Those "wildfires" are SUSPICIOUS. Because:
Started at the EXACT SAME TIME across Canada
This video shows they all started in late May 2023 at https://www.bitchute.com/video/3cf8zXuRHoiy/
In this video, I live in the middle right side. Thanks to BigMikesSaggyBaggins for the link to this video :)
Usually, they start at random times. Mostly where natural lightning hits. Which start natural wildfires. But it is very unlikely that there would be natural lightning ALL ACROSS Canada at once. I never heard of that before. This would be a first.
Apocalyptic-like video. But they are real. I see one of those wildfire from my living room window:
- https://odysee.com/@RT:fd/CANADA-FIRE:a
- https://odysee.com/@paulbutler:f/unbelievable-images-and-videos-millions:4
Air quality alerts for east coast. Millions affected. Including Washington DC, NY, Ottawa:
Live maps:
Started in MOIST MAY
I live in Quebec, Canada. In my northern area, historically and since we have detailed recorded statistics, most wildfires started between late July and August. This period is the hottest and driest time of the year. Not in May. Because until April, there is a huge amount of accumulated snow on the ground. We're talking about 4 to 10 feet of snow. Which is the equivalent of 4 months of rain here. By the end of April, this accumulated snow is fully melted. Then this huge amount of water is sucked in by the forest. Through their root. They drank a lot of it. In other words, in late April and May, the forest here are filled with moisture and water. NOT dry. My father was a forest engineer. So I learn a few things about the above.
If you are not familiar with the melting snow thing and the north of Quebec. Think of it as someone that goes to an open bar. Then, drank the WHOLE BAR. Then try to fool you into believing that he/she is not drunk but dry and only had one drink ;) LOL You're really welcome to enjoy yourself. But don't drag me into your lie https://files.catbox.moe/i46s4i.jpg
Much BIGGER than usual.
Those "wildfires" are so big, they show on those satellite photos at:
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https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/images/151430/fires-burn-across-quebec
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On this photo above, my city is called Sept-Iles. Around the middle, right side.
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Photo:
Usually, wildfires have an annual expected average size. This year, there are up to 100 TIMES bigger. For examples, two fires, 3 miles from my home, are more than 160 square miles of total burning inferno. Compare to 14 square miles for the average past year.
Firefighters from across Canada flew in. Plus, more than 350 military from worldwide joined the efforts to resolve those challenges.
Total fires 2,214
Total area 4,300,000 ha (10,600,000 acres)
On June 8th. 137 fires were active in Quebec and 54 in Ontario
Source
Thunderstorm and lightning SOUNDED DIFFERENT
I'm born and raised in Quebec. Thunderstorm and lightning have a unique sound here. This year when they started in late May, all at one, the thunderstorm and lightning sounded VERY DIFFERENT. A continued and rolling sound of lightning for minutes. Louder too. Compare to the natural sound which is very sudden and short. And lower volume. Which last seconds at top. Not minutes.
Started on or NEAR CRITICAL POWER LINES AND RAILROADS
Most wildfire this year started all at once near critical power lines and railroads all across Canada in remote area. This is very suspicious, usually they start at random locations depending on the present weather. For example, in my city, there is a huge amount of power lines for very large hydroelectric dams. Including "Churchill Falls" and more than 80 other dams in norther Quebec. A significant amount of this renewable electricity is sold to the United Stated. Mostly east coast. New York. So a significant amount of New York is powered by electricity bought from Quebec. As for the railroads, one of the biggest "wildfire" start RIGHT IN THE MIDDLE of this railroad. Which transport critical aluminum ingredients to the huge Alouette Aluminum Plant. 550,000 metric tonnes capacity per year.
Photo powerlines Quebec June 2023:
Photo Alouette Aluminum Plant in my city at Sept-Iles. This plant uses gigantic amount of electric power at https://files.catbox.moe/4u20re.jpg
Questions
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A more realistic and plausible simple explanation is that someone partying light her/his fart too close to something flammable ;) https://files.catbox.moe/y5pc6z.jpeg
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Fires started all at the same time by arsonists?
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Somehow started from above by arsonists?
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Somehow started from below by arsonists?
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Who would benefit from targeting critical infrastructure such as power lines and railroads?
BTW I'm safe. My city is facing the ocean. Which is not going to burn any time soon, LOL ;) https://files.catbox.moe/h6esff.jpg Also, many exit routes were planned years ago.
Hey! Salut mon beau Quebecois!! 514-50 dans mon reseau!