In the last decade, Hawaii has prided itself on having the world’s best outdoor all-hazard public safety warning system.
The warning systems consist of over 400 sirens all across several islands.
Despite having the world’s best warning system according to the Associated Press, many residents of Lahaina were given little warning about the massive wildfire.
It was even reported no sirens sounded off which has raised major suspicions.
Hawaii’s alarm system didn’t warn people of the blaze. Why did it fail? https://t.co/xmhwbKkGC0
— Kelly (@Kelly04405562) August 12, 2023
Per Deseret News:
In the last five years, the Hawaiian emergency alarm system mistakenly went off two different times, causing panic among residents. This week, the system fell short yet again but in a profound way — there was never a warning to the community about the latest wildfires set ablaze on the island of Maui.
Most survivors had little warning of the gaining fire until they smelled smoke or saw flames, reported The Associated Press. Dustin Kaleiopu, a resident of the city of Lahaina that’s in ruins, left his home with his grandfather when smoke started coming through the window, reported CBS News.
ADVERTISEMENT“By the time we got in our car, our neighbor’s yard was on fire,” Kaleiopu said. “There were strangers in our yard with their water hoses trying to put fires out.”
“By the time we got in our car, our neighbor’s yard was on fire,” Dustin Kaleiopu, a resident of the city of Lahaina that’s in ruins, told CBS. “There were strangers in our yard with their water hoses trying to put fires out.”
Hawaii has prided itself in the past on what it’s called the largest integrated outdoor all-hazard public safety warning system in the world, equipped with 400 sirens across the island.
But the Hawaii emergency management team has no record of the sirens sounding to warn residents of the fires on Tuesday, per AP. Instead, Adam Weintraub — who is a Hawaii Emergency Management spokesman — said alerts were sent out through cellphones, televisions and radio stations, which weren’t reliable considering the power and cell tower outages at the time.
This week, the system fell short yet again but in a profound way — there was never a warning to the community about the latest wildfires set ablaze on the island of Maui. | By @rolds22 https://t.co/AKYZpkzDPw
— Deseret News (@Deseret) August 11, 2023
Per The NY Post:
Blaring warning sirens throughout Maui failed to activate as the apocalyptic wildfires swept through the island, officials said Friday.
The Hawaii Emergency Services Administration confirmed that the emergency system it tests every month in preparation for a crisis was not turned on as the flames raced toward residents.
Instead, HI-EMA sent out alerts via mobile devices. radio and television, and the county’s opt-in resident alert system — which may have never arrived due to widespread power and cellular outages across Maui.
“Neither Maui nor HI-EMA activated warning sirens on Maui during the wildfire incident,” the agency said in a statement.
ADVERTISEMENT“The sirens are used to alert the public to seek additional information; they do not necessarily indicate an evacuation.”
Maui’s emergency sirens didn’t go off as wildfires tore through island, officials confirm as residents return to destroyed homes https://t.co/vPlD4JsgTp pic.twitter.com/KBRecWd5y0
— New York Post (@nypost) August 12, 2023
Here was our prior report on the story, which is proving to be more accurate as more details come out:
Maui Destroyed By Fire, Lahaina Town Completely GONE!
Let’s dig into the Maui fire story.
I’m guessing you may have seen this covered on the news already, but I’m going to cover some things you might not have seen.
This is a story that has captured my attention for a couple reasons…
One, because I already find many things about it do not make logical sense.
And Two, because I’ve been there and walked up and down Front Street and enjoyed the wonderful Lahaina Town and now it’s GONE.
Literally looks like something worse than Iraq after a bombing.
It will eventually be rebuilt, but not with the same character it had.
And likely not for a long time.
So if you were thinking of going and seeing Lahaina Town in Maui, you can basically cross that off your list for years.
So very sad.
Let’s start with this video:
Is the Banyan tree gone?! Maui Lahaina front street destroyed pic.twitter.com/tHnjyJXxDd
— Justin Hart (@justin_hart) August 9, 2023
If you’ve been there before, this view is stunning.
Even if you’ve never been there before, what does this look like?
It looks like something from the battlefields of Iraq or Somalia!
This does not look like Hawaii.
I said a couple things right away when I first heard the news and first started watching videos of the destruction.
I said this does not look or feel “natural”.
Sorry, it just doesn’t.
The other thing I said was this looks like some sort of weapon was deployed.
The third thing I said was this feels EERILY like those Colorado fires from a few years back.
Remember those?
Just my first thoughts, but perhaps they will turn out to have some merit behind them.
Lahaina Town dates back to the early 1800s.
The official story here that I’ve heard parroted over and over and over on the news and on The Weather Channel is that a hurricane in the area created high winds, and that very dry conditions sparked a fire, and then the high winds spread the fire.
Ok, fine.
So that’s the first time high winds and dry conditions have hit Hawaii since 1802?
Really?
I’m sorry folks but I’m skeptical.
It’s actually a real shame that almost nothing is trustworthy anymore, but that’s the world we live in.
We’ve been lied to over and over and over that it would actually be FOOLISH to believe an official story about something this big and take it at face value.
Is everything a conspiracy?
