Death Toll In Spain Officially Reported As 158 And Climbing, As Of Yesterday.

Celia Farber

WHAT WAS IT? The People Got NO Warning. In Some Footage The Streets Are DRY When The “Flood” Rolls In; People Are In Shock

Another event happened that is something that can’t happen—this time in the Valencia region on Spain.
It was neither a “storm” nor a “hurricane” but a sudden appearance of violent mud, water, mud and debris, pushing down bridges, tearing up streets, and flinging cars, even even huge trucks, into chaotic piles, resembling a boy’s car collection emptied from a bucket onto a pile on the floor.
My daughter in law told me yesterday, confirming what we are hearing, that based on what she heard from people in the Valencia region, people got no warning.
Do you remember how I kept saying the most ominous thing about “Helene” was the lack of warning? That seems to be an essential part of these new “weather” attacks, which are not weather.
“Storms” are tracked. Obsessively, with high tech precision, by professionals all over the world, and certainly Spain is no exception.
So what happened here?
One year’s worth of rain in 6 or 8 hours? I don’t think we should continue to use words like “rain.”
It was water. Violent water, out of nowhere. Mud water.
Right now I am only emphasizing the things that are impossible—I’m not offering “answers,” and of course, I am well aware of weather weaponry and have reported on it, more and more recently.
It seems this time they are not even trying to make it appear like a real “storm.”
What are we looking at here? It’s towns and cities filling up with water as you’d fill a bathtub. Water just descending, like a Hollywood film effect. There is no reference point for this. My daughter in law told me it is known hardly ever to rain in the Valencia region—but I am adamant it’s not rain, so what should we call it?

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