTotal by Type
Single Family
Residential
~465~9,87910,344
Multiple Family
Residential*
~22~276298
Mobile home
Residential*
~6~3,6953,701
Mixed Commercial
/Residential*
~0~1111
Commercial~105~514619
Other~77~4,2864,363
Total67518,66119,336

Note: Cal Fire damage updates do not contain categories tagged with *,
however, a count was given November 17; also, ‘~’ denotes an estimate.

Source: Wikipedia

2018 Camp Fire Statistics

Dates(s):November 8–25, 2018
Burned Area:153,336 acres, 240 square miles,
621 square kilometres, 62,053 hectares
Cost:$16.65 billion (2018 USD)
(Costliest worldwide)
Cause:Electrical transmission fire from a PG&E power line
Buildings Destroyed:18,804
Deaths:85
Non-fatal Injuries:17
Missing People:1
Evacuated:52,000 people

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

AWAKEN HUMANITY

SUBLIMINAL
adjective

(of a stimulus or mental process) below the threshold of sensation or consciousness; perceived by or affecting someone’s mind without their being aware of it.

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

HOLOCAUST TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

2023 Hawaii Wildfires – 10.5 – Camp Fire (2018) Satellite View (November 8th)

2018 CAMP FIRE — CALIFORNIA

2018

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

2018 CAMP FIRE


Camp Fire (2018)

(Original Image)

The Official Story

CAMP FIRE (2018)
(Butte County, California)


 

The Camp Fire was the deadliest and most destructive wildfire in California’s history, and the most expensive natural disaster in the world in 2018 in terms of insured losses.

Named after Camp Creek Road, its place of origin, the fire started on Thursday, November 8, 2018, in Northern California’s Butte County. Ignited by a faulty electric transmission line, the fire originated above several communities and an east wind drove the fire downhill through developed areas. After exhibiting extreme fire spread, fireline intensity, and spotting behaviors through the rural community of Concow, an urban firestorm formed in the foothill town of Paradise. Drought was a factor: Paradise, which typically sees five inches of autumn rain by November 12, had only received one-seventh of an inch by that date in 2018. With the arrival of the first winter rainstorm of the season, the fire reached 100 percent containment after seventeen days on November 25.

The Camp Fire caused 85 civilian fatalities, with one person still missing as of August 2, 2019, and injured 12 civilians and five firefighters. It covered an area of 153,336 acres (620.5 km2; 239.6 sq mi), and destroyed more than 18,000 structures, with most of the destruction occurring within the first four hours. The towns of Paradise and Concow were almost completely destroyed, each losing about 95% of their structures. The towns of Magalia and Butte Creek Canyon were also largely destroyed. By January 2019, the total damage was estimated at $16.5 billion; one-quarter of the damage, $4 billion, was not insured. The Camp Fire also cost over $150 million in fire suppression costs, bringing the total cost of the fire to $16.65 billion.

The same month, Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E), the utility company responsible for the faulty power line, filed for bankruptcy, citing expected wildfire liabilities of $30 billion. On December 6, 2019, the utility made a settlement offer of $13.5 billion for the wildfire victims; the offer covered several devastating fires caused by the utility, including the Camp Fire. On June 16, 2020, the utility pleaded guilty to 84 counts of involuntary manslaughter.

The Camp Fire was the deadliest wildfire in the United States since the Cloquet fire in 1918 until it was surpassed by the Lāhainā fire’s 115 fatalities in 2023. It is also the fourteenth-deadliest wildfire in the world and the seventh-deadliest U.S. wildfire overall.

Timeline

Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) notified customers for two days before November 8 that it might shut down power due to a forecast of high winds and low humidity. Ultimately, PG&E de-energized portions of Paradise on November 7, but not on November 8; however, even de-energizing Paradise would not have prevented the fire unless PG&E chose to perform the manually intensive task of shutting down their 115 kV transmission lines located in and near Pulga, California. The National Weather Service had issued a red flag warning for most of Northern California’s interior, as well as Southern California, through the morning of November 9.

Early November 8 the northeasterly “Jarbo Winds” formed; a katabatic wind off the Great Basin that picked up speed as it funneled through the Feather Canyon.

On Thursday, November 8, 2018, around 6:15 a.m. there was a problem on a PG&E power transmission line above Poe Dam near Pulga, California in Butte County. A fire under power transmission lines near Poe Dam was reported to Cal Fire by a PG&E Rock Creek Powerhouse worker at 6:33 a.m. PST. The fire was first reported to the Rock Creek Powerhouse by a PG&E field crew. The location is accessed by Camp Creek Road above Poe Dam and the Feather River railroad tracks. Soon after this report, a size-up fire officer was dispatched. Within minutes, a few other people, most of them other PG&E workers, called in about the fire.

An electrical machinist took two photos of the fire at 6:44 a.m., when it had grown to 10 acres (4.0 ha), and four minutes later two other employees sent in 21 photos and three videos. That afternoon airborne observers noted that an insulator had separated from the tower. PG&E later reported that power lines were down.

Arriving ten minutes later, Captain Matt McKenzie, the first unit on scene, observed rapid fire growth and extreme fire behavior. Possibly saving many, he radioed in a request for resources and evacuations with a note, “this has got potential for a major incident,” and that he was “still working on [finding a way to] access [the fire].” Access to the fire was by a narrow mountain road, which the fire engines were too large to navigate. Air resources had to wait until 30 minutes after sunrise, i.e., 7:14 a.m., but due to winds, aircraft were not on the fire until the afternoon.

The community of Concow did not receive an evacuation warning before the fire arrived less than twenty minutes later around 7 a.m. A call at 7:07 a.m. from someone directly observing the fire reported it in Concow with high winds on it, they said it was “rippin'”. Several additional calls from Concow followed soon thereafter. At 7:23 a.m. the Butte County Sheriff’s Office began evacuating Pulga.

Calls from Concow and Paradise continued for an hour at nearly one call per minute to report a fire — all were told there was no danger, that the fire was north of Concow off Highway 70, that there was no evacuation, and that authorities would contact residents if there were danger.

By 8 a.m. PST, the fire entered the town of Paradise. Several minutes later, “the Butte County Fire Department notified Paradise dispatchers of their orders to evacuate the entire town” which would be in a sequence of zones beginning with the east side of town. At some point that day, emergency shelters were established. Wind speeds approached 50 miles per hour (22 m/s), allowing the fire to grow rapidly. Most residents of Concow and many residents of Paradise were unable to evacuate before the fire arrived. Due to the speed of the fire, firefighters for the most part never attempted to prevent the flames from entering Concow or Paradise, and instead sought to help people get out alive. According to Chief Scott McLean of Cal Fire, “Pretty much the community of Paradise is destroyed, it’s that kind of devastation. The wind that was predicted came and just wiped it out.”

The first hours saw a cascade of failures in the emergency alert system, rooted in its patchwork, opt-in nature, and compounded by a loss of 17 cell towers. Thousands of calls to 9-1-1 inundated two emergency dispatchers on duty. Emergency alerts suffered human error as city officials failed to include four at-risk areas of the city in evacuation orders and technical error as emergency alerts failed to reach 94 percent of residents in some areas and even in areas with the highest success still failed to reach 25 percent of those residents signed up.

The day after the fire started, PG&E employees noted the Big Bend’s line equipment on the ground.

On November 10, an estimate placed the number of structures destroyed at 6,713, which surpassed the Tubbs Fire as the most destructive wildfire in California history, but that has since been updated to 18,793.

By November 15, 5,596 firefighters, 622 engines, 75 water tenders, 101 handcrews, 103 bulldozers, and 24 helicopters from all over the Western United States were deployed to fight the fire.