No.
But most of my so-called “conspiracy theories” over the past 15 years have proven to be true!
We now call them Conspiracy TRUTH.
So when a new one rolls along, it’s the fool that blindly accepts it at face value.
The wise person says let me investigate and use all 5 of the senses God gave me and the brain that God gave me before I come to a conclusion here.
The wise person says “perhaps the Tell-A-Vision isn’t telling me the truth….”
My guard ALSO goes up when the official narrative is one that just so happens to reinforce one of their favorite topics: Climate Change.
Yeah sorry, I’m skeptical.
“Ze will eat ze bugs and ze will own nothing and be happy or ve vill burn Maui to the ground!” — Klaus Schwab, probably
So let’s start with the official report from the AP and we’ll move on from there:
The wildfire that has brought sheer devastation to Maui is especially heartbreaking for Hawaii because it struck one of its most historic cities and the onetime capital of the former kingdom.
Lahaina holds deep cultural significance for Hawaiians. The city was once the royal residence of King Kamehameha III, who unified Hawaii under a single kingdom by defeating the other islands’ chiefs. His successors made it the capital from 1820 to 1845, according to the National Park Service.
Kings and queens are buried in the graveyard of the 200-year-old stone Wainee Church. Later named Waiola, the church that once sat up to 200 people was photographed apparently engulfed in flames this week.
“It was really the political center for Hawaii,” said Davianna McGregor, a retired professor of ethnic studies at the University of Hawaii at Manoa.
What’s driving Maui’s devastating fires, and how climate change is fueling those conditions
Dozens of people were killed and hundreds of structures were damaged or destroyed in the blaze that ignited Tuesday and quickly spread throughout the western Maui community of less than 13,000 residents.
It’s feared that the fire also consumed much of Lahaina’s historic Front Street, home to restaurants, bars, stores and what is believed to be the United States’ largest banyan, a fig tree with roots that grow out of branches and eventually reach the soil like new trunks.
There has been some debate about whether the Banyan Tree survived, but it looks like it will make it.
If you don’t know what the Banyan tree is or why it’s special, watch this:
The Lahaina banyan tree was first brought to the Hawaiian islands in 1873 by missionaries from India & had a long history in religion, medicine, and pop culture.
The tree and so much more has been lost to these wildfires. 😪#Lahaina #BanyanTree #MauiFires #Hawaii pic.twitter.com/unUKmSqcCU
— ∼Marietta (@MariettaDaviz) August 9, 2023
Another wild video showing the destruction but appearing to show that the Banyan Tree is mostly ok:
Not my video- a ground view of Lahaina today shows the Banyan Tree somehow still stands amidst so much destruction, for those who have been worried.
Only time will tell if it survives the injuries sustained in the fires, but it feels like a small beacon of hope in this disaster. pic.twitter.com/xZ4x2hJ3Li— Panda’s Toybox (@PandaToybox) August 9, 2023
The death toll currently sits at 36:
Ok, now let’s go to my friend Stew Peters who had MANY of the same thoughts I did:
These burned out cars are eerily reminiscent of 9/11. pic.twitter.com/INaCdGdejE
— Stew Peters (@realstewpeters) August 10, 2023
Yes, exactly right.
Fire is one thing.
But fire stoked by thermite or incited by a DEW (more on that below) burns in a very different way.
Very much looks and feels like the results after 9/11.
So sad.
“NOT NORMAL” seems to be the best and most accurate way to sum things up right now:
This is NOT normal. pic.twitter.com/jem0ZM0r1J
— Stew Peters (@realstewpeters) August 10, 2023
NOTE: no reports so far have been able to explain how the fire first actually sparked.
Just “dry conditions”.
Or were they set?
Stew Peters is asking the question and I think it’s a good one:
Typical arson. Just burn Maui down in a couple of hours. Totally normal. pic.twitter.com/JaJ4HYsGZS
— Stew Peters (@realstewpeters) August 10, 2023
Stew also does not seem to buy the official story…
Me either.
Lahaina, Maui has been RAZED to the ground.
The claim that the these “wildfires” were spread by hurricane force winds is bogus bc along with hurricane winds comes LOTS of RAIN.
Only a Directed Energy Weapon (DEW) can cause this kind of destruction. pic.twitter.com/LF8mXe1SIp
— Stew Peters (@realstewpeters) August 10, 2023
So now let’s talk about the obvious elephant in the room and how eerily similar this feels to the Colorado fires….
Were both fires sparked by a DEW?
The Directed Energy Weapons (DEWs) being used on Hawaii are powerful enough to set the Pacific Ocean on fire. pic.twitter.com/5ZdGNyZqOj
— Stew Peters (@realstewpeters) August 10, 2023
Let’s flash back to the 2022 Colorado fires when I covered those and asked some very similar questions.
Were both of these “DEW” attacks?
I explain what that means below…
“DEW” Attack Suspected In Unprecedented Colorado Fires
Just yesterday, I brought you Hank Kunneman’s prophetic word for 2022…
Among other things, he said people would routinely be saying “We’ve never seen anything like this before.”
