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pyrangello
12th May 2021, 18:39
I put this in the quake area because this bridge isn't cracking because everything is stable, Everyone knows about the New Madrid fault. This isn't an easy fix either, especially if things continue to move below.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/discovery-massive-bridge-crack-forces-us-coast-guard-close-portion-mississippi-river

onawah
13th May 2021, 00:24
I've been over that bridge, and it really is massive. That's going to cause a LOT of problems.


I put this in the quake area because this bridge isn't cracking because everything is stable, Everyone knows about the New Madrid fault. This isn't an easy fix either, especially if things continue to move below.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/discovery-massive-bridge-crack-forces-us-coast-guard-close-portion-mississippi-river

O Donna
13th May 2021, 02:19
U.S. gets 'C-,' faces $2.59 trillion in infrastructure needs over 10 years

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States faces a $2.59 trillion shortfall in infrastructure needs that requires a massive jump in government spending to address crumbling roads, bridges and other programs, according to an assessment by an engineers group issued on Wednesday. Source (https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-infrastructure/u-s-gets-c-faces-2-59-trillion-in-infrastructure-needs-over-10-years-report-idUSKBN2AV0DD)

West Seattle Bridge has been a headache for some time.

West Seattle Bridge closure, 1 year later: 5 things happening now

Throughout the day, we’ve been observing the one-year anniversary of the West Seattle Bridge’s sudden, shocking closure. One last report as promised: So what’s happening now?
Source (https://westseattleblog.com/2021/03/west-seattle-bridge-closure-1-year-later-5-things-happening-now/)

Remembering the collapse of the I-35W Mississippi River bridge almost 14 years ago (August 1, 2007, killing 13 people and injuring 145).

https://engineering.purdue.edu/CAI/SBRITE/Facilities/BCGallery/Images/I-35W%20Bridge%202.jpg

Sue (Ayt)
13th May 2021, 06:05
This is going to add yet another huge disruption in supply distribution. Get prepared fast, cause with the pipeline, etc, it looks like events are coming down fast now.

Cracked Memphis Bridge Remains Indefinitely Closed Disrupting Supply Chain


Traffic on and below a major bridge over the Mississippi River near Memphis could be halted for several days or longer, causing significant disruptions to motorists and shipping, officials said on Wednesday.

Authorities in Arkansas and Tennessee, along with the U.S. Coast Guard, indefinitely stopped all traffic related to the Hernando de Soto Bridge on Interstate 40 after inspectors discovered a crack in the steel structure on Tuesday and Tennessee officials say repairs could take some time.

The bridge connects Memphis, Tenn., to West Memphis, Ark., and is a crucial waterway for barges transporting crops to export markets. Crews have begun emergency repairs.
<snip>

Arkansas transportation director Lori Tudor said it had the potential to become a "catastrophic event," adding "the bridge was closed to vehicular traffic and the river was closed to barge traffic as a safety precaution."

Authorities say barge traffic can't resume unless engineers determine that the ridge can stand on its own despite the rusting crack. They say it could take a couple of weeks just to complete a full inspection of the nearly 50-year-old bridge.
<snip>

The Coast Guard says Mississippi river traffic is already backing up in both directions, with more than 400 barges awaiting passage, according to Reuters.

Lieutenant Mark Pipkin, a Coast Guard spokesman, told the wire service that there were 12 northbound vessels with 157 barges waiting to pass and another 16 vessels with 254 barges in the queue to go southbound. "The barges are carrying a mix of materials including crude oil and dry cargo like corn or rocks," Reuters said.
https://www.npr.org/2021/05/12/996407481/cracked-memphis-bridge-remains-indefinitely-closed-disrupting-supply-chain

araucaria
13th May 2021, 07:32
I put this in the quake area because this bridge isn't cracking because everything is stable, Everyone knows about the New Madrid fault. This isn't an easy fix either, especially if things continue to move below.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/discovery-massive-bridge-crack-forces-us-coast-guard-close-portion-mississippi-river
Concrete doesn't last for ever, quake or no quake.
https://www.hindawi.com/journals/amse/2020/9370591/