In the first week, the fire burned tens of thousands of acres per day. Containment on the western half was achieved when the fire reached primary highway and roadway arteries that formed barriers. In the second week the fire expanded by several thousand acres per day along a large uncontained fire line. Each day, containment increased by 5 percent along the uncontained eastern half of the fire that expanded into open timber and high country.

  • November 9, the fire burned 70,000 acres (28,000 ha).
  • November 10, the fire was 100,000 acres (40,000 ha) and 20 percent contained.
  • November 13, the fire was 125,000 acres (51,000 ha) and 30 percent contained.
  • November 14 PG&E employees noted a broken C hook and a disconnected insulation anchor on a nearby tower.
  • November 15, the fire was 140,000 acres and 40 percent contained.
  • November 16, the fire was 146,000 acres and 50 percent contained.
  • November 17, the fire was 149,000 acres and 55 percent contained.
  • November 21, 85 percent containment; with rain falling, fire activity from November 21-on described as minimal.
  • November 22, 90 percent containment.

Heavy rainfall started on November 21, which helped contain the fire. Fire crews pulled back and let the rain put out the remaining fires while teams searched for victims.

On November 25, 2018, Cal Fire announced that the fire had reached 100 percent containment and a total burn area of 154,000 acres (62,000 ha).

Source: Wikipedia

2018 Camp Fire Statistics

Dates(s):November 8–25, 2018
Burned Area:153,336 acres, 240 square miles,
621 square kilometres, 62,053 hectares
Cost:$16.65 billion (2018 USD)
(Costliest worldwide)
Cause:Electrical transmission fire from a PG&E power line
Buildings Destroyed:18,804
Deaths:85
Non-fatal Injuries:17
Missing People:1
Evacuated:52,000 people

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

AWAKEN HUMANITY

SUBLIMINAL
adjective

(of a stimulus or mental process) below the threshold of sensation or consciousness; perceived by or affecting someone’s mind without their being aware of it.

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

HOLOCAUST TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

2023 Hawaii Wildfires – 10.6 – Patti Poppe (CEO, Pacific Gas & Electric, 2021+)

2018 CAMP FIRE — CALIFORNIA

2018

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

2018 CAMP FIRE


Patti Poppe

The Official Story

PATTI POPPE
(CEO of PG&E, 2021+)


 

Patricia Kessler Poppe (born 1969) is an American businesswoman and business executive. Poppe is the first female executive to serve as the CEO of one Fortune 500 and become CEO of another. She was president and CEO of CMS Energy from July 2016 to December 2020. In November 2020, it was announced that she would be leaving CMS Energy and joining PG&E as CEO starting January 4, 2021.

CMS Energy

In December 2010 Consumers Energy announced that it had hired her, and the first of the next year, Poppe joined CMS Energy in 2011, when she became VP of customer operations. From November 15, 2013 to January 2015 she was VP of customer experience. From January 2015 she was senior vice president of distribution operations, engineering and transmission starting in March 2015, before becoming CEO in July 2016, succeeding John Russell. She also became president-elect, with the positive effective on July 1, 2016. She remained president in 2017. In February 2017, she co-wrote a guest column for Michigan Live in support of a new non-discrimination ordinance.

In 2016, Crain’s Detroit Business named her one of 100 Most Influential Women. She is an inductee into the Automotive Hall of Fame.

In November 2020, it was announced that Poppe would be leaving CMS Energy on December 1, 2020 to become CEO of Pacific Gas & Electric on January 4, 2021. In April 2022, it was reported that PG&E CEO Patti Poppe received over $50 million in total direct compensation for her work in 2021.

Source: Wikipedia

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

AWAKEN HUMANITY

SUBLIMINAL
adjective

(of a stimulus or mental process) below the threshold of sensation or consciousness; perceived by or affecting someone’s mind without their being aware of it.

HISTORICAL TRUTH

MIND CONTROL TRUTH

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

2023 Hawaii Wildfires – 10.7 – William D. Johnson (CEO, Pacific Gas & Electric, 2019-2021)

2018 CAMP FIRE — CALIFORNIA

2018

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

2018 CAMP FIRE


William D. Johnson

The Official Story

WILLIAM D. JOHNSON
(President and CEO, PG&E, 2019-2021)


 

William Dean “Bill” Johnson (born January 9, 1954) is an American attorney and businessman. He is a retired president and CEO of the Pacific Gas and Electric Company, as of June 2020.

Career

After graduating, he served as a law clerk on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit. He later worked as a partner in the Raleigh, North Carolina office of Hunton & Williams.

He joined Progress Energy forerunner Carolina Power & Light in 1995. He became president of Progress Energy in 2005, and chairman and CEO in 2007. He remained the chairman, president, and CEO of Progress Energy until the company was bought by Duke Energy, in 2012.

Per the merger agreement between Progress and Duke, he was slated to become CEO of the new combined company. Within an hour after the merger closed, he was removed as CEO by the new board, the majority of whom were legacy Duke Energy board members. The Los Angeles Times estimated that Johnson received $44 million as severance pay.

He next served the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) for six years before announcing plans to retire, in November 2018, amid some controversy. At their February 2019 meeting, the TVA board of directors announced their selection of Jeffrey Lyash to replace Johnson, effective April 2019. Lyash came to TVA from Ontario Power Generation Inc. (OPG).

On April 3, 2019, Johnson was announced as the new president and CEO of PG&E Corporation, replacing interim CEO John Simon, and garnering “more than twice the base salary” of his predecessor, Geisha Williams.

On April 22, 2020, it was publicly announced that Johnson would be retiring from PG&E.

On June 16 2020, Johnson confessed in court to 84 felony counts of involuntary manslaughter, as PG&E’s equipment was the cause of the 2018 Camp Fire in California.

Source: Wikipedia

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

AWAKEN HUMANITY

SUBLIMINAL
adjective

(of a stimulus or mental process) below the threshold of sensation or consciousness; perceived by or affecting someone’s mind without their being aware of it.

HISTORICAL TRUTH

MIND CONTROL TRUTH

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

2023 Hawaii Wildfires – 10.8 – Geisha Williams (CEO, Pacific Gas & Electric, 2017-2019)

2018 CAMP FIRE — CALIFORNIA

2018

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

2018 CAMP FIRE


Geisha Williams

The Official Story

GEISHA WILLIAMS
(CEO, Pacific Gas and Electric Company,
2017-2019)


 

Geisha J. Williams (born Jimenez, c. 1961/1962) is a Cuban American businesswoman. She was the president and CEO of the Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) from March 2017 to January 13, 2019.

Career

After university, Williams worked for Florida Power & Light (FPL), starting as a residential energy auditor. Williams joined Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) in 2007.

In March 2017, William became the first Latina chief executive officer of a Fortune 500 company.

She is a director at the Edison Electric Institute, the Institute of Nuclear Power Operations and the Association of Edison Illuminating Companies and is the board chairwoman for the Center for Energy Workforce Development.

Compensation criticism

In January 2019 Williams left PG&E as the company struggled to deal with legal and financial repercussions associated with a series of devastating California wildfires, which occurred in 2017 and 2018. Despite losing more than $6 billion, Williams received a pay raise of 8.12% in 2018. PG&E filed for bankruptcy immediately after Williams’ departure.

Williams is criticized for a $10mm+ pay packaging including $2.6mm in severance pay when she left PG&E as the company prepared to enter bankruptcy. The Los Angeles Times reported that, “Williams’ compensation encompassed numerous perks, including a car and driver, a $51,000 security system for her home, health club and “executive health” services worth $5,453 and financial services subsidized to the tune of $7,980.”

In April 2019, California Governor Gavin Newsom expressed concern that new PG&E board members would have little knowledge of California, and may lack the expertise to safely run a utility.

