Here is the link to view the grid pattern of earthquakes for La Palma over the last 48 hours. You will need to zoom in on La Palma. I am unfamiliar with how seismic activity is measured in real time. The grid suggests these are not naturally produced, but again, not my field. Thoughts? https://www.emsc-csem.org/Earthquake/Map/gmap.php
I discovered this information this morning from a video posted last night on Bitchute. Here is the link to his video https://www.bitchute.com/video/HOy53HLRTMzN/
I recently read a short discussion on this possible tsunami-east-coast-US issue, and a couple of geologists in the group said not to worry, that tsunamis do not travel in a straight line from the point of earthquake, tectonic subduction, or mass falling into the ocean. If you look at an image of the Atlantic Ocean you can see that there is a LOT of open ocean north and south (not just east) of the Las Palmas island.
If a large portion of the island slid into the ocean it would displace a lot of water, sure, but the water would be sent rushing in an expanding arc toward the west, north, AND east from the origin point.
Their point was that in the 8 to 12 hour period after such an event, coastal regions of Greenland, Canada, the US, Mexico, Central America, and South America would see moderate tidal waves but not civilization-ending tsunamis like we see in the movies. It would take something much, much larger to do that, such as a mile-wide meteor with a great deal of velocity and mass to create that kind of killer tsunami.