Lioness of Judah Ministry
What is the chance that two very large and powerful hurricanes hit the same area within 13 days of each other?
What is the chance that two very large and powerful hurricanes hit the same area within 13 days of each other? Look at the landfall areas of Tampa Bay, Sarasota, Siesta Key, Longboat Key, Anna Maria Island, and other barrier islands in that area of Florida.
The locals lost their homes, condos, and their possessions that they had worked a long time to build and accumulate within 13 days of two unimaginable disasters. These possessions are now buried in tall mountains of rubbish temporarily housed on a large vacant lot near the Tamiami Trail in Sarasota…
After reading this detailed list of activities which must be reported to NOAA, a non-scientist would wonder, if nobody engages in such activities, how do they know in so much detail what can be done to modify weather and climate and that must be reported to NOAA?
Watching an episode of What on Earth?, I came across an interesting report about bizarre events that happened on January 22, 2011 in Australia. Satellite images of meteorological maps showed bizarre glowing spiral rings over the city of Melbourne, spanning an area of tens of thousands of miles, reaching all the way to the island of Tasmania off the south coast. Before these rings appeared, the weather was calm, the longest drought on record was taking place. After the circles appeared, the area experienced bizarre weather, torrential rains, funnel winds, and hail.
Scientists thought it was a radar issue; radar combines with satellite images to create real time weather maps of changing weather across a specific area. But radar is reliable.
Other circles appeared in other parts of Australia; one spanned 400 miles. One circle had a white and red eye with a black circle within the larger circle, with black lines radiating from it. Dr. Mike Pavelec said that “it looked like a computer glitch.”
Each strange circle that appeared on the satellite maps seemed to bring extreme weather. “Melbourne had the worst storm in its history, flash floods, 4-inch hail storms, a month’s rain in 48 hours, and a mini tornado. All the other areas plagued by intense and long drought also experienced massive, big thunderstorms, the wettest weather on record.