Williams was succeeded by John Simon as interim CEO, then, in May 2019, Bill Johnson became CEO, garnering “more than twice the base salary” of Williams.

Source: Wikipedia

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

AWAKEN HUMANITY

SUBLIMINAL
adjective

(of a stimulus or mental process) below the threshold of sensation or consciousness; perceived by or affecting someone’s mind without their being aware of it.

HISTORICAL TRUTH

MIND CONTROL TRUTH

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

2023 Hawaii Wildfires – 10.9 – PG&E Headquarters (Kaiser Center, Oakland, CA)

2018 CAMP FIRE — CALIFORNIA

2018

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

2018 CAMP FIRE


PG&E Headquarters

The Official Story

PACIFIC GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY
(PG&E)


 

The Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) is an American investor-owned utility (IOU). The company is headquartered at 300 Lakeside Drive, in Oakland, California. PG&E provides natural gas and electricity to 5.2 million households in the northern two-thirds of California, from Bakersfield and northern Santa Barbara County, almost to the Oregon and Nevada state lines.

Overseen by the California Public Utilities Commission, PG&E is the leading subsidiary of the holding company PG&E Corporation, which has a market capitalization of $3.242 billion as of January 16, 2019. PG&E was established on October 10, 1905 from the merger and consolidation of predecessor utility companies, and by 1984 was the United States’ “largest electric utility business”. PG&E is one of six regulated, investor-owned electric utilities (IOUs) in California; the other five are PacifiCorp, Southern California Edison, San Diego Gas & Electric, Bear Valley Electric, and Liberty Utilities.

In 2018 and 2019, the company received widespread media attention when investigations by the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire) assigned the company primary blame for two separate devastating wildfires in California. The formal finding of liability led to losses in federal bankruptcy court. On January 14, 2019, PG&E announced its filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in response to its liability for the catastrophic 2017 and 2018 wildfires in Northern California. The company hoped to come out of bankruptcy by June 30, 2020, and was successful on Saturday, June 20, 2020, when U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Dennis Montali issued the final approval of the plan for PG&E to exit bankruptcy.

Disasters (Camp Fire)

In November 2018, PG&E and its parent company were sued in the San Francisco County Superior Court by multiple victims of the Camp Fire – the deadliest and most destructive wildfire in California history. The Camp Fire destroyed more than 18,000 buildings, including 14,000 homes, being particularly devastating to poorer residents. Approximately 90% of the population of the town of Paradise, California as of June 2020 remains dispersed in other parts of the state and the country. The lawsuit accused PG&E of failure to properly maintain its infrastructure and equipment.

The cause of the fire, as indicated by PG&E’s “electric incident report” submitted to the California Public Utilities Commission, was a power failure on a transmission line on November 8, just 15 minutes before the fire was first reported near the same location. Later investigation revealed that a “broken hook may have allowed a piece of electrically charged equipment to swing free and come close enough to the tower to arc, providing the spark that ignited the blaze.”

The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection and state utility regulators are investigating PG&E to determine if they complied with state laws.

As a result, both Pacific Gas and Electric Company and parent company PG&E Corporation together filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on January 29 following the California required 15-day bankruptcy waiting period. PG&E settled criminal proceedings with a fine, pleaded guilty to one felony count of illegally starting a fire, and 84 felony counts of involuntary manslaughter.

Civil lawsuit proceedings continued, and were resolved by settlement. On July 1, 2020, PG&E funded the Fire Victim Trust (FVT) with $5.4 billion in cash and 22.19% of stock in the reorganized PG&E, which covers most of the obligations of its settlement for the wildfire victims. PG&E has two more payments totaling $1.35 billion in cash, scheduled to be paid in January 2021 and January 2022, to complete its obligations to the wildfire victims.

Controversies (Smart meters)

In the middle of 2010, PG&E rolled out new electronic meters that replaced traditional mechanical electric meters. Customers whose meters were replaced with smart meters reported seeing their energy bills increase and accused the company of deliberately inflating their bills and questioned the accuracy of the meters. Subsequently, the California Public Utilities Commission commissioned an investigation. Based on the assumption that “the information received was accurate and complete information and documentation”, the research company reported that of the 613 Smart Meter field tests, 611 meters were successfully tested and 100% passed Average Registration Accuracy. One meter was found to have serious errors and was malfunctioning on arrival, while another was found to have serious event errors upon installation. These meters were, therefore, excluded from testing. There were also complaints that the company did not honor customers’ request not to have their mechanical meters replaced. Although the contractor that installed the meters would honor these requests, PG&E would eventually replace them anyway.

Source: Wikipedia

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

AWAKEN HUMANITY

SUBLIMINAL
adjective

(of a stimulus or mental process) below the threshold of sensation or consciousness; perceived by or affecting someone’s mind without their being aware of it.

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

HOLOCAUST TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

2023 Hawaii Wildfires – 10.10 – California Public Utilities Commission Headquarters (San Francisco, CA)

2018 CAMP FIRE — CALIFORNIA

2018

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

2018 CAMP FIRE


California Public Utilities
Commission Headquarters

(Original Image)

The Official Story

CALIFORNIA PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION (CPUC)


 

The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC or PUC) is a regulatory agency that regulates privately owned public utilities in the state of California, including electric power, telecommunications, natural gas and water companies. In addition, the CPUC regulates common carriers, including household goods movers, limousines, rideshare services (§ Transportation network companies), self-driving cars, and rail crossing safety. The CPUC has headquarters in the Civic Center district of San Francisco, and field offices in Los Angeles and Sacramento.

Energy and climate change

The CPUC regulates investor-owned electric and gas utilities within the state of California, including Pacific Gas & Electric, Southern California Edison, Southern California Gas and San Diego Gas & Electric. Among its stated goals for energy regulation are to establish service standards and safety rules, authorize utility rate changes, oversee markets to inhibit anti-competitive activity, prosecute unlawful utility marketing and billing activities, govern business relationships between utilities and their affiliates, resolve complaints by customers against utilities, implement energy efficiency and conservation programs and programs for the low-income and disabled, oversee the merger and restructure of utility corporations, and enforce the California Environmental Quality Act for utility construction. Leuwam Tesfai has served as Director of Energy Division and Deputy Executive Director of Energy and Climate Policy since 2022.

Source: Wikipedia

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

AWAKEN HUMANITY

SUBLIMINAL
adjective

(of a stimulus or mental process) below the threshold of sensation or consciousness; perceived by or affecting someone’s mind without their being aware of it.

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

HOLOCAUST TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

2023 Hawaii Wildfires – 10.11 – Vicki Christiansen (Chief, U.S. Forest Service, 2018-2021)

2018 CAMP FIRE — CALIFORNIA

2018

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

2018 CAMP FIRE


Vicki Christiansen

The Official Story

VICKI CHRISTIANSEN
(Chief of the United States Forest Service,
2018-2021)


 

Vicki Christiansen is an American government official who served as the 19th chief of the United States Forest Service from October 2018 to July 2021. Prior to assuming the role, Christiansen had spent seven years with the Forest Service and 30 years with the Washington State Department of Natural Resources and Arizona Department of Forestry and Fire Management.

Career

Christiansen worked as a firefighter in Washington for 26 years, eventually serving as the Washington State Forester. She then served as the Arizona State Forester from 2009 to 2010. She joined the United States Forest Service in 2010 as the acting director of legislative affairs before serving as deputy director of fire and aviation management. In 2012, she served as acting regional forester for the Northern Region, which covers 25 million acres across five states and includes 12 national forests.

