Nothing to see here in Hawaii, people!
(media.greatawakening.win)
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Nothing to see here... Except some strange plasma (?) fire, like nothing you've ever seen before in your entire life, flowing across the street
https://www.bitchute.com/video/ckPW2DoJjmnQ/
Creep across the street. Amazing. What is the fuel?
I have no idea... but whatever it is, it raised my eyebrows for sure.
I know people who were fire-fighter, you need to have two things in order for the fire to burn.
What's on the pavement because that's a concrete. Unless you have a bunch of gasoline leaking all over, it won't burn like that. I was on the fire line before also, so I know this too.
It just dawned on me that it acts very much like Sterno/alcohol in the way that it moved.
What's strange is how it remains intact, not leaving any kind of "residue" for lack of better term, as it moves. I mean, I would expect there to be some "transference" of the fire with the physical world - like a slug/snail slime trail - but there is none.
This leads me to wonder if it's plasma. Most are familiar with the first 3 states of matter, but the 4th, plasma - most if us have limited information outside of what we've seen in videos and things like plasma cutters etc.
https://youtube.com/shorts/uUGzrS5tpLc?feature=share
Aluminum dust like they sprayed on Maui before the fires.
Oh. AL burns quick. Yeah.
It just looks like flames being blown across the pavement to me. Just as a flame can go up from a burning material, wind can make flames go sideways.
The winds are blowing the flames across the surface. They are not arising from the surface. You have to think in terms of what the combustion is. The fuel is solid material from plants and possibly dust. (Sawdust or grain dust can produce terrible fires.) The wind is blowing plenty of dust. So the burning particles are blown across the street by the wind. The redness of the flames indicates that it is carbonaceous material and the fuel/air ratio is higher than it would be in quiet air, where there would be normal draft. This is an example of the capricious nature of forest fires and urban fires generally.