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yelik
13th June 2014, 09:09
We know there has been concern about the decline in bees as well as the wider insect population.

The reason I mention this is that I have noticed a distinct lack of insects that are normally attracted into my kitchen this time of year when the light is on, I have those bright daylight bulbs. Over the last few weeks there have been virtually no insects whatsoever.

When we also consider the mass fish deaths being reported around the world since around 2009 there's definitely something strange going on with our environment which is now concerning me. It could be related to a combination of general pollution and the continued rise in radioactive contamination from Fukishima and chemtrails which contain high levels of heavy metals such as nano Aluminium, Strontium and Iridium particles which are supposedly designed to reflect sunlight away from the earth to control warming. Some people claim it reduces the ability of humans to reproduce.

If it is killing off insects then it will be slowly killing us. Maybe this is intentional so as to reduce human life expectancy as part of population reduction.

How do we try and stop this madness and bring the perpetrators to justice for crimes against humanity. This is especially relevant if the elites did indeed create the Japanese tsunami by using the Tesla / Electromagnet Scalar Wave Weapon, as claimed by Simon Parkes.

Sunny-side-up
13th June 2014, 10:03
Yes yelik, even though the trees and grasslands around my area (Richmond-Upon-Thames) are looking very healthy and green there is a vast decline in insect activity. So few Butterfly's to mention one! I know for a fact that in relation to my childhood days there are vertically no insects in comparison. I used to know where and how to find caterpillars at certain times of the year, on certain plants etc but! vertically none now :(

Earth as it was is no more, I feel the nature havens of the past, even great parks and riversides are virtually barren now! very sad!

Lifebringer
13th June 2014, 10:07
They'll just clone more slaves for the world plantation if they poison us off. That's a big if. If we know it's monstanto, then who in Monsanto is making the decision and who are we to boycott for. The way I see it is if they corner all the the island foods that produce vitamin C, we're done. You know, it really doesn't have to be that way, and all we have to do is ask the creator to stop it. Perhaps when the place is empty, he'll strike all the monsantos with lightning and burn them all up.

Matt P
13th June 2014, 10:42
While I don't disagree at all, I see no diminishing mosquito numbers around here. If only the mosquitoes would be so kind as to offer to switch places with the bees and butterflies. Maybe the flies that like to eat just a single hole in ALL my strawberries (instead of eating a whole berry and saving me some) and the caterpillars frolicking all over my kale and broccoli could kindly sacrifice a little, too! ;-) Not to take away from a serious problem...

Matt

cursichella1
13th June 2014, 12:53
Ha! I was just startled awake by the County spraying the property and woods for mosquitoes! I had to run out (wrapped in blankets!) and grab the neighbors elderly dog who was wandering aimlessly around the yard before they sprayed him! Grrrrr Anyway, it is the opposite here (Northern Calif) with insects. Overwhelming quantities of mosquitoes, gnats, bees and box elder beetles; lots of butterflies and moths, too. Maybe it's an overall imbalance that's causing the former to thrive in sporadic locales. And during a draught, no less! Bizarre...

conk
13th June 2014, 15:33
I believe that insects and tiny animals are the 'canary in the coal mine', signaling something amiss. Tiny critters seem more susceptible to minute changes in the environment and succumb to them long before humans or larger animals.

Just yesterday I was reading about Truvia, the commercial (fake) version of stevia. Far from being stevia, which is what marketing would have you believe, it is 95% alcohol sugar and 5% stevia. When Truvia was fed to tiny worms or flies they died in 5 days, compared to the 30 odd days they normally live. Now, Truvia won't kill any of us off in 5 days, we have to wonder what the long term negative effects might be.

I too have not noticed any ants in my kitchen this year, a sharp contrast to the annual spring visitation experienced over the previous decade or so.

Matt P
13th June 2014, 18:23
I believe that insects and tiny animals are the 'canary in the coal mine', signaling something amiss. Tiny critters seem more susceptible to minute changes in the environment and succumb to them long before humans or larger animals.

Just yesterday I was reading about Truvia, the commercial (fake) version of stevia. Far from being stevia, which is what marketing would have you believe, it is 95% alcohol sugar and 5% stevia. When Truvia was fed to tiny worms or flies they died in 5 days, compared to the 30 odd days they normally live. Now, Truvia won't kill any of us off in 5 days, we have to wonder what the long term negative effects might be.

I too have not noticed any ants in my kitchen this year, a sharp contrast to the annual spring visitation experienced over the previous decade or so.

I saw that Truvia thing, too. If I'm not mistaken, the alcohol sugar was gmo. Scary. Also heard Sweet-n-low can be used as ant killer. Another gmo product. Yeah, if it kills our insect friends you can bet it's not good in our bodies either.
The sad thing is the actual plant, Stevia, is amazing. We grow it and you can pick the leaves right off and it's like eating a sugar plant. Why not just use the real thing instead of fabricating these lab poisons? Well, don't answer that. We probably already know the answer...

Matt

yelik
14th June 2014, 12:55
I tried truvia as replacement for sugar because I thought it was healthy. It tasted awful to me so threw it away. I am really struggling to find a healthy alternative to sugar. At the moment I use natural honey.