Christiansen was named the 19th chief of the Forest Service in October 2018. Christiansen assumed the role on an interim basis after Tony Tooke, who had been serving as chief for six months, resigned amid allegations of sexual assault and workplace misconduct. Christiansen later said that, as chief, she would seek to end the culture of harassment within the Forest Service.

In June 2021, Christiansen announced her intention to retire from the Forest Service in August 2021, and she formally stepped down as chief on July 26, 2021. She was succeeded by Randy Moore, the former regional forester for the Pacific Southwest Region.

Source: Wikipedia

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

AWAKEN HUMANITY

SUBLIMINAL
adjective

(of a stimulus or mental process) below the threshold of sensation or consciousness; perceived by or affecting someone’s mind without their being aware of it.

HISTORICAL TRUTH

MIND CONTROL TRUTH

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

2023 Hawaii Wildfires – 10.12 – Tony Tooke (Chief, U.S. Forest Service, 2017-2018)

2018 CAMP FIRE — CALIFORNIA

2018

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

2018 CAMP FIRE


Tony Tooke

The Official Story

TONY TOOKE
(Chief of the United States Forest Service,
2017-2018)


 

Tony Tooke was the Chief of the United States Forest Service for a little over six months, from September 1, 2017, until he announced his retirement on March 7, 2018 due to numerous sexual misconduct allegations over his four decades of employment in numerous positions for the Forest Service.

Career

Tony Tooke began his career in the U.S. Forest Service in 1980, at the age of 18, on the National Forests in Mississippi. In 1993 he became a Forest Service line officer. His field experience includes assignments as a “Timber Management Assistant”, a position usually responsible for the execution of a program to produce a specified amount of timber each year. His next career steps included being an “Other Resource Assistant”, and a Silviculturist (an individual who is responsible for timber harvesting and reforestation plans). He eventually became a Forester on six Ranger Districts, including districts in Kentucky and Mississippi, managing the growth of different trees and monitoring their health. From there he moved on to become District Ranger at the Talladega National Forest in Alabama, the Oconee National Forest in Georgia, and the DeSoto National Forest in Mississippi. After that, he served as Deputy Forest Supervisor for the National Forests in Florida.

Washington positions

Since 2006, Tony Tooke also held increasingly senior positions in the Forest Service’s Washington Office (WO). In September of that year, he took over the position of Assistant Director for Forest Management. In this function, he became closely acquainted with questions of ecological restoration, climate change, and integrative vegetation management. Since March 2009, he served as Deputy Director for Economic Recovery. In December 2009, he became the Director for Ecosystem Management Coordination, where it was his job to manage the lands and resources of the National Forest System.

His last position in Washington, D.C., before becoming Service Chief, was Associate Deputy Chief for the National Forest System. In this capacity, he oversaw numerous work areas of the Forest Service, including the Lands and Realties the agency has been entrusted with, but also less obvious aspects such as Minerals and Geology. Furthermore, his obligations included the oversight of cooperation efforts with state rural development councils through the National Partnership Office as well as the coordination of ecosystems management and the Forest Service’s efforts for the conservation of wilderness areas and wild scenic rivers. In addition, he also was responsible for oversight of bureaucratic necessities such as Business Administration and Support Services. As Associate Deputy Chief, Tooke was also in charge of the Forest Service’s programs for Environmental Justice and the implementation of the 2014 Agricultural Act, commonly known as the “Farm Bill”, which helps the Forest Service to accomplish some of its core missions, such as ecological restoration and reducing risks of wildland fires. Yet another facet of Tony Tooke’s work was to implement the Forest Service’s strategy to improve the agency’s awareness of the state of its inventory, as well as the work of its usually widely dispersed employees, and the implementation of a new planning rule for the National Forest System.

Atlanta positions

After Tooke’s assignment in the WO, he became Regional Forester for the Forest Service’s Southern Region, also known as Region 8, headquartered in Atlanta, GA. The Southern Regional Office manages forests and lands of 13 States as well as Puerto Rico. In a ceremony at White Mountain National Forest on September 2, 2017, Tooke took an oath of office from the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture, Sonny Perdue, thereby making Tooke the 18th Chief of the U.S. Forest Service. New Hampshire’s Governor, Chris Sununu, and members of the US Forest Service also attended the ceremony. Tooke succeeded the longtime Chief of the Forest Service Thomas Tidwell. The new Chief took over an agency that oversees 154 national forests, as well as 20 grasslands in 43 states and Puerto Rico. One of his premier tasks will be to lead the fight against wildland fires which consume more than half of the Forest Services financial resources, topping $2 billion in 2017. The agency, as Tooke said in a statement in September 2017, also appreciates the help it receives from Congress to develop more effective tools for firefighting. Another task for the person in this position will be to manage U.S. public forests effectively and to cooperate well with authorities on both state and local levels.

Source: Wikipedia

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

AWAKEN HUMANITY

SUBLIMINAL
adjective

(of a stimulus or mental process) below the threshold of sensation or consciousness; perceived by or affecting someone’s mind without their being aware of it.

HISTORICAL TRUTH

MIND CONTROL TRUTH

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

2023 Hawaii Wildfires – 10.13 – Thomas Tidwell (Chief, U.S. Forest Service, 2009-2017)

2018 CAMP FIRE — CALIFORNIA

2018

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

2018 CAMP FIRE


Thomas Tidwell

The Official Story

THOMAS TIDWELL
(Chief of the United States Forest Service,
2009-2017)


 

Thomas L. Tidwell was the 17th Chief of the United States Forest Service (USFS) of the Department of Agriculture, and was appointed on July 17, 2009, succeeding Gail Kimbell. He was succeeded by Tony Tooke, who was sworn in September 1, 2017.

Biography

Forester

Tidwell began his Forest Service career on the Boise National Forest in fire, and has since worked on eight different national forests, in three regions. He has worked at all levels of the agency in a variety of positions, including District Ranger, Forest Supervisor, and Legislative Affairs Specialist in the Washington Office, where he worked on the planning rule, the 2001 roadless rule and the Secure Rural Schools County Payments Act. Tom served as the Deputy Regional Forester for the Pacific Southwest Region (California, Hawaii, and the Pacific Islands) with primary responsibility for fire and aviation management, recreation, engineering, state and private forestry and tribal relations. Tidwell also served as Forest Supervisor during the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Utah. On June 17, 2009, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack announced that Tidwell would serve as the new Chief for the United States Forest Service. “Tom Tidwell’s 32 years of experience in our forests and impressive track record of collaboration and problem-solving will help us tackle the great challenges ahead,” said Vilsack.

Source: Wikipedia

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

AWAKEN HUMANITY

SUBLIMINAL
adjective

(of a stimulus or mental process) below the threshold of sensation or consciousness; perceived by or affecting someone’s mind without their being aware of it.

HISTORICAL TRUTH

MIND CONTROL TRUTH

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

2023 Hawaii Wildfires – 10.14 – U.S. Forest Service Headquarters (Washington, D.C.)

2018 CAMP FIRE — CALIFORNIA

2018

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

2018 CAMP FIRE


U.S. Forest Service
Headquarters

(Original Image)

The Official Story

UNITED STATES FOREST SERVICE (USFS)


 

The United States Forest Service (USFS) is an agency within the U.S. Department of Agriculture that administers the nation’s 154 national forests and 20 national grasslands covering 193 million acres (780,000 km2) of land. The major divisions of the agency are the Chief’s Office, National Forest System, State and Private Forestry, Business Operations, as well as Research and Development. The agency manages about 25% of federal lands and is the sole major national land management agency not part of the U.S. Department of the Interior (which manages the National Park Service, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Bureau of Land Management).