pyrangello
13th May 2021, 12:07
I agree concrete has a finite span in life, but if you look at that picture in the link I provided, the concrete snapped and shifted diagonally . There is no signs of it crumbling from AGE. A snap and shift represents load displacements, so something is moving. We have a bridge here in Michigan on I-75 called the zilwaukee bridge, all concrete with cables inside, the concrete pillars below holding up the bridge kept sinking so they shot Freon in the ground to freeze the areas around the pillars.

If that pressure snapped that one spot on the bridge just imagine all the other areas now that have more stress trying to keep things in tact.

Karen (Geophyz)
13th May 2021, 12:37
Soil along a river is going to shift and move. With flooding and droughts this makes this a pretty normal event. I have not hear of any quakes along the fault line that were out of the norm. I think this is probably from natural processes. A river naturally wants to move and meander. When men channelize it to stop that the river finds a way.

TomKat
13th May 2021, 12:40
Flood of immigrants at the southern US border. Ship blocks the Suez Canal. Gasoline pipeline hack in eastern US. Mississippi river blocked and major interstate highway closed.

I sense a hidden hand.

Billy
13th May 2021, 12:51
I agree concrete has a finite span in life, but if you look at that picture in the link I provided, the concrete snapped and shifted diagonally . There is no signs of it crumbling from AGE. A snap and shift represents load displacements, so something is moving. We have a bridge here in Michigan on I-75 called the zilwaukee bridge, all concrete with cables inside, the concrete pillars below holding up the bridge kept sinking so they shot Freon in the ground to freeze the areas around the pillars.

If that pressure snapped that one spot on the bridge just imagine all the other areas now that have more stress trying to keep things in tact.

The picture in the link you provided shows the steel has cracked, not the concrete.

46675

Mark (Star Mariner)
13th May 2021, 12:53
Concrete doesn't last for ever, quake or no quake.
https://www.hindawi.com/journals/amse/2020/9370591/

No it doesn't, but in regard to the potential durability of concrete the Romans have a pretty strong case to argue. A good example being the spectacular rotunda of the Pantheon, built in the early 2nd century. It is still the world's largest unreinforced concrete dome. Many such Roman concrete structures are still standing 2,000 years later - in an earthquake zone too.

Satori
13th May 2021, 13:19
I’ve done a fair amount of construction litigation over the years. Cracked or cracking concrete is a common point of contention. As one structural engineer told me: “There's two kinds of concrete; the kind that’s cracked and the kind that’s not cracked yet.”

Cracked or cracking concrete has a ripple effect throughout the entire structure. If not repaired, assuming it can be, it will lead to structural failure.

The photo I’ve seen is of a steel beam with a “cut” or split right through it. Did concrete failure do that, or did that happen and then ripple out and down to the concrete? Cause and effect. Not good either way.

Is the US infrastructure really given a grade of C-? If so, that’s up from the D- or F it had the last time I saw something on that a few years back. Either things have improved, which I doubt, or the people handing out the grades are grading on some kind of a curve.

Kindred
13th May 2021, 13:31
That is Not a 'crack'... THAT is a BREAK - a Complete separation of a (Very Large) single piece of metal! Since the bridge appears to be composed of individual beams that are bolted or riveted together, then, plausibly, a new beam could be manufactured and installed to replace the broken beam... however, this in itself is Not a small undertaking, by any stretch of the imagination. I would estimate that it would take up to a year to fabricate, transport, remove the old beam, and install the new one. Simply my take with what I know about infrastructure such as this.

araucaria
13th May 2021, 14:25
Concrete doesn't last for ever, quake or no quake.
https://www.hindawi.com/journals/amse/2020/9370591/

No it doesn't, but in regard to the potential durability of concrete the Romans have a pretty strong case to argue. A good example being the spectacular rotunda of the Pantheon, built in the early 2nd century. It is still the world's largest unreinforced concrete dome. Many such Roman concrete structures are still standing 2,000 years later - in an earthquake zone too.


