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Richard Syrett's Strange Planet

733 Fire in Nature PT.1

Richard Syrett's Strange Planet

Richard Syrett & Glassbox Media

Society & Culture, News, Politics

4.41.8K Ratings

🗓️ 16 May 2022

⏱️ 49 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Episode #733 Fire in Nature PT.1 Richard welcomes a fire management activist who warns of catastrophic fires that can consume everything in their wake with the power of multiple atomic bombs. There is a very high probability of terrorist wildfire attacks in the United States, and around the globe in the next few years, but is anybody listening? SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS!!! COPY MY CRYPTO - Discover how over 1,300 people - many of who know nothing about crypto or how to invest - are building rapid wealth the cabal can never steal - "You don't need to know a thing about cryptocurrency if you copy someone who does"CopyMyCrypto.com/Dollar Life Change and Formula 13 Teas All Organic, No Caffeine, Non-GMO! More Energy! GET THE CONSPIRACY SPECIAL HERE C60EVO -The Secret is out about this powerful anti-oxidant. The Purest C60 available is ESS60. Buy Direct from the Source. Buy Unlock Strange Planet Premium at https://strangeplanet.supportingcast.fm/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://strangeplanet.supportingcast.fm/

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is a Glassbox Media Podcast.

0:31.0

Here's Richard.

0:36.0

Ed Comarek is standing by to talk about fire, wild fires.

0:42.0

What's causing them? Well, he says it is a rabid fire suppression culture to blame.

0:50.0

Not climate change, not directed energy weapons, but a fire suppression culture.

0:57.0

But he's also sounding the fire alarm that there is a very high probability of terrorist wild fire attacks in the United States and around the globe in the next few years.

1:08.0

Pyroterrorism, fire in nature, a fire activist's guide is about changing a global culture of fire suppression to a culture of good fire management where prescribed fire is used to put simulated natural light fires back into fragmented light fire ecosystems.

1:25.0

We'll find out what that all means in a moment. The book clearly points out that it is the unnatural build-up of fuel caused by over 100 years of fire suppression that is the real cause for widespread global destruction of forests and grasslands by catastrophic fire.

1:41.0

Smokey the bear in the United States Forest Service and other government agencies around the world have built these powder kegs.

1:48.0

And now the terrorists want to light the fuse releasing the power of multiple atom bombs on Americans, American and other cities.

1:56.0

Why go to all the trouble and the expense of making an atom bomb when several individuals in a plane or car can light a line of wild fires, a hundred miles long, under high winds and drought conditions?

2:09.0

Imagine a fire, hundreds of feet high with the power of multiple atom bombs in a couple of hours could overwhelm all attempts at fire suppression.

2:18.0

It could trap people in cities, killing thousands, maybe millions of people, something equivalent to the devastation of cities by fire bombing in World War II.

2:27.0

Homeland security is already informed as to the threat. We're about to speak about that. Ed, comrade.

2:35.0

Fire in nature, a fire activist's guide. We should point out that some of this is your writing and some of it is just sort of compiled from other people and so forth.

2:46.0

Now, what I try to do with my books is not just give my opinion, you know, and basically if I say something, I want to back it up.

2:55.0

So fortunately, with the internet, you know, with word searches, you can get pretty good at that.

3:00.0

And so I've tried to back up and put note everything that I say. For instance, we were just talking about pyroteroism.

3:07.0

If somebody does a search on pyroteroism, Homeland security, the very top on the three search engines, at least on my search engines, that at the very top is the 25 paper that apparently you just put up there in the public domain, basically saying what I've been saying all along for years.

3:24.0

So they're on to it. Right. I want to address this narrative that's out there though that, you know, every year we hear, they seem to be ratcheting up the hyperbole.

3:34.0

The 2018 in places like British Columbia was I read in some accounts. It was the worst year others. It was the second worst year for fires.

3:43.0

They're talking now of we're seeing wildfires in places that we traditionally don't in in wetter cooler climates places like Finland, even the what they call the Peatland Moors in England.

...

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