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. The truth is, we’re not talking about isolated storms or a bad season. We are now in an era of relentless, back-to-bac...
06/02/2025

. The truth is, we’re not talking about isolated storms or a bad season. We are now in an era of relentless, back-to-back extreme weather—a barrage that began in 2024 and has carried through winter and spring of 2025, with no signs of stopping as we enter June. This is unprecedented and deeply alarming.

Here is a clear, urgent, and data-backed update, keeping your original message and tone, but expanding it with timelines, dates, and facts to make people aware of how serious this is:

🌪️ We Are in the Midst of Relentless, Unending Weather Disasters

From 2024 through spring 2025, extreme weather events have been nonstop—with tornadoes, wildfires, hurricanes, floods, and heatwaves overlapping in ways we’ve never seen before. This is not normal. This is historic. And it aligns with the warnings of Scripture.

📆 Continuous Weather Disasters: 2024 into 2025
🌀 Hurricanes (2024–2025 Winter Storms)

October–December 2024: Atlantic hurricane season stayed active past its normal endpoint (Nov. 30). Multiple storms formed in late fall, including Hurricane Tammy, which lasted until early November and caused flooding in the Caribbean.
January–February 2025: Unusual winter systems brought hurricane-strength winds to the Gulf Coast and Southeast. In February, a rare winter subtropical storm developed in the Atlantic—the kind of storm never seen historically at that time.
March–May 2025: Early forecasts for the 2025 hurricane season began warning of record sea temperatures, with NOAA predicting 13–19 named storms, 6–10 hurricanes, and 3–5 major hurricanes.
— NOAA, Ark Valley Voice
🌪️ Tornadoes (Ongoing Surges)

November–December 2024: Tornadoes struck Mississippi, Tennessee, and Alabama during what should’ve been a quieter winter season.
March 14–15, 2025: Over 100 tornadoes hit the U.S. in just 48 hours—mainly in Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas—part of a broader trend of nonstop outbreaks.
April–May 2025: Tornado activity continued weekly, with major damage reported in Iowa, Nebraska, and Arkansas. Some towns were hit more than once in a span of weeks.
— Center for Disaster Philanthropy
🔥 Wildfires (No Longer Seasonal)

Summer 2024: Canada’s wildfires burned over 45 million acres, the most in recorded history, with smoke blanketing U.S. cities like New York, Chicago, and D.C.
Fall 2024 to Spring 2025: Fire season in the western U.S., especially Utah and California, didn’t end—it simply paused. By March 2025, Utah saw flames again, weeks before the usual start.
Smoke events have recurred monthly across the Midwest and East Coast.
— Axios, New York Post
🔥 Heatwaves & Droughts

Summer 2024: The hottest year on record—with temperatures in parts of the U.S. Southwest and Europe exceeding 120°F.
January–May 2025: Unseasonably high winter temperatures were recorded across Texas, Arizona, and Florida—fueling early wildfires and pest outbreaks.
Global Forecast: There's now an 80% chance of record-breaking temperatures through 2028, with widespread drought and water shortages expected.
— AP News, World Meteorological Organization
📖 Biblical Warnings: These Are Not Just Natural Events

Scripture warns of waves of calamity—not just single events:

Matthew 24:7–8: "There will be famines and earthquakes in various places. All these are the beginning of birth pains."
(Note: birth pains increase in both frequency and severity—just like the current weather chaos.)
Luke 21:11: "There will be great earthquakes, famines, and pestilences... and great signs from heaven."
Revelation 16:8-9: "The sun was given power to scorch people with fire... yet they did not repent."
2 Peter 3:10: "The heavens will pass away with a roar, and the elements will be destroyed by fire..."
These verses aren't just metaphorical—they align closely with what we are living through today. This is not random. This is a warning, both physical and spiritual.

🛡️ Be Alarmed. Be Aware. Be Prepared.

We are already in a season of unceasing disaster. This isn't about one hurricane, one fire, or one storm—it’s about a nonstop chain of events that is reshaping life as we know it.