Sure. In fact I gather concrete spends centuries recovering the CO² that was pumped out to make the cement, which has a strengthening effect. Another factor however is load-bearing capacity. The Pantheon roof has not been taking any extra weight over time, whereas say a road bridge is likely taking many times more than it was designed for a century ago. German World War II bunkers are still in good shape too. It doesn’t matter that saboteurs tried to weaken the concrete e.g. by leaving their shovels in the mix, the ones that survived D-Day have been sitting pretty ever since and are not going anywhere anytime soon.

TomKat
13th May 2021, 16:51
The picture in the link you provided shows the steel has cracked, not the concrete.


Biden has studied the problem and Super Glue Corp. has been dispatched to the site. :-)

pyrangello
13th May 2021, 17:36
Your right it is steel, look to the left and see the rivots, when a bridge is built its engineered for movement, expansion and contraction from the sun, so many variables. In the pictures I just posted this is the Mackinaw Bridge joining upper and lower michigan , Its 5 miles across , all the 1 million bolts were hand tightened at night .The towers stand 1800 ft tall , and they go in the water 200 feet plus another 14 feet in the bedrock, when the winds are high thru the straits , this bridge was designed to sway side to side. It takes 3 days for this bridge to stop swaying once the winds have stopped. My buddy who is 91 worked on this bridge for quite a few years. Fascinating story.

onawah
13th May 2021, 18:49
The concrete that was used ages ago to build the Bosnian Pyramid Complex is unlike modern concrete and much more durable.
I don't think anyone has figured out how it was made yet.
I have a small piece of it, and it has a very unusual vibe.
Dr. Semir Osmanagic, who discovered the complex, was giving away pieces of the concrete at one of the conferences I attended in Little Rock where he was a guest speaker.

Ewan
13th May 2021, 20:52
That is Not a 'crack'... THAT is a BREAK - a Complete separation of a (Very Large) single piece of metal! Since the bridge appears to be composed of individual beams that are bolted or riveted together, then, plausibly, a new beam could be manufactured and installed to replace the broken beam... however, this in itself is Not a small undertaking, by any stretch of the imagination. I would estimate that it would take up to a year to fabricate, transport, remove the old beam, and install the new one. Simply my take with what I know about infrastructure such as this.

I was about to point out that it was not a crack but a shear, you beat me to it. It is not new either, it is at least 3 or 4 months old judging by the weathering marks around the exposed edges. The replacement of the beam is the obvious solution but the entire bridge would need a very in depth survey to be declared fit for purpose again. Non-destructive testing would need to be carried out on every element of the bridge which could extend to far more than a year, in addition the replacement of the beam would require extensive support and bracing to the connected load bearing elements.

Without visiting the site or seeing extensive photography of the surrounding elements I can't say any more, but I do wonder if no signs of stress are measurable in connected elements that the bridge is massively over-designed. It would be fairly common. It is possible the shearing of the beam has not really diverged stress to other areas, what needs to be established is what caused the shear in the first place. That could take years!

Hym
14th May 2021, 17:21
I'm not an engineer but I have engineered and drafted all of the projects I have been on as a contractor. Having the Los Angeles City, County and California building codes as a guideline for earthquake requirements, you learn a lot of the basics of securing anything to the earth. Soil makeup,stability, drainage and compression testing beforehand, plotting and laying out foundations, etc.. When looking at a project you get an eye for potential weaknesses in all aspects of the build. Even a good builder can ruin a project if their attention to the foundation details are not scrutinized over and over again.

It looks as if at least half of the structural load on the Hernando de Soto Bridge is carried midspan on those two pilings/columns connected to the central pier that should be anchored into the bedrock below the bottom of the river. The original design and documentation of the build, inspections, metal quality, thickness and manufacturing , all have to be reviewed and post haste, knowing the urgency of commercial traffic flowing below.

