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Weekly Message Archive August 2011

 
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  August 2011 Questions:

August 26, 2011: Should we be using icebergs to replenish our water supplies?
August 19, 2011: Should the United States be increasing its shale gas drilling operations?
August 12, 2011: How can the Mississippi River floods be prevented?
August 5, 2011: Will the United States people ever fully feel the impact of the Hiroshima bombing decision?
 

Answers:

August 26, 2011: Should we be using icebergs to replenish our water supplies?

Icebergs and the poles are what keep the earth and the Earth cool. They are necessary to keep the earth in balance with human-driven climate change. If you continue to use every available resource on the planet, you will quickly ensure your demise.

Life on earth and planet Earth is a gift. The icebergs are a gift. Use the resources you have more wisely and you won’t feel the need to exploit the last fresh water source, when every other fresh water and treated seawater source has been exploited.

Think of icebergs as elders. Would you sacrifice your last source of ancient wisdom and knowledge because you were too lazy to look for other answers or alternative technologies? Think of this in terms of water. Do all you can to preserve the ice caps and icebergs. Your life on a temperate Earth depends on it. (Euphrena)  (Top)
 

August 19, 2011: Should the United States be increasing its shale gas drilling operations?

No, the United States should be developing alternative methods of energy production. Think of it this way. If you put all your claims on one piece of land, and any number of things prevent you from drilling, what do you have?

Right now, the United States is wagering a war on terrorism, but where is the war being fought? In every nook and cranny of the world by one conventional means—war. What happens if war becomes outlawed? A whole economy based on war is a fragile economy.

Putting all one’s eggs in one basket is a recipe for disaster. The same goes with shale gas drilling. Looking for another viable way to fuel the oil machines, without looking into the future.

Other countries in your world are looking at alternative fuels and energy sources. They will lead the way and will have no need for shale gas.

The United States, as a country, needs to look forward or be left behind, waiting on gas lines for oil that is delivered by vehicles that run on a combination of air, water, and hydrogen.

Do you want to be left behind? Then keep doing what you are not doing. (Shamani)  (Top)
 

 

August 12, 2011: How can the Mississippi River floods be prevented?

How can you prevent that which you have created? Time and time again, floods are coming and going with increasing frequency. And no one has a clear-cut explanation, other than, “We are studying it.”

The simple fact of the matter is, it’s the way humans have treated Mother Earth—much like an unlimited credit card. Take what you want and worry about the consequences (if any) later. And if the consequences come, then someone or a group of individuals will be required to fix the problem. Problem solved. On to the next flood.

Throw several more billions of dollars into the already weakened levee system and tell the American public all is well again. Go back to your homes and farms. Problem solved. On to the next flood.

Wait for a Category 4 or 5 hurricane to completely inundate the coastal and inland areas. Spend upwards of one hundred billion dollars on recovery efforts. Then after some time, allow the same developers in and label the land enriched fertile farmland. Drive the prices up, invite the next generation of workers to build communities. As these communities thrive, the memories of past hurricanes diminish. Problem solved. Until the next flood.

What happens when simultaneous floods happen, levees break, and there is no money left to build on the floodplains? That wasn’t in the plan. No one ever thought that would happen. Problem not solved. Worldwide devastation. The floods now control your life. What do you do? (Shamani)  (Top)
 

August 5, 2011: Will the United States people ever fully feel the impact of the Hiroshima bombing decision?

Those who should have felt it in a mercy-filled way have either died or are reaching that age where death is imminent. How can a country of more than three hundred million people not realize the full impact of such a horrible act etched in human history? The answer is denial of the spiritual truth.

There are many among you who can justify the action to a military degree. But no one can justify it peacefully in a humanitarian way. If bombs are to bring peace, then let us pick up the pieces of those who are killed and parade them down the streets of your nation’s capitol. This will never happen, but what if it did?

Would people deny that these people, animals, or creatures were victims of war or victims of peace?

To know the horror is unbearable. Think of the years that have passed since the act in Hiroshima. Those who were young and survived are now old. They have seen time pass with incremental progress toward world peace. Was not World War II a war to end all wars? The wars continue, the dead are buried, the sons and daughters sacrificed, and the rich grow richer if they are invested in it.

No one can fully know the impact of the decision to bomb Hiroshima, unless they lived through it from a Japanese man, woman, child, animal, or creature’s perspective. To have been there is to know what humankind is capable of doing.

Right or wrong—you decide. But the United States people will never truly know what it felt like to have hell rain down from above at supersonic speed. Just pray that it never has to happen again—ever! (Asmuth)  (Top)
 

Weekly Messages for 2011:

January 2011    February 2011    March 2011   April 2011   May 2011  June 2011   July 2011   August 2011    September 2011    October 2011   November 2011   December 2011

 

Weekly Messages for 2010:

April 2010   May 2010   June 2010   July 2010   August 2010   September 2010  October 2010  November 2010  December 2010
 

 
   

 

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