If it seems to you as if everything is whipsawing–from politics to the weather to pink moons–that’s because it is.
Those who want to put forth a specific narrative are watching one thing occur here and another there.
A stark example: “Absolutely gigantic dust storms are ‘triggering massive highway pileups’ in the middle of the country, virtually the entire Southwest is currently experiencing at least some level of drought, and dust storms and soil erosion are now costing our economy more than 100 billion dollars every year,” in the words of one commentator.
“The same conditions that prevailed during the Dust Bowl years of the 1930s are returning, and scientists have warned us that the megadrought that has now begun could continue for a long time to come.” As in centuries.
At the same time, parts of the world are struggling against inundation: too much rain.
Remember Asheville (and other parts of that region)?
It has not stopped.
“In early April, the southern and midwestern United States experienced devastating storms, including tornadoes and torrential rains, leading to historic flooding. At least 24 people lost their lives across seven states, with Kentucky, Tennessee, and Arkansas among the hardest hit. The flooding resulted in over 500 road closures in Kentucky alone, and significant infrastructure damage was reported in multiple states.”
The same for Europe.
The litany is almost endless.
In 2024, the most severe weather events included an exceptionally active tornado season, a record-breaking heat wave, and a series of catastrophic floods and droughts.
Tornadoes were particularly prevalent, resulting in a near-record number of confirmed twisters and numerous state records being broken.
Recall also how Governor Ron DeSantis was tending to the wallop from one major hurricane when days later another struck.
Powerful Hurricane Helene made landfall on the Florida Gulf Coast as a Category 4 storm on September 26, causing catastrophic flooding across the southern Appalachians (the Asheville floods). On October 9 came Hurricane Milton near Siesta Key. It just missed wiping out massive parts of the Tampa area.
That storm’s rate of rapid intensification—a 90-mile-per-hour increase in wind speed during a 24-hour period from early October 6 to early October 7—was among the highest ever observed, reports the government.
Storms are doing things no modern meteorologist has seen before.
All this while much of the Los Angeles area (including tony Malibu, the nation’s epicenter of Hollywood wealth) were destroyed in fires.
In the state, 1,716 homes and businesses.
That’s a lot, but nothing like what could (and like will