Looking at the shear crack on that lower beam supporting the suspended roadway, my first check would be the downward stress on the entire structure from a sinking midspan foundation and the midspan pier itself. The relationship between the two land based support structures and the midspan pier could easily be checked, as all of the structural relations on the elevation drawings are there to see on the plans. Their relationship is set and any lowering of elevation of the midspan connections will be easy to see. Transit, lasers.

Hym
14th May 2021, 18:20
The concrete that was used in times past contained volcanic ash. In Italy and other areas in southern Europe there was a readily available supply of this ash considering the demands of the builds they had then. As population increased the access and supply of that critical component in producing that particular concrete, along with an aggregate, sand and various other binders, dwindled over time.

Modern builds do have a pretty reliable formula for the various types of concrete, but without the infusion of those much longer lasting ingredients there is, in modern commercial builds, an expectation of a much faster degradation of the structural integrity of concrete. Throughout all commercial builds worldwide, not just in the states, there often pops up a dangerous lack of integrity in the production of some products, concrete mix ratios being the most common and the deliberate lowering of the ratio of more expensive materials to cheaper ones is often the cause of concrete failure, cracking, chipping and flaking.

I was working as a plasterer on a film there and my foreman asked me to take pictures of concrete failure on public works in the city in order to duplicate the many aspects of poor mixing and aged concrete on the sets we were building. For one of those examples I recorded, there is an overpass on the I-25, for the east west connection to Paseo Del Norte, in Albq., N.M. that had early concrete failure soon after the build was made.

As it so happened there was a painting foreman who used to work in the concrete industry who filled me in on shoddy and good concrete mixing patterns of the companies in the state. He predicted the concrete failure on the overpass, which did not result in any harm to anyone, but it highlighted the lack of integrity in some public construction builds nationwide, and it may have been the sign of deeper structural problems in the overpass itself.

In many cases the punitive and restorative power of litigation, suing the responsible parties, is the only prevention against poor construction and all of the damage it can cause, when in reality the only reliable power lives in diligence and insistence upon quality when public agencies and private interests contract out their builds.

It was not just another coincidence that last night I happened to catch an episode of an old t.v. series filmed in Albq., In Plain Sight, featuring a conscientious engineer whose bridge had failed resulting in civilian deaths. It ended up being a play on a deeper integrity held by the structural engineer.

Yes, some few designs and the engineering that creates them are faulty, but the vast majority of them are done well. In the case of the bridge on the Miss.River I see an over reliance upon a faulty design that does not pass the eye test.

In the U.S. there are many, many bridges that are close to collapse because of the signs of structural failure, from a variety of causes. Both parties lack the political will and most likely the funding to prevent those many failures in the public transportation system, which do cause a preventable disruption in the supply chain that many have come to take for granted.

I would love to see a massive injection of public funding going into highway and waterway repair and reclamation projects, much like the public works projects that offered so many jobs during the last depression. Everyone benefitted. However, not addressing the critical repairs needed nationwide will produce many incidents just like this one in the years ahead.


I knew that a new carpenter would be a good partner when upon meeting him, and him seeing I was a journeyman carpenter, sunk in detail, he said "It's not that I don't trust your measurements. I don't trust your measurements." He meant that due diligence is how he works with himself as well as others, checking and double-checking, knowing what is right also looks right to the well trained eye. We have all caught our mistakes by keeping that focus on using our other senses, beyond what seems the monotony of repetitive work.

I also say that if you're not making mistakes, you're not working. It's how open you are to constantly looking at the possibilities of change in a fixed build. In all building, that respect and openness with the entire work crew, with all of those eyes on the integrity of their work makes a big difference, an insurance worth more than all of the required bonds we can take out in procuring a project build.

The earth is not static at all, nor especially is the build in a riverbed on a known fault line.

Gwin Ru
14th May 2021, 18:58
...