Well, it turns out that things are starting already, as the fires in Colorado can only be described as “unprecedented”.
The story is odd for several reasons.
One: I follow the news pretty close and I haven’t seen much coverage of this story.
I only see it mostly online.
You’d think that when an entire neighborhood is charred to a crisp and burned to the ground in a scene that looks like the after-effects of an attack from the Crystalline Entity it would get some news coverage.
But this had been oddly, largely ignored.
Second: have you ever in your life heard of wildfires in Colorado in the dead of winter in a suburban neighborhood?
I haven’t.
Seems very strange.
And the direction and intensity of the fire seems almost artificial.
It’s why many online are beginning to ask if this was a Directed Energy Weapon attack, otherwise known as a “DEW”.
I’m not saying it was or it wasn’t, but I am saying I appreciate the people who are asking the question and digging into it.
Here’s a sampling of what some are saying online:
This Suspicious Looking "Beam Of Energy" Hits Right Where the Fires Sparked In Colorado! DEW? Shout out to @Kt23kartracer #MarshallFire pic.twitter.com/guZ7Smog5g
— Dahboo7 🎙 (@dahboo7) December 31, 2021
…do some of these picture look odd.
like DEW related?https://t.co/TkE2RSW8yq— Jean-Claude (@Beyond_Mystic) December 31, 2021
Straight out of ST:TNG when the Crystalline Entity attacks:
I would have thought the Colorado Fires would dominate the Sunday morning news. 1000 houses burned to the ground Christmas Week. People lost everything.
What is happening to humanity? pic.twitter.com/my6cWkgCdG— Darla Shine 👑 (@DarlaShine) January 2, 2022
https://twitter.com/MadorePhilias/status/1477513260849106945
https://twitter.com/LilStormRogue/status/1477333954604650496
None of it seems to make much sense:
These are DEW's! Just all-of-a-sudden we hv hundreds of homes burning dwn in Colorado in late December! I',m not buying it! These are not 'natural' fires! These hv been intentionally created! Here is aerial footage of these fires in Colorado! https://t.co/jGuxMlWaOt
— Ed Kiely (@EdKiely1) December 31, 2021
Here are more details from ABC News:
Thousands of people are being asked to evacuate immediately and hundreds of buildings have already been lost as winds fuel fast-spreading wildfires in Boulder County, Colorado.
Several small grass fires, sparked by downed power lines amid gusty winds in central Colorado, according to the Boulder County sheriff, have grown into raging blazes Thursday afternoon.
Of two wildfires burning, the most significant — the Marshall Fire — was first reported after 11 a.m. Thursday and has since “ballooned” to approximately 1,600 acres, Boulder County Sheriff Joe Pelle told reporters during a press briefing.
“We’ve been really concerned about the speed of the fire,” Pelle said. “This was consuming football-field lengths of land in seconds.”
Louisville, Colorado, with a population of about 20,000, is being asked to evacuate due to the Marshall Fire, according to the Boulder Office of Emergency Management. The entire city of Superior, Colorado, with a population of about 13,000 people, is also being asked to evacuate due to that fire.
Here are more videos live on the scene:
#Colorado
Home surveillance cameras show the rapid speed at which a wind-driven fire moves across combustible material(s). This massive wildfire was sparked by downed power lines toppled in the high winds.#CAwx
pic.twitter.com/dm9lCD3NFj— The News Spark (@TheNewsSpark) December 30, 2021
Boulder Fire behind Costco In Superior Colorado. Thanks to the guy in the truck for saying to turn around 🙏🏼 pic.twitter.com/3fmI7XxXwT
— Robert Gutierrez (@Robertt_ml) December 30, 2021
The winds will not stop.
Entire neighborhoods up in flames. #marshallfire pic.twitter.com/K2k6NWUC4N— Sam Boik (@SamBoik) December 31, 2021
Close up view of the Boulder County fire and reaction from inside the Chuck E. Cheese off Marshall Rd in Superior, CO with wind gusts of 110mph. pic.twitter.com/OkBUnl8E9c
— Jason Fletcher (@SoFarFletched) December 30, 2021
#BREAKING: Cars flipping around and going wrong way on U.S. 36 to escape fast-moving wildfire. #cowx @DenverChannel @BoulderOEM #wildfire #BoulderFire pic.twitter.com/uiBiptg5J7
— Russell Haythorn (@RussellHaythorn) December 30, 2021
And from an airplane:
#BREAKING: New Footage From The Air, Taken On A Commercial Flight This Evening, Shows Hundreds Of Homes And Structures On Fire In #Superior & #Louisville, CO. #BreakingNews#coloradofires#BoulderFires#BoulderColorado
https://t.co/FTjCeT0AMx— The News Spark (@TheNewsSpark) December 31, 2021
Of course the MSM and lefties can only blame “climate change”:
Suburbs raised to the ground by a fast moving wild fire in Colorado. In late December. This is the climate roaring. pic.twitter.com/RY3DDQiDgp
— Sandy McLachlan (@mclachlan_sandy) January 1, 2022
It indeed may be “man made”…..but in what way?
Climate change?
Or DEW?
Or something else…?
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