Weather
Modification Tech Tested on Japan
Chem-trails detected in attempt to restore typhoon. I have never written on Chem-trails or
HAARP. As VT has become, perhaps, the major player in global information
we have begun applying higher standards than the MSM does. However, we
have solid information that this typhoon is NOT natural and that efforts are
being made to use it against Japan.
We stuck our necks out
on this, letting the public know about efforts to dissipate the storm using
highly classified tech. We are now seeing “pushback” from someone.
The map below outlines the attack, where Chem-trails have been laid and how
they are helping re-form the storm:
(Earlier
today) Latest: The operation still in process in spite of countermeasures
region north of top arm dissipating
+3 hours, region north of eye reduced asymmetically
+2 hours, complete loss of symmetry
13 hours into op, storm reduced to category 3
Technology tested in the
US over the last few years, a breakoff team from DARPA, will be testing its
Tesla based technology on the typhoons currently threatening Japan. At
best, damage and landfall will be limited.
Hopes are that the storm
can be broken up in under 48 hours. We will see.
VT knows those
involved. We wish them luck.
Look for anomalous
behavior of these storms that, over the next few hours, will be the
subject of high energy experiments that had proven very successful on a
smaller scale in the US.
Big
typhoons may collide off Honshu
—
Less than a week after
being hit by the largest typhoon in a decade, Tokyo is bracing for another
strong storm that will likely reach the area Saturday, and it may get merged
with an even stronger approaching tempest.Though less powerful than Typhoon Wipha,
incoming tropical cyclone Francisco is rated as “strong,” the Meteorological
Agency said. But on a possible collision course is Typhoon Lekima, considered
“more fierce.”As of 3 p.m. Wednesday, Typhoon Francisco, the 27th this year,
was located about 180 km south of Minamidaito Island, east of Okinawa, heading
northwest at a speed of 15 kph.The agency previously described the typhoon as
“very strong,” but it appears to have passed its peak, weather forecaster
Nobuaki Hiramatsu said.Still, Hiramatsu cautioned that the relatively slow
speed of Francisco heralds prolonged rainfall. The possibility remains, he
added, that it could lead to the same amount of rain as Wipha brought to Tokyo
last weekend.It has so far proved a daunting task to predict the course of
Francisco, Hiramatsu said, partly because the “more fierce” Lekima, the year’s
28th typhoon, may affect its path.
“If it wasn’t for
Lekima, Francisco would just go away up north,” he said. But the stronger and
faster Lekima is likely to block and even disrupt Francisco, preventing its
swift run to the north and altering its path.
The Meteorological
Agency said the two storms will likely come in closest proximity to each other
Saturday, when Francisco is forecast to linger over the Izu island chain south
of Tokyo, unable to move due to the stronger force of Lekima just to its east.
This interaction between
two typhoons in close proximity is popularly known as the “Fujiwara Effect,”
named after the late meteorologist Sakuhei Fujiwara.
Among the Izu islets is
Oshima, which Wipha pounded last week, leaving 29 residents confirmed dead and
15 missing as of Wednesday morning.
Hiramatsu warned that
torrential rain could once again pelt Izu-Oshima, leading to a repeat of the
mud and landslides that caused so much devastation there.
In preparation for the
onslaught of another disastrous typhoon, The local government is gearing up to
evacuate 119 people, including elderly and disabled residents, and their
families and helpers. Starting Wednesday, the evacuation was to continue
through Thursday. The municipality was also canvassing neighborhoods to see how
many more residents, especially pregnant women and bedridden people, want to
flee the island.
As the two typhoons
approached Honshu, concerns were mounting over the crippled Fukushima No. 1
nuclear power plant. Tokyo Electric Power Co. drew fire Sunday for failing to
prevent rainwater brought by Wipha from overflowing concrete walls enclosing
tanks containing radioactive water. At one monitoring point, the spilled
rainwater was found to contain strontium-90 at a level of 710 becquerels per
liter, 71 times higher than Tepco’s self-imposed limit.
To prevent the same
blunder, Tepco on Tuesday began to install tanks with extra pipes to boost
their ability to pump out water and transfer it somewhere safer, and added
manpower. It will also mobilize a larger number of workers to monitor the
situation and carry out the pumping operation more smoothly, according to Tepco
spokesman Hiroki Kasuya.
“We’re coming up with
various preventative measures, and all we can say is that we will do everything
we can to ensure the plant’s safety,” he said.
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