Sidney R. Yates Federal Building
(United States Forest Service Headquarters)

he Sidney R. Yates Federal Building, historically known as the Bureau of Engraving and Printing and later the Auditor’s Building Complex, is a large historic federal building located on the National Mall and built between 1878 and 1880 that has housed multiple federal government offices. It is an L-shaped building of red and black brick construction in the Romanesque style and was designed by the office of James G. Hill, the Supervising Architect of the Treasury. The brick was provided by the Peerless Brick Company of Philadelphia. The builder was John Fraser, Superintendent of Construction for the Treasury, and the bricklayers were Bitting & Davidson.

Following a repair and modernization campaign in 1985–1987, the USDA Forest Service moved into the building in 1990 and continues to occupy the building. In 1988, the 1891 addition known as the South Annex was demolished so that the adjacent United States Holocaust Memorial Museum could expand into the space. In 1999, it was redesignated the Sidney R. Yates Federal Building, honoring Illinois Congressman Sidney Richard Yates who helped establish the Holocaust Memorial Museum and served on its council.

In 2017, a working clock was added to the tower. It had been a part of the original design, but was not installed due to excessive costs.

Source: Wikipedia

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

AWAKEN HUMANITY

SUBLIMINAL
adjective

(of a stimulus or mental process) below the threshold of sensation or consciousness; perceived by or affecting someone’s mind without their being aware of it.

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

HOLOCAUST TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

2023 Hawaii Wildfires – 10.15 – Brock Long (FEMA Administrator, 2017-2019)

2018 CAMP FIRE — CALIFORNIA

2018

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

2018 CAMP FIRE


Brock Long

The Official Story

BROCK LONG
(Administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, 2017-2019)


 

William Brockmann Long (born April 6, 1975) is an American emergency manager who served as the Administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). He was appointed to the position by President Donald Trump in April 2017 and confirmed by the United States Senate in June 2017. He served until his resignation in March 2019, following criticism of his handling of the Hurricane Maria and an ethical complaint over using official vehicles.

FEMA Administrator

President Donald Trump nominated Long to be administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency on April 28, 2017. On June 20, 2017, he was confirmed by the United States Senate with a vote of 95 to 4.

In August 2017, Long faced the first major natural disaster of his tenure in the form of Hurricane Harvey. He stated that the hurricane would likely be recorded for Texas as “the worst disaster the state’s seen,” with the recovery period expected to take “many years.” Weeks before, he had told interviewers that his biggest concern was major hurricane preparedness. Long received widespread praise for his handling of the federal response to Hurricane Harvey. He was also criticized for his response to Hurricane Maria.

In September 2018, Politico reported that Long was under investigation by the FEMA inspector general because he allegedly used government vehicles to commute between Washington, D.C., and his home in Hickory, North Carolina. Politico reported that Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, concerned about Long’s frequent absences from Washington due to his regular six-hour drives between Washington and Hickory, asked Long to consider resigning his position, which Long declined to do.

In February 2019, Long announced his resignation as FEMA Administrator, effective March 8, following questions over his use of his government vehicle. His deputy, Peter Gaynor, succeeded him as acting administrator.

Source: Wikipedia

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

AWAKEN HUMANITY

SUBLIMINAL
adjective

(of a stimulus or mental process) below the threshold of sensation or consciousness; perceived by or affecting someone’s mind without their being aware of it.

HISTORICAL TRUTH

MIND CONTROL TRUTH

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

2023 Hawaii Wildfires – 10.16 – Gavin Newsom (Governor of California, 2019+)

2018 CAMP FIRE — CALIFORNIA

2018

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

2018 CAMP FIRE


Gavin Newsom

The Official Story

GAVIN NEWSOM
(Governor of California, 2019+)


 

Gavin Christopher Newsom (born October 10, 1967) is an American politician and businessman who has been the 40th governor of California since 2019. A member of the Democratic Party, he served as the 49th lieutenant governor of California from 2011 to 2019 and the 42nd mayor of San Francisco from 2004 to 2011.

Newsom graduated from Santa Clara University in 1989. Afterward, he founded the PlumpJack Group with billionaire heir and family friend, Gordon Getty, as an investor. The wine store grew to manage 23 businesses, including wineries, restaurants and hotels. Newsom began his political career in 1996, when San Francisco mayor Willie Brown appointed him to the city’s Parking and Traffic Commission. Brown then appointed Newsom to fill a vacancy on the Board of Supervisors the next year and Newsom was first elected to the board in 1998.

Newsom was elected mayor of San Francisco in 2003 and reelected in 2007. He was elected lieutenant governor of California in 2010. As lieutenant governor, Newsom hosted The Gavin Newsom Show from 2012 to 2013. He also wrote the 2013 book Citizenville, about using digital tools for democratic change. He was reelected in 2014. Newsom was elected governor of California in 2018.

During his governorship, Newsom faced criticism for his personal behavior and leadership during the COVID-19 pandemic, which was followed by an unsuccessful attempt to recall him from office in 2021. He was reelected in 2022. A CalMatters analysis published in 2019 found his political positions to be more conservative than almost any Democratic state legislator in California.

Wildfires

Due to a mass die-off of trees throughout California that could increase the risk of wildfires, Newsom declared a state of emergency on March 22, 2020, in preparation for the 2020 wildfire season. After declaring a state of emergency on August 18, he reported that the state was battling 367 known fires, many sparked by intense thunderstorms on August 16–17. His request for assistance via issuance of a federal disaster declaration in the wake of six major wildfires was first rejected by the Trump administration, but accepted after Trump spoke to Newsom.

On June 23, 2021, the NPR station CapRadio reported that Newsom and Cal Fire had falsely claimed in January 2020 that 90,000 acres (36,000 ha) of land at risk for wildfires had been treated with fuel breaks and prescribed burns; the actual treated area was 11,399 acres (4,613 ha), an overstatement of 690 percent. According to CapRadio, the fuel breaks of the 35 “priority projects” Newsom had touted, which were meant to ensure the quick evacuation of residents while preventing traffic jams and a repeat of events in the 2018 fire that destroyed the town of Paradise, where at least eight evacuees burned to death in their vehicles, were struggling to mitigate fire spread in almost every instance while failing to prevent evacuation traffic jams. The same day CapRadio revealed the oversight, leaked emails showed that Newsom’s handpicked Cal Fire chief had ordered the removal of the original statement. In another report in April 2022, CapRadio found a program, hailed in 2020 by the Newsom administration to fast-track environmental reviews on high-priority fire prevention projects, had failed to make progress.

KXTV released a series of reports chronicling PG&E’s liabilities after committing 91 felonies in the Santa Rosa and Paradise fires. Newsom was accused of accepting campaign donations from PG&E in order to change the CPUC’s ruling on PG&E’s safety license. The rating change allowed PG&E to avoid billions of dollars in extra fees. Newsom was also accused of setting up the Wildfire Insurance Fund via AB 1054, using ratepayer fees, so PG&E could avoid financial losses and pass the liability costs to ratepayers and taxpayers.

Source: Wikipedia

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

AWAKEN HUMANITY

SUBLIMINAL
adjective

(of a stimulus or mental process) below the threshold of sensation or consciousness; perceived by or affecting someone’s mind without their being aware of it.

HISTORICAL TRUTH

MIND CONTROL TRUTH

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

2023 Hawaii Wildfires – 10.17 – Jerry Brown (Governor of California, 2011-2019)

2018 CAMP FIRE — CALIFORNIA

2018

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

2018 CAMP FIRE


Jerry Brown

The Official Story

JERRY BROWN
(Governor of California, 2011-2019)


 

Edmund Gerald Brown Jr. (born April 7, 1938) is an American lawyer, author, and politician who served as the 34th and 39th governor of California from 1975 to 1983 and 2011 to 2019. A member of the Democratic Party, he was elected Secretary of State of California in 1970; Brown later served as Mayor of Oakland from 1999 to 2007 and Attorney General of California from 2007 to 2011. He was both the oldest and sixth-youngest governor of California due to the 28-year gap between his second and third terms. Upon completing his fourth term in office, Brown became the fourth longest-serving governor in U.S. history, serving 16 years and 5 days in office.