... I don't really know, but looking at this picture, I can see two different signatures:


1) a clear, clean cut of the top of the beam and



2) a sheared/torn side of that beam...


46675
^
(click)



... well, that's sabotage!

Ernie Nemeth
14th May 2021, 19:54
The top of that beam has been purposely cut, it seems to me. Once the load bearing strength of the beam was compromised by the sabotage, the remainder of the beam sheared off. The difference in the top and the side of the beam is very obvious.

Bill Ryan
18th May 2021, 12:17
This VERY interesting piece was posted by Jeffrey Prather to his subscribers. He cites evidence that this was sabotage via an ultrasound weapon.


https://www.patreon.com/posts/us-steel-my-day-51375742?utm_medium=post_notification_email&utm_source=post_link&utm_campaign=patron_engagement&token=eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLCJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9.eyJyZWRpc19rZXkiOiJpbnN0YW50LWFjY2VzczoxMjI0MzJjNi1lNzFhL TRiYmQtYmY3Yi1hNWRhNGU5NjFlNDgifQ.ZfDTDyC2uZlr_nMI-fis7XnkNeWP0KnPNh8U3anjBD0

“SONIC, INFRASONIC, AND ULTRASONIC FREQUENCIES: The Utilization of Waveforms as Weapons, Apparatus for Psychological Manipulation, and as Instruments of Physiological Influence by Industrial, Entertainment, and Military Organisations (http://researchonline.ljmu.ac.uk/id/eprint/6092/1/543845.pdf)”—“Acoustic Weapons - A Prospective Assessment (http://scienceandglobalsecurity.org/archive/sgs09altmann.pdf)”—and—“Super-Fine Sound Beam Could One Day Be An Invisible Scalpel (https://news.umich.edu/super-fine-sound-beam-could-one-day-be-an-invisible-scalpel/)”.

In the opening section of this MoD document it examines an American-based company named Michael Baker International (https://mbakerintl.com/)—whose headquarters is in Pittsburgh-Pennsylvania, and has nearly100 offices throughout the United States—says it has “solved some of the world’s most complex infrastructure challenges for more than 80-years with a legacy of expertise, experience, innovation and integrity (https://mbakerintl.com/about?section=who-we-are)”—in 1942 saw it being part of the US War Department during World War II (https://80years.mbakerintl.com/)—in 2007 saw it providing engineering, design and on-site consulting services for the $30-million Pyandzh River Bridge, which opened a trade route stretching over 1,400 miles from Karachi-Pakistan, to Almaty-Kazakhstan (https://80years.mbakerintl.com/)—in 2015 saw it becoming one of the first companies to receive certification from the FAA to operate Unmanned Aircraft Systems (https://80years.mbakerintl.com/)—and in 2017 saw this company introducing what they call their Wolf Pack philosophy (https://80years.mbakerintl.com/).

As to why the MoD extensively examines this shadowy American defense company becomes stunningly clear when reading this document’s section on Aerospace Defence Forces (ADF (http://eng.mil.ru/en/structure/forces/cosmic.htm)) alerts over the past 48-hours—ADF military experts who constantly monitor alerts received from the Lotos S1 intelligence-gathering spacecraft Kosmos 2549 (https://spaceflightnow.com/2021/02/07/russian-soyuz-rocket-delivers-military-intelligence-gathering-satellite-into-orbit/)—and at 20:37:05 hrs +8 GMT on 11 May, saw the Kosmos 2549 intelligence satellite sending an alert that it had detected a micro burst of 20-kilohertz (20,000 hertz) ultrasound energy emanating from the North American coordinates of 35.1495° N, 90.0490° W—a location immediately identified as Memphis-Tennessee—that was followed by the Kosmos 2549 intelligence satellite issuing two other alerts, the first at 21:57:07 hrs +8 GMT on 11 May, and the second at 22:02:23 hrs +8 GMT on 11 May—both of which exactly correspond with two panicked 911 emergency calls (https://www.kark.com/news/local-news/we-need-to-get-people-off-the-bridge-as-soon-as-possible-hear-bridge-crews-frantic-911-calls-after-i-40-bridge-crack-found/) made to police authorities in the Memphis region—the first one occurring at 13:57:07 hrs local Memphis time (1:57 p.m.) on 11 May, in which a panicked unidentified male warns about a “super critical finding (https://www.kark.com/news/local-news/we-need-to-get-people-off-the-bridge-as-soon-as-possible-hear-bridge-crews-frantic-911-calls-after-i-40-bridge-crack-found/)” on the Interstate 40 bridge—and the second occurring at 14:02:23 hrs local Memphis time (2:02 p.m.) on 11 May, in which an ever more panicked female identifies herself as being an employee of Michael Baker International and warns the Interstate 40 must be immediately shut down (https://www.kark.com/news/local-news/we-need-to-get-people-off-the-bridge-as-soon-as-possible-hear-bridge-crews-frantic-911-calls-after-i-40-bridge-crack-found/).

