'What Caused The Hawaii Wildfires,' Asks The BBC, As It Deviously Manipulates Readers Into Believing It Was Climate Change
Part I Of What Caused The Hawaii Wildfires
The ‘Trusted News Initiative’ BBC strikes again, this time inviting its readers by sleight of hand reporting to believe that the Hawaii wildfires have been caused by climate change, whilst at the same time providing enough information for readers to put two and two together and come up with the bleedin’ obvious answer of four.
First the reporter states the likely reasons why the fires have been so intense and spread so quickly.
Hawaii is no stranger to wildfires, but those of the past few days are being called some of the worst in the archipelago's history.
Their toll has been devastating, though what sparked the deadly fires is still under investigation.
Hurricane winds and dry weather, however, helped fuel the flames.
Drought or abnormally dry conditions across large parts of Hawaii - including the entire island of Maui - also played a role.
Around 14% of the state is suffering from severe or moderate drought, according to the US Drought Monitor, while 80% of Hawaii is classed as abnormally dry.
Last month the National Weather Service noted that brush fires had been reported in Maui and briefly closed a highway. Forecasters warned at the time that "the risk of fires during this year's dry season is elevated".
Scientists also note that some parts of the Hawaiian islands are covered with non-native grasses that are more flammable than native plants.
This, coupled with dry conditions, can cause a spark to ignite a fire that can spread quickly.
It’s hot, it’s dry, it’s windy and parts of the island are covered with flammable non-native grasses. Putting aside for the moment why it is hot, dry and windy in Hawaii (I’ll come to that in Part II) all we need therefore is a source of ignition. Clue: it’s not lightning and it’s not volcanoes spewing red hot embers all over the place. Hmm, what does that leave? Dogs? Nah, pooches don’t play with matches. Cats, lizards, frogs, rogue firebug horses, birds who’ve learned to start fires by rubbing their beaks vigorously against dry twigs? Fire ants? Do they live on Hawaii? Could be. Could be fire-breathing flying pig-dragons too. Humans? What about humans? Of course! Knock me down with a feather, how did I miss that? Stupid, negligent, irresponsible humans; malicious, criminal humans (arsonists). There’s never any shortage of stupid amongst the enlightened ranks of the human species, but I’m inclined to believe that malicious and criminal applies more here, and not just random malicious and criminal, but planned, organised and deliberate malicious and criminal. It’s been happening a lot with ‘wild’ fires this summer, from Canada, to Italy, to Greece and now Hawaii - which has made great headlines for ‘the world is burning’ (or boiling) crowd. Purely coincidentally of course. I’ve been alive long enough to realise how stupid and irresponsible people can be. I’ve also lived through the past 3 years to convince me just how evil, malicious and destructive humans can be when they are fixated upon achieving ideological/political/financial objectives - and there’s not much difference in those respects between Covid and climate change.
This is a rather amusing statement from the BBC:
Maui itself was also under a red flag alert - meaning warm temperatures, very low humidities, and stronger winds were expected to combine to produce an increased risk of fire danger - before the fires broke out.
Climate activists were like, ‘Yeah man, great opportunity for a false red flag. Let’s get out there and start some serious fires and generate some serious headlines for The Cause’.
Cos it’s climate change and it’s never happened before, says the BBC:
In a news conference on Thursday, Hawaii Governor Josh Green said that the wildfires are the "largest natural disaster" in the state's history.
"We have never experienced a wildfire that affected a city like this before," Mr Green said, adding that the challenges of climate change are putting unprecedented strain on Hawaii.
"We're seeing this for the first time in many different parts of the world," he said.
The BBC also tells us this:
Wildfires were once uncommon in Hawaii, ignited largely through volcanic eruptions or lightning strikes. But in recent decades, human activity has made them more common and extreme.
Naturally, from what has already been said, the reader is invited to come to the conclusion that ‘human activity’ equates to the burning of fossil fuels, the use of gas stoves, gas boilers and the driving of cars. But the bleedin’ obvious is in front of our faces: arson and carelessness account for the majority, if not all of the sources of ignition of these fires. So that leaves the climate crisis fanatics left with the only option of blaming the prevailing weather conditions (hot, dry, windy) for the ‘unprecedented’ intensity and rapid spread of the ‘wild’ fires, whilst totally ignoring the significant and inconvenient fact that the fires were started by human hand. See Part II for the verdict on that whacko theory.
Hopefully not spoiling Part 2, but in case you've not seen it.
https://cliffmass.blogspot.com/2023/08/wind-driven-wildfires-on-maui.html
Comments will worth a read too
If anyone has access to check out the GOES satellite imagery from last Wednesday, I'd be curious to see if all those fires in Hawaii popped off all at once, just like they did up in Canada. I tried checking myself, but how convenient... the image production from that satellite is currently down. Gee, imagine that.
"GOES-West - Hawaii - Fire Temperature - We are working to restore image production as quickly as possible. Please refer to the other GOES imagery sites listed on our resources page. Thank you for your patience"
https://climaterealist.substack.com/p/debunking-the-climate-change-narrative