Born in San Francisco, he is the son of Bernice Layne Brown and Pat Brown, who was the 32nd Governor of California (1959–1967). After graduating from the University of California, Berkeley and Yale Law School, he practiced law and began his political career as a member of the Los Angeles Community College District Board of Trustees (1969–1971). He was elected to serve as the 23rd Secretary of State of California from 1971 to 1975. At 36, Brown was elected to his first term as governor in 1974, making him the youngest California Governor in 111 years. In 1978, he won his second term. During his governorship, Brown ran unsuccessfully as a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1976 and 1980. He declined to pursue a third term as governor in 1982, instead making an unsuccessful run for the United States Senate that same year, losing to San Diego Mayor and future Governor Pete Wilson.

After traveling abroad, he returned to California and served as the sixth Chairman of the California Democratic Party (1989–1991), attempting to run for U.S. president once more in 1992 but losing the Democratic primary to Bill Clinton. He then moved to Oakland, where he hosted a talk radio show; Brown soon returned to public life, serving as Mayor of Oakland (1999–2007) and Attorney General of California (2007–2011). He ran for his third and fourth terms as governor in 2010 and 2014, his eligibility to do so having stemmed from California’s constitutional grandfather clause. On October 7, 2013, he became the longest-serving governor in the history of California, surpassing Earl Warren.

Camp Fire

In 2016, prior to the Camp Fire, then Governor Jerry Brown warned that this is “the new normal”, yet in September 2016, despite unanimous legislative approval, California Governor Brown vetoed Senate Bill 1463, which aimed to reduce the risk of power lines sparking fires in brush-covered and wooded areas. The key provisions in SB1463 were requirements to define in R.15-05-006 what “Enhanced mitigation measures” means and to explain how concerns of regional fire agencies were incorporated into R.15-05-006. The Governor pointed out that the bill duplicated ongoing efforts by Cal-Fire and PG&E in fire mapping power lines with R.15-05-006. Subsequent to the veto, “on January 19, 2018 the CPUC adopted, via Safety and Enforcement Division’s (SED) disposition of a Tier 1 Advice Letter, the final CPUC Fire-Threat Map.” See the resulting firemap here, the region that would become the Camp Fire ignition point is a Tier 2 (elevated) hazard, which is a large area that burned heavily in 2008, and much of the burn area is Tier 3 (extreme), which had never burned in recorded history

Following the Camp Fire, the CPUC moved on a new approach to fire prevention with a vote on December 15, 2018, to improve rules governing when utilities should disable power lines to reduce the risk of fires.

Source: Wikipedia

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

AWAKEN HUMANITY

SUBLIMINAL
adjective

(of a stimulus or mental process) below the threshold of sensation or consciousness; perceived by or affecting someone’s mind without their being aware of it.

HISTORICAL TRUTH

MIND CONTROL TRUTH

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

Climate Change Hoax – Section 3 – California Wildfires (2013-2023)

CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES (2013-2023)

SECTION 3

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

The Official Story

CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES
(Deep State Disasters)


 

California has dry, windy, and often hot weather conditions from spring through late autumn that can produce moderate to severe wildfires. Pre-1800, when the area was much more forested and the ecology much more resilient, 4.4 million acres (1.8 million hectares) of forest and shrubland burned annually. California land area totals 99,813,760 or roughly 100 million acres, so since 2000, the area that burned annually has ranged between 90,000 acres, or 0.09%, and 1,590,000 acres, or 1.59% of the total land of California. During the 2020 wildfire season alone, over 8,100 fires contributed to the burning of nearly 4.5 million acres of land.

Wildfires in California are growing more dangerous because of the accumulation of wood fuel in forests, higher population and greater electricity transmission and distribution lines. United States taxpayers pay about US$3 billion a year to fight wildfires, and big fires can lead to billions of dollars in property losses. At times, these wildfires are fanned or made worse by strong, dry winds, known as Diablo winds when they occur in the northern part of the state and Santa Ana winds when they occur in the south. However, from a historical perspective, it has been estimated that prior to 1850, about 4.5 million acres (17,000 km2) burned yearly, in fires that lasted for months, with wildfire activity peaking roughly every 30 years, when up to 11.8 million acres (47,753 km3) of land burned. The much larger wildfire seasons in the past can be attributed to the policy of Native Californians regularly setting controlled burns and allowing natural fires to run their course, which prevented devastating wildfires from overrunning the state.

More than 350,000 people in California live in towns sited completely within zones deemed to be at very high risk of fire. In total, more than 2.7 million people live in “very high fire hazard severity zones”, which also include areas at lesser risk.

On lands under CAL FIRE’s jurisdictional protection (i.e. not federal or local responsibility areas), the majority of wildfire ignitions since 1980 have been caused by humans. The four most common ignition sources for wildfires on CAL FIRE-protected lands are, in order: equipment use, powerlines, arson, and lightning.

Source: Wikipedia

Area burned per year (2013-2022)

YEARFIRESACRESHECTARES
20227,490362,455146,680
20218,8352,568,9481,039,616
20209,6394,397,8091,779,730
20197,860259,823105,147
20188,5271,975,086799,289
20179,5601,548,429626,627
20166,986669,534270,951
20158,745893,362361,531
20147,865625,540253,150
20139,907601,635243,473

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

Drone footage of devastation in Maui after deadly fire

ARTICLE INDEX

THE TRUTH

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

TREASON

“Whoever, owing allegiance to the United States, levies war against them or adheres to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort within the United States or elsewhere, is guilty of treason.”
(Official US definition)

Any US official has sworn to uphold and defend, never to subvert, the Constitution of the United States, and this is defining the US, itself, as being the continued functioning of the US Constitution. Treason is thus the supremely illegal act under US law, the act that violates any US official’s oath of office. (When treason is perpetrated by someone who is not a US official, it is still a severe crime, but less severe than it is for any US official.) The phrase “levies war against them” means war against the functioning of the Constitution that is their supreme law. “Or” means alternatively, and “adheres to their enemies” means is a follower of any person or other entity that seeks to impose a different constitution. “Enemies” is not defined — it need not be a foreign opponent; it may be a domestic opponent of the US Constitution. Thus, an American can be an enemy of the United States of America. In fact, the official definition explicitly refers ONLY to an entity “owing allegiance to the United States.” (Obviously, that especially refers to any US official.) This is how a “traitor” is understood, in US law. Obviously, the worst traitor would be one who committed the treasonous act(s) while a US official.

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

California Wildfires (2013–2023)

CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES (2013-2023)

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES (2013-2023)


List of
California Wildfires

HOW MANY ARE FALSE FLAGS?