Following these alarming events leading to it being discovered that this vital bridge was in danger of collapse due to a mysterious break in one of its critical steel support beams, University of Memphis civil engineer Professor Adel Abdelnaby grimly stated:

“If you compare it to a body, this looks like the arteries and this is the heart of the country…So if you cut the heart of the country, it's like you are giving the country a heart attack by shutting down the I-40 bridge - because that is what connects the east and the west to the rest of the U.S (https://www.localmemphis.com/article/news/investigations/i-team/barges-trucking-i-40-hernando-de-soto-bridge-shutdown-memphis-supply-chain/522-5f46d889-1b04-4d57-ad2e-a94df93f1ae4)”.

Being called a “catastrophic event (https://www.npr.org/2021/05/12/996407481/cracked-memphis-bridge-remains-indefinitely-closed-disrupting-supply-chain)” that has halted all traffic at the 4th largest inland port in the United States (https://www.npr.org/2021/05/12/996407481/cracked-memphis-bridge-remains-indefinitely-closed-disrupting-supply-chain), and has further halted more than 400 barges awaiting passage (https://www.npr.org/2021/05/12/996407481/cracked-memphis-bridge-remains-indefinitely-closed-disrupting-supply-chain), it’s now being warned that the closure of this bridge may last for months (https://wreg.com/news/tdot-to-hold-news-conference-on-i-40-bridge-closure/)—though most critically to note is that this bridge is one of the most vital links in the Dwight D. Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense Highways (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interstate_Highway_System) specifically designed to rapidly deploy US military forces throughout America during an invasion or civil war—sees it being joined by another “catastrophic event (https://www.foxbusiness.com/energy/colonial-pipeline-back-online-energy-secretary-says)” that disabled one of America’s most vital energy pipelines and has caused massive fuel shortages—further sees both of these “catastrophic events” coming at the same time over 120 retired US Generals and Admirals wrote an open letter questioning the mental fitness of Supreme Socialist Leader Joe Biden and the integrity of the 2020 election (https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2021/05/american-heroes-120-retired-generals-admirals-write-joe-biden-questioning-mental-health-support-evidence-election-fraud/)—which is why this MoD document states that if the US military is planning to overthrow Biden in a coup, these are the exact types of “catastrophic events” one would expect to occur before operations of this kind are launched.

https://www.whatdoesitmean.com/cbm21.jpg



Audio 1: 911 Call Memphis Bridge (https://www.whatdoesitmean.com/mbca37.mp3)
Audio 2: 911 Call Memphis Bridge (https://www.whatdoesitmean.com/mbca73.mp3)

(https://www.whatdoesitmean.com/mbca73.mp3)
https://www.whatdoesitmean.com/cbm22.jpg
https://www.whatdoesitmean.com/cbm23.jpg

