Guessing the plumbing thing is plausible, considering the following:
Older homes, unlike newer PEX/PVC, had copper and cast iron pipes
Plumbing systems are grounded/earthed, typically using an 8 gauge copper wire, secured to the copper pipe and the other end to a 6 foot copper rod driven into the ground. Nobody likes getting electrocuted in the shower when lightning strikes...
I could imagine some kind of electrical energy following the path of least resistance through the ground, to the rod & "all up in" through the plumbing system.
This still does not explain the "blue stuff" that didn't get fried...and the other weirdness.
hmmmm The youtube account for the first two videos you linked to has been removed.
I thought the aluminum melting on cars was strange, but when I looked into it, it is fairly common with car fires, if the fire is allowed to reach maximum burn temperatures (not put out by a fire department before that point).
The fact that the local police prevented photos/videos after the event (at least tried to stop them) is one more piece of why the whole thing is highly suspicious.
Interesting that the event is now almost completely forgotten by anyone other than those who lived there. CBS ran a story today about the 4 remaining people who are missing. Did they account for all the children who were missing?
Guessing the plumbing thing is plausible, considering the following:
Older homes, unlike newer PEX/PVC, had copper and cast iron pipes
Plumbing systems are grounded/earthed, typically using an 8 gauge copper wire, secured to the copper pipe and the other end to a 6 foot copper rod driven into the ground. Nobody likes getting electrocuted in the shower when lightning strikes...
I could imagine some kind of electrical energy following the path of least resistance through the ground, to the rod & "all up in" through the plumbing system.
This still does not explain the "blue stuff" that didn't get fried...and the other weirdness.
hmmmm The youtube account for the first two videos you linked to has been removed.
I thought the aluminum melting on cars was strange, but when I looked into it, it is fairly common with car fires, if the fire is allowed to reach maximum burn temperatures (not put out by a fire department before that point).
The fact that the local police prevented photos/videos after the event (at least tried to stop them) is one more piece of why the whole thing is highly suspicious.
Interesting that the event is now almost completely forgotten by anyone other than those who lived there. CBS ran a story today about the 4 remaining people who are missing. Did they account for all the children who were missing?