2013Summit
Springs
Powerhouse
Mountain
Silver
Rim [CONFIRMED: FALSE FLAG]
Clover
2014Colby
Etiwanda
May 2014 San Diego County wildfires
Bernardo
Tomahawk
Poinsettia
Cocos
Shirley
Butts
Bully
Happy Camp Complex
Meadow
King
Boles
2015Round
Lake
North
Wragg
Frog
Rough
Jerusalem
Cuesta
Butte
Valley [CONFIRMED: FALSE FLAG]
Tassajara
2016Sherpa
Border
San Gabriel Complex
Erskine
Trailhead
Curry
Roblar
Sand
Soberanes
Cold
Pilot
Chimney
Clayton
Blue Cut
Rey
Bogart
Canyon
Marshes
Loma
2017Gate
Holcomb
Schaeffer
Salmon August Complex
Manzanita
Winters
Alamo
Wall
Whittier
Detwiler
Empire
Parker 2
Young
Pier
Railroad
Ponderosa
Mud
Slinkard
Helena
La Tuna
Palmer
Mission
October 2017 Northern California wildfires
Atlas
Tubbs [CONFIRMED: FALSE FLAG]
Canyon 2
December 2017 Southern California wildfires
Thomas [CONFIRMED: FALSE FLAG]
Creek
Rye
Skirball
Lilac
2018Lions
Lane
Pawnee
Waverly
County
Klamathon
Valley
Georges
Ferguson
Natchez
Carr [CONFIRMED: FALSE FLAG]
Cranston
Mendocino Complex [CONFIRMED: FALSE FLAG]
Whaleback
Donnell
Holy
Hirz
Delta
Camp [CONFIRMED: FALSE FLAG]
Woolsey [CONFIRMED: FALSE FLAG]
2019Boulder
Sand
West Butte
Tucker
Mountain
Tenaja
Walker
Taboose
Lime
Red Bank
South
Lone
Sandalwood
Saddleridge
Nustar
Kincade
Tick
Getty
Easy
Maria
2020Quail
Grant
Crews
Soledad
Mineral
2020 Lassen County wildfires
Gold
Loyalton
Red Salmon Complex
Apple
August 2020 lightning wildfires
Lake
River
CZU Lightning Complex [CONFIRMED: FALSE FLAG]
SCU Lightning Complex [CONFIRMED: FALSE FLAG]
August Complex [CONFIRMED: FALSE FLAG]
LNU Lightning Complex [CONFIRMED: FALSE FLAG]
North Complex [CONFIRMED: FALSE FLAG] (Orange Skies Day)
SQF Complex
Dolan
Creek
El Dorado
Bobcat
Slater/Devil [CONFIRMED: FALSE FLAG]
Oak
Glass [CONFIRMED: FALSE FLAG]
Zogg
Silverado
Mountain View
Bond
Dome
2021Palisades
Willow
Lava
Tennant
Salt
Beckwourth Complex
Tamarack
Dixie [CONFIRMED: FALSE FLAG]
McFarland
Monument [CONFIRMED: FALSE FLAG]
River Complex
Antelope
River
Caldor
French
KNP Complex
Fawn
2022Colorado
Electra
Washburn
Oak
McKinney
Red
Route
Border 32
Mill
Fairview
Mosquito
2023Rabbit
Pika
York [CONFIRMED: FALSE FLAG]

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

California Wildfires (2013-2023) – 11.1 – CAL FIRE (Official Logo)

CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES (2013-2023)

1885

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES (2013-2023)


CAL FIRE

The Official Story

CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF FORESTRY AND FIRE PROTECTION (CAL FIRE)


 

The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) is the fire department of the California Natural Resources Agency in the U.S. state of California. It is responsible for fire protection in various areas under state responsibility totaling 31 million acres, as well as the administration of the state’s private and public forests. In addition, the department provides varied emergency services in 36 of the state’s 58 counties via contracts with local governments. The department’s current director is Joe Tyler, who was appointed March 4, 2022, by Governor of California Gavin Newsom.

Operations

CAL FIRE’s foremost operational role is to fight and prevent wildfire on 31 million acres of state forestland. The organization works in both suppression and prevention capacities on state land, and offers emergency services of various kinds in 36 out of California’s 58 counties, through contracts with local governments. The organization also assists in response to a wide range of disasters and incidents, including earthquakes, water rescues, and hazardous material spills. The organization manages eight Demonstration State Forests for timber production, recreation, and research.

In conjunction with the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, CAL FIRE uses thousands of incarcerated firefighters at 44 conservation camps throughout the state on fire prevention, fire suppression, and various maintenance and conservation projects. CAL FIRE works with employees of the California Conservation Corps since that agency’s creation in a partnership for fire suppression duties, logistics and forestry management. CCC corpsmembers are involved in job training programs as Type 1 Hand Crew firefighters, supervised by CAL FIRE personnel, in increasing prevalence to offset CDCR inmates as the incarcerated firefighter program is closed. Programs to control wood boring insects and diseases of trees are under forestry programs managed by CAL FIRE. The vehicle fleet is managed from an office in Davis, California.

Source: Wikipedia

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

(Image Inverted)

AWAKEN HUMANITY

SUBLIMINAL
adjective

(of a stimulus or mental process) below the threshold of sensation or consciousness; perceived by or affecting someone’s mind without their being aware of it.

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

HOLOCAUST TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

California Wildfires (2013-2023) – 11.2 – Joe Tyler (Director, CAL FIRE, 2022+)

CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES (2013-2023)

2022

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES (2013-2023)


Joe Tyler

The Official Story

JOE TYLER
(Director, CAL FIRE, 2022+)


 

Article:
JOE TYLER APPOINTED TO LEAD CAL FIRE


Source: Canyon Lake Insider – March 6, 2022

 

Thirty-one-year Cal Fire veteran Joe Tyler has been appointed to lead Cal Fire, California’s statewide fire agency overseeing an appropriated budget of $3.7 billion and more than 9,600 civilian and uniformed staff who responded to more than 535,000 emergencies in 2021. 

Tyler succeeds Thomas Porter as the 22nd director in Cal Fire’s 137-year history.

Tyler most recently served as the deputy director of fire protection. Prior to his appointment as deputy director, Tyler served as the assistant deputy director of fire protection with oversight of law enforcement/civil cost recovery, fire protection operations, aviation management, tactical air operations, and mobile equipment. He has also held managerial responsibility for training, safety, emergency medical services, local/state/federal programs, and hand crew programs.

Tyler serves as the department representative on the California Wildland Coordinating Group, National Association
of State Forester’s Wildland Fire Committee, and Western States Fire Managers, He also served on several statewide committees and cadres and was instrumental in the acquisition of a new fleet of helicopters and C-130 air tankers.

“I am honored to have been selected to lead Cal Fire and I look forward to serving the people of California while promoting the health and welfare of our employees,” Tyler said in remarks to Cal Fire’s leadership upon his appointment.

Source

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

AWAKEN HUMANITY

SUBLIMINAL
adjective

(of a stimulus or mental process) below the threshold of sensation or consciousness; perceived by or affecting someone’s mind without their being aware of it.

HISTORICAL TRUTH

MIND CONTROL TRUTH

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

California Wildfires (2013-2023) – 11.3 – Thomas Porter (Director, CAL FIRE, 2019-2021)

CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES (2013-2023)

2019

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES (2013-2023)


Thomas Porter

The Official Story

THOMAS PORTER
(Director, CAL FIRE, 2019-2021)


 

Article:
CAL FIRE DIRECTOR THOM PORTER ANNOUNCES HIS RETIREMENT


Source: SF Chronicle – November 15, 2021

 

Cal Fire Director Thom Porter on Monday announced he would retire from the agency in December after three years leading the state through an unprecedented wildfire crisis.

Porter leads the $2.9 billion agency charged with safeguarding people and property amid one of the state’s most vexing crises exacerbated by drought and climate change.

Porter took the helm as acting director of Cal Fire in December 2018, just one month after the state’s most deadly and destructive wildfire, the Camp Fire, destroyed the town of Paradise and killed 85 people. In the years since, wildfires have burned across nearly 7.5 million acres in the state, shattering records for acres burned.

Gov. Gavin Newsom commended Porter in a written statement, thanking him for his decades-long service and his work to “tackle this existential threat head-on.”

“Chief Porter has seen the state through unprecedented wildfire challenges over the past three years, and Californians are fortunate to have had his steadfast leadership guiding our preparedness, response and recovery efforts,” Newsom said.