Mysterious crack (top photo) in steel support beam shuts down the Hernando de Soto Bridge on Interstate 40 (middle photo) over Mississippi River in Memphis-Tennessee while raging fuel shortages (bottom photo) cripple American east coast—the result of which severely degrades the Pentagon’s ability to rapidly deploy troops and equipment needed to defend socialist leader Biden against a coup.

onawah
21st May 2021, 21:19
SCALER ATTACK ON BRIDGE ACROSS MISSISSIPPI…WARNING SHOT ACROSS THE BOW?
5/17/21
https://projectcamelotportal.com/2021/05/17/scaler-attack-on-bridge-across-mississippi-warning-shot-across-the-bow/

https://i1.wp.com/projectcamelotportal.com/wp-content/uploads/bridge-crack-interstateMississippi-river.jpg?fit=992%2C558&ssl=1

"See the comments below from a SOURCE on the story linked here:

I-40 SPAN OVER MISSISSIPPI RIVER SHUT AFTER CRACK FOUND
The Interstate 40 bridge over the Mississippi River has been closed after authorities said they found a crack in the span linking Arkansas and Tennessee

abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/40-span-mississippi-river-shut-crack-found-77632637



My comments here:

The placement of the pyramid next to the bridge is undeniable evidence they are strategically positioned to shut that corridor open in a heartbeat at any time. This may simply be advance warning.

If we have a civil war the states will withdraw from the union …the Mississippi is a huge connector within the middle of the U.S.

This may be a warning shot across the bow as they say.–Kerry Cassidy

*****

FROM A SOURCE.


IMO, this was done by space-based orbital high tech scalar wave/standing wave frequency (Tesla) weaponry (aka Alien ET technologies)

IMO, the group doing this has delivered a serious threat to all world leaders and top Intel and defense officials that if they do not play ball according to the Globalist NWO leadership group (Stop Sabbattean Frankists) the major cities of the world will be destroyed piece by piece.

IMO, some leaders have been completely human compromised (bought off/bribed, blackmailed or induced into major felonies or capital perversions/cannibalism), some may have even been “replaced after being soul-snatched”, perhaps some cloned (no belly buttons, shorter life-spans, occasional weird glitches). Far out yes, but sad to say this technology exists and has been used for 30 years in DUMBs.

All these events are being pre-planned, orchestrated and deployed on the larqe quantum computer associated with Google Jigsaw.

Here are the Intel’s basic procedures which make their acts hard to identify:

1. create ongoing inconsistency by generating numerous false and true accounts on the internet to keep people confused

2. compartmentalize everything as much as possible into small operational groups. Feed each groups some different not essential anecdotal information that is true and some easily provably false to help discredit leaks and make leakers identified.

3. use deniable cutouts who are associated with drug cartels, or criminal enterprises (organized crime)

4. control top officials with very sophisticated and powerful human compromise operations, including blackmail/bribing and induction into major felony capital crimes such as pedophilia, child/human sacrifice and cannibalism.

5. control the masses with high powered orbital and ground generated pulsed beam EMF including scalar waves, D-waves, and UHF to flash the inhaled chemtrail nano-particles that are electromagnetically treated and have passed across the blood-brain barrier..–UNDISCLOSED SOURCE "

Ewan
23rd May 2021, 19:27
The top of that beam has been purposely cut, it seems to me. Once the load bearing strength of the beam was compromised by the sabotage, the remainder of the beam sheared off. The difference in the top and the side of the beam is very obvious.

Sorry mate, I can't agree with a word you said there. You know in the past that I've remarked to you, privately, I appreciate your posts but here I fear your observations are wrong.

The top 'cut' is not straight by any physical/mathematical measure I am aware of. If there is a flaw, a weak point, in a metal beam there is zero guarantee, or probability, that it will fail in a uniform way. Therefore the variation between the top and bottom of the shear have literally no meaning. It is like electricity following the shortest path, the strain follows the weakest path.