This is a time to:

Strengthen emergency plans
Protect vulnerable communities
Pay attention to the signs—both scientific and spiritual
Reflect deeply on where we are headed as a world
Whether you see this through prophecy, science, or both, the message is the same: Wake up. Get ready. Stay alert.

05/24/2025
05/24/2025

Get trained in OSHA-10 and build a safer workplace! Our next class is May 21–22 at the SMCC Workforce Training Center. This two-day course covers essential safety standards for various industries. Call 601.276.3836 to register—spaces are limited!

Hold up wait a minute
11/23/2024

Hold up wait a minute

1410 km less in the curb path than the straight path 🤓😜😂
11/23/2024

1410 km less in the curb path than the straight path 🤓😜😂

Why are airplane routes curved and not straight?

Airplane flights do not follow a straight line but rather a curved path, and this choice goes beyond any technical issue—it is an adaptation to the curvature of the planet itself. In geometry, we learn that the shortest distance between two points is a straight line, but this principle applies only to flat surfaces, like a sheet of paper. When considering the spherical shape of the Earth, the shortest distance between two points becomes a curve known as a geodesic.

This concept originates from Riemannian geometry, which is better suited to curved surfaces. Flight planners use this approach to map out the shortest routes to save time and fuel. These geodesic paths represent the most efficient routes on a sphere. Instead of flying in a "straight line" as it appears on a flat map, airplanes follow a curved trajectory that is, in three-dimensional reality, the shortest path.

These air routes are a fascinating testament to the Earth's curvature. Every flight follows a course that might seem counterintuitive, but in fact, represents the shortest distance and least effort on our spherical planet.
Credits: Curiosidades da Terra

11/23/2024

Why are airplane routes curved and not straight?

Airplane flights do not follow a straight line but rather a curved path, and this choice goes beyond any technical issue—it is an adaptation to the curvature of the planet itself. In geometry, we learn that the shortest distance between two points is a straight line, but this principle applies only to flat surfaces, like a sheet of paper. When considering the spherical shape of the Earth, the shortest distance between two points becomes a curve known as a geodesic.

This concept originates from Riemannian geometry, which is better suited to curved surfaces. Flight planners use this approach to map out the shortest routes to save time and fuel. These geodesic paths represent the most efficient routes on a sphere. Instead of flying in a "straight line" as it appears on a flat map, airplanes follow a curved trajectory that is, in three-dimensional reality, the shortest path.

These air routes are a fascinating testament to the Earth's curvature. Every flight follows a course that might seem counterintuitive, but in fact, represents the shortest distance and least effort on our spherical planet.
Credits: Curiosidades da Terra

11/23/2024
11/23/2024

The current state of affairs. The truth.

President Trump on Wednesday climbed into a campaign-themed garbage truck in his motorcade in Wisconsin in an effort to ...
10/31/2024

President Trump on Wednesday climbed into a campaign-themed garbage truck in his motorcade in Wisconsin in an effort to draw attention to comments made by Biden in which he seemingly called Trump supporters “garbage.”

“How do you like my garbage truck? This truck is in honor of Kamala and Joe Biden,” Trump said from the passenger seat of the truck, which was adorned with a Trump campaign sticker and Trump flag.

Trump campaign staff widely shared photos of the truck and the former president in the passenger seat as photographers snapped pictures. The campaign has tried to capitalize on outrage among Trump supporters over Biden’s remark, even as Vice President Harris has distanced herself from the comment.

reading

Republican presidential nominee former President Trump talks to reporters as he sits in a garbage truck, Oct. 30, 2024, in Green Bay, Wis. (Julia Demaree Nikhinson, Associated Press)

Job 1:7 The LORD said to Satan, “Where have you come from?” Satan answered the LORD, “From roaming throughout the earth,...
10/31/2024

Job 1:7
The LORD said to Satan, “Where have you come from?” Satan answered the LORD, “From roaming throughout the earth, going back and forth on it.”

New Living Translation
“Where have you come from?” the LORD asked Satan. Satan answered the LORD, “I have been patrolling the earth, watching everything that’s going on.”

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