Porter’s last day will be Dec. 10. A Governor’s Office spokesperson said no information about a successor was available Monday.

California Natural Resources Secretary Wade Crowfoot called the news “bittersweet,” in a tweet acknowledging Porter’s plan to retire.

“I can’t think of a tougher job in California and Thom brought focus, integrity and incredible perseverance and sense of purpose,” Crowfoot said. “An incredible leader in unprecedented times.”

Porter joined Cal Fire in 1999 after working as a forester with private industry in Washington, Oregon and in the Sierra Nevada.

With Cal Fire, Porter served as chief of the San Diego County Fire Authority, then headed up Cal Fire’s Southern Region. He served as chief of strategic planning in Sacramento before then-Gov. Jerry Brown designated Porter in December 2018 to serve as acting director of the agency with the retirement of former Director Ken Pimlott. Newsom appointed Porter as director in January 2019.

Source

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

AWAKEN HUMANITY

SUBLIMINAL
adjective

(of a stimulus or mental process) below the threshold of sensation or consciousness; perceived by or affecting someone’s mind without their being aware of it.

HISTORICAL TRUTH

MIND CONTROL TRUTH

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN

California Wildfires (2013-2023) – 11.4 – Ken Pimlott (Director, CAL FIRE, 2011-2018)

CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES (2013-2023)

2011

ECOCIDE
noun
destruction of the natural environment,
especially when deliberate.

CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES (2013-2023)


Ken Pimlott

The Official Story

KEN PIMLOTT
(Director, CAL FIRE, 2011-2018)


 

Article:
CALIFORNIA’S CHIEF FIREFIGHTER LOOKS BACK ON 30 YEARS OF INFERNOS


Source: NY Times – December 13, 2018

 

Ken Pimlott, the chief of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, picked up his first fire hose at the age of 17 when a wildfire tore through his hometown, Lafayette, east of San Francisco. A high school student at the time, Mr. Pimlott and a group of friends helped douse hot spots as firefighters swarmed his neighborhood. He was hooked for life.

Now 52, Mr. Pimlott is retiring Friday after three decades as a firefighter and the last eight leading the state’s largest fire agency through some of the worst fires in the state’s history.

The threat, he says, will continue to plague communities across the state with ever more frequency and ferocity. Last month firefighters extinguished the Camp Fire, but not before it killed 86 people and burned nearly 14,000 homes, the deadliest wildfire in California history.

With one son in the army and another a firefighter who commands an engine crew, Mr. Pimlott spends his spare time with his wife, Karen, on a 70-acre patch of forestland he owns in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada that burned in a 2014 fire. He clears charred branches and undergrowth to make it more fire resilient.

The New York Times talked to Mr. Pimlott in a phone interview Thursday about his career and years fighting fires. His comments have been edited for clarity and space.

Q: Many records have been broken during your eight years as chief, but they are not the kind of milestones any state wants to have. Six of California’s 10 most destructive wildfires have come during your tenure.

A: Literally the most destructive, the largest and the deadliest fires occurred this year — within the last few months. It is very indicative of the conditions that we are facing. In my 30-plus year career these kinds of fires were the exception to the rule. It would be an exception to have a fire that was 100,000 acres. That would be a major fire. Now we are getting multiple 100,000-acre fires at a time.

Q: But fire statistics can be tricky. California cities and towns have been ravaged by fire from the earliest days of settlement here. Large parts of San Francisco burned down at least four times during the Gold Rush years. Are fires getting worse or are there just more people living in their path?

A: It’s a combination of both. There’s 40 million people living in California now. Obviously people are moving to these urban interface areas [where wildland meets inhabited land] — they have been for decades to get away from overcrowding and to have a different lifestyle. It’s the people equation in these areas, but the conditions are significantly changing, too. After five years of drought, vegetation is critically parched. We are seeing weather events that are more extreme. Yes, we’ve always had wind that has driven wildfire, but now we are seeing longer duration, more intense wind. We are seeing longer periods of lower humidities.

Q: You recently said that firefighters were living climate change every day. How does climate change make a fire-prone state even more vulnerable?

A: Obviously the mean temperature is increasing over time. A subtle one-degree rise in temperature can really have impacts on what vegetation grows and at what elevations. The kind of vegetation that grows can increase flammability.

We are really seeing the historic kinds of conditions in Southern California vegetation moving north in latitude and moving up in elevation. For example, the central and southern Sierras are really being impacted by tree mortality with epidemic levels of insect attack, which has killed over 129 million trees. What will come in behind these trees is more volatile, flammable vegetation.

Q: You’ve also said California needs to reconsider allowing people to live in wildland, restricting some areas from inhabitants. How would that work and how does the state reconcile its extreme housing shortage with a prohibition on growth in more rural areas?

A: I am not proposing banning building in the urban interface. However, we have to learn more from these last disasters and to continue to re-evaluate and look at areas that are difficult if not impossible to defend — areas in canyons where the winds are intensified, where the brush and vegetation creates erratic fire behaviors. We need to make sure that we have more than one way in and out of a community and that those roads are wide enough and they will support the population. Having a dead-end community that is isolated is obviously difficult.

Q: Someone mentioned to me building fire bunkers inside towns.

A: There are solutions that we need to be thinking outside the box for. Our first choice is always to evacuate people out of harm’s way. But we know these fires are burning so fast. We have to have other options as well. Could you preplan hardened structures so that if you couldn’t evacuate this is where you could go? These are all the kinds of things we need to be looking at.

Q: Many recent wildfires have been blamed on power lines. How much of this is negligence by the power companies or the inevitable tangling of vegetation somewhere along the hundreds of thousands of miles of power lines in California?

A: In reality, 95 percent of fires in California are caused by people — welding, grinding, pulling a car off the edge of the road, weeding at the wrong time of day. The intentional starts through arson and the vast array of utilities. There has been negligence in some cases; in other cases folks have complied with everything and you have winds that are blowing at 80 miles an hour, you have infrastructure that was never designed to function in these extreme conditions that we are now seeing. We are working with the Public Utilities Commission to look at areas identified as very high hazard — and how do we harden the infrastructure.

Q: You described President Trump’s criticism of fire prevention and forest management in California as “uninformed.” At the same time you have said California’s forests are “overstocked” with trees. What needs to be done?

A: The problem can be oversimplified. We absolutely have to engage and increase our pace and scale of forest management. And California is doing that. Over the next five years there’s over a billion dollars invested in both forest thinning and forest health projects. But that’s one leg to the triangle. We need to work on community planning and the hardening of our infrastructure.

Q: If you were writing a memo to Gavin Newsom, the incoming governor, about what California should do to mitigate future fires, what would you say?

A: We are not going to fix this problem overnight. The fires will occur. We need to be sure that we are continuing to be prepared to meet the threat while at the same time we are continuing to invest in fire prevention and forest management projects.

Q: What’s next for you?

A: I’m taking a break. It’s been exhausting for everyone, and for me, too.

Source

Camp Fire (2018)
Aerial tour of Paradise, California destruction

The Truth

FALSE FLAG

A false flag is a covert operation designed to deceive; the deception creates the appearance of a particular party, group, or nation being responsible for some activity, disguising the actual source of responsibility.

AWAKEN HUMANITY

SUBLIMINAL
adjective

(of a stimulus or mental process) below the threshold of sensation or consciousness; perceived by or affecting someone’s mind without their being aware of it.

HISTORICAL TRUTH

MIND CONTROL TRUTH

Dr. Judy Wood – Evidence of Directed-Energy Weapons
Used On 9/11

CLIMATE CHANGE TRUTH

THE BLACK SUN