-------------------

As to Bill's subsequent post regarding 'Sonic, Infrasonic and Ultrasonic frequencies' I have to bow out, maintaiing an open mind.

pyrangello
25th May 2021, 13:09
So this was exactly what I thought was going on , there is pressure in the north american bow of the US plates- new madrid fault and snap the bridge structure shifts, did not even consider the colonial pipeline but read the rest of the link. Big full moon coming up tomorrow and CME's hitting the earth starting today for next 3 days. Wonder what that cocktail will do. Lets hope nothing. :)


http://zetatalk.com/newsletr/issue765.htm


I-40 Bridge over Mississippi River remains Closed after Structural Crack Discovered
May 12, 2021
https://www.fox13memphis.com/news/local/heads-up-drivers-i-40-bridge-is-closed
The I-40 bridge has been shut down indefinitely. The bridge is closed because of a structural infrastructure crack in the bridge. The crack was found in the “bottom side of the bridge truss” or support beam.

ZetaTalk Prediction 5/31/2021: It is no coincidence that the I-40 was forced to close just 3 days after the Colonia Pipeline was forced to close. We predicted that the New Madrid Fault Line would start unzipping in the Gulf, near New Orleans, and thence proceed up the Mississippi. The Junta closely monitors the angle of alignment of both banks of the Mississippi to determine motion, and noted a torque or twist. The metal and concrete in bridges and pipelines cannot tolerate this before snapping or leaking, thus the Colonial was closed where it crosses at Alabama. Not 3 days later the I-40 at Memphis and Arkansas was cracking. This process will not abate.

pyrangello
17th June 2021, 18:35
4,000-acre Lake Jackson drains overnight in giant sinkhole near Tallahassee – Two human skulls discovered https://strangesounds.org/2021/06/4000-acre-lake-jackson-drains-overnight-in-giant-sinkhole-near-tallahassee-two-human-skulls-discovered.html

pyrangello
29th June 2021, 04:28
This would be a made for TV movie on whats happening around the world if it wasn't true, and this was just in the last 24 hours.

"Scared Me To Death" - 2 Earthquakes Rattle Baltimore City In Days

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/scared-me-death-2-earthquakes-rattle-baltimore-city-days

Something very odd is happening around the Baltimore Metropolitan Area, where two earthquakes have been recorded in a matter of days. The occurrence of earthquakes in the metro area is rare.

When we think of earthquakes in the US, they're usually in California, the Coastal Pacific Northwest, Alaska, Hawaii, among other hotbed areas.

But Baltimore?
Giant eruption of Costa Rica volcano

https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20210628-giant-eruption-of-costa-rica-volcano
Powerful 3.9 magnitude earthquake strikes near San Francisco

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9735487/Powerful-4-0-magnitude-earthquake-strikes-near-San-Francisco.html

Ratszinger
29th June 2021, 12:31
I've crossed this bridge going into Memphis (where my wife's family all still live) TN dozens and dozens of times. The big truck traffic, the passenger vehicles and the water from the river hitting the supports all come together to vibrate that bridge so it is resonating throughout all day everyday all the time!! This resonance changes as the traffic changes. That support broke after a convoy of Army trucks and heavy equipment crossed over the bridge carrying numerous tanks with big army wheel tires that resonate and the bridge resonates with that and a support popped apart it's that simple folks!! The scaler weapon theory is entertaining but I've walked that bridge and if a scaler was used the bridge would just vibe apart in many more places than just the one spot. This was resonance from a complete new tune being played on the bridge in the way of sound creation because they did some unprecedented exercises and are still doing them according to Monkeywerx on youtube and have been hauling heavies as he called them and even flying them he thinks. But I have been traveling in several states and seen large convoys on the roads so I know they are there and on many trains. Anyway, that is my two cents. And I didn't even mention the wind as it also is kicking out there over the river and it can blow you over at times if you don't hunker down when you walk.This resonates a sound as well and moves the bridge as does the traffic.

Ewan
29th June 2021, 20:40
<snip>
This resonance changes as the traffic changes. <snip>

A plausible explanation, Occam's Razor contender right there.