3PM Tuesday February 6, 2024. |
And stuff.
Folks in HUGE Canaanite enclaves are finding their hillside slaughter pens for children, moving. Like the front yard moving east, while the hill moves south, and the backyard moves west. Read many reports in comments sections about this.
Plus what I've seen.
Turns out LA is going to get an EQ, as well. Not as big as Frisco, but ENOUGH.
Why pick on us? the whiny killers bemoan. Recall. From 2 years ago. For the sins of Sodom and Gomorrah are upon your heads. You export sodomy, to the world. You export child sexploitation, to the world. You revel in the blood of the innocent. You routinely announce, God can't stop us now! I've heard it myself.
https://yeshuafreedom.com/w/o5S6buntcFFFfHjmhnocAu
Plus, you smell bad. Like really awful. I don't know how dogs and cats can stand you lizards. You've had plenty of jokes, dinner parties, and such at my and Yeshua's expense.
Okay then.
By Friday, Storm 36 will be done and time to get ready!
For storm 37.
Let's take a vote. All these storms, back to back, or spread out over Feb and March. Cast your votes today, last chance to influence an outcome. You don't have to tell me (most emails are blocked anyways), you only have to tell our Father, YHVH. Or Yeshua, same difference. I'll get it from them.
After all, THERE ARE FOUR MORE TO GO.
What is it they say, saving the best for last? Something like that.
PS. The desert DUMB locales are GETTING HAMMERED. New lakes, others formed last year and ballooning in size. My kind of rain.
Matillja Dam overtops in Ojai, CA. |
Ever flooding Southland, Los Angeles. |
From Yahoo news
Rainfall in Southern California has already smashed records since the relentless atmospheric river storm barreled into the region and parked itself over the Los Angeles Basin, causing flooding and mudslides — some of which ruined homes and forced evacuations.
And it's not over yet.
Forecasters are warning of heavy precipitation continuing through Tuesday morning, with a widespread flood advisory still in effect and showers lingering through at least late Wednesday.
“For the Los Angeles area, we are going to see some more breaks today in the rain — something we haven’t seen since Sunday morning — but it’s still going to be raining,” Ryan Kittell, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Oxnard, said early Tuesday.
The atmospheric river has also taken a deadly toll across the state, contributing to the deaths of at least three people in Northern California who were killed by falling trees, according to Brian Ferguson, spokesperson for the governor’s Office of Emergency Services.
A flash flood warning was newly issued Tuesday morning for northwestern Orange County, including Anaheim, Irvine and Huntington Beach, and for a swath of western Los Angeles County, including the Hollywood Hills, Griffith Park, Beverly Hills, Malibu and across the Santa Monica Mountains, as well as for a portion of southeastern Ventura County, as more moderate to heavy rain is again drenching the area.
Rainfall totals in the Santa Monica Mountains, largely considered the hardest hit by the storm, have averaged 7 to 11 inches since Sunday, with local amounts surpassing 12 inches, according to the weather service. In Orange County, urban areas have already reported 2 to 5 inches of rain.
"Flash flooding, mud and debris flows, and landslide and rock slides have occurred in this area, and should continue through at least mid-morning," the new warning for Orange County said.
The rainfall has been record-smashing across Southern California, with nearly half the average seasonal rainfall falling in just two days, on Sunday and Monday, officials said.
"Rainfall in downtown Los Angeles on the 4th and the 5th [of February] totaled 7.03 inches," an analysis from the National Weather Service said. "That is the third wettest consecutive two-day total since official weather records began in 1877 ... and the highest two-day rainfall total for the month of February."
https://www.yahoo.com/news/relentless-record-breaking-rain-continues-162842562.html
The massive amount of rain, along with its affiliated threats, prompted officials to order the evacuation of some foothill communities, especially in the Santa Monica Mountains. Orange County officials issued evacuation warnings for some Santa Ana foothill communities late Monday. Residents are urged to avoid traveling on canyon roads.
As of late Monday, Los Angeles authorities had responded to more than 300 mudslides, with 35 homes or buildings damaged by debris flows, including five that were deemed unsafe to enter.
The San Diego River at Fashion Valley is again forecast to overflow its banks, with the latest projections from the California Nevada River Forecast Center showing it peaking early Tuesday. Weather officials expect flooding around the river, near Fashion Valley mall.
Heavy rainfall triggered flash flooding in the southern part of Los Angeles County, California, on Thursday, February 1.
The Long Beach and Rancho Palos Verdes areas flooded, causing Caltrans to close part of Interstate 710.
This footage shows a flooded road in Long Beach with a stranded car stuck in the floodwater.
Heavy rainfall in Southern California has caused flooding, mudslides and debris flows since Sunday. A local emergency was declared in Los Angeles due to 307 reported mudslides, damage to several buildings and numerous high-water rescues.
While evacuation orders in Ventura and Santa Barbara counties have been lifted, lingering heavy rain could trigger additional flooding from Los Angeles to San Diego on Tuesday. Northern and Central California also face lingering storm impacts, with over 150,000 customers without power and three fatalities due to falling trees.