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7
We knew this was a dessert when we built the cities in these locations. The Colorado River runs through multiple States, and requires the states north to share with the states south. (us.cnn.com)
posted 2 years ago by Michalusmichalus 2 years ago by Michalusmichalus +8 / -1
Los Angeles, Las Vegas and other major cities could face huge water cuts in feds' proposed plan to save the Colorado River | CNN
The Biden administration released a highly anticipated analysis of the Colorado River crisis that paints a dire picture of what that river system's collapse would portend for the West's major cities, farmers and Native tribes.
us.cnn.com
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– Primate98 2 points 2 years ago +2 / -0

For the Real Deep(tm) conspiracists, the fact that these cities are located in very dry areas should have a good explanation. People are dumb, sure, but not that dumb and not all people.

One explanation is that North America was settled long before whitey showed up, and not just by a handful of rando redskins running around the forest chasing deer. It's also possible the climate was quite different when this was done.

This ties in to the mud flood, the Reset of the 19th Century, all the leftover Tartarian architecture, huge canal systems no one would even propose building today, etc, etc.

One interesting factoid I've mentioned before that ties many of these ideas together is London Bridge, now located in Lake Havasu. With research anyone can do but no one does, it appears that bridge was not taken apart, transported across the ocean and reconstructed, but rather was preexisting in it's current location and dug out of the earth. The real bridge, I suppose, was just dropped in the ocean.

So we find with just with this single bridge that: (1) it was originally hundreds of meters away from Lake Havasu, (2) it was completely buried under dirt, (3) there's no record of who actually built it, (4) there was only a tiny settlement near one end and none on the other, and (5) it's clearly in the Tartarian style.

The more I learn about the world, the grander my estimate of the deception.

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– Michalusmichalus [S] 2 points 2 years ago +2 / -0

That honestly deserves a thread of its own. Very interesting.

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– Michalusmichalus [S] 1 point 2 years ago +1 / -0

In the draft analysis, the US Interior Department’s Bureau of Reclamation offers two different scenarios for how to slash water usage should the levels in Lakes Mead and Powell continue to plummet, with the immediate goal of keeping enough Colorado River flowing through the Glen Canyon and Hoover dams to supply hydroelectric power to hundreds of thousands of customers.

But the implications of the analysis go far beyond hydropower.

The Colorado River provides water and electricity to more than 40 million people in seven states: Utah, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, Nevada, Arizona and California. Decades of overuse, combined with years of drought worsened by the climate crisis, have spurred a sharp drop in water levels in recent years at Lakes Mead and Powell, the nation’s largest reservoirs that power Hoover and Glen Canyon and provide water for drinking and agriculture to millions.

https://us.cnn.com/2023/04/11/us/colorado-river-water-cuts-federal-analysis-climate/index.html?utm_source=operamini&utm_medium=feednews&utm_campaign=operamini_feednews

Another article :

https://www.independent.co.uk/climate-change/news/biden-colorado-river-drought-water-b2318083.html?amp

Nearby the opposite issue.

https://www.mrt.com/news/article/the-great-salt-lake-seemed-like-it-was-dying-but-17887260.php

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– Ep0ch 2 points 2 years ago +2 / -0

At its lowest in history. How many other sources are also depleting.

Isn't the Mississippi? Meanwhile the great lakes are in coastal retreat.

How many sources are feeding the West Coast?

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– Michalusmichalus [S] 1 point 2 years ago +1 / -0

I'm will airing for California to drop-off into the ocean. But, I'd miss almonds and cashews.

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– TallestSkil 1 point 2 years ago +1 / -0

Fun fact: The US gives tens of millions of gallons to Mexico as part of a “sharing” agreement, and the Mexicans take millions more annually than they’re legally allowed, but we do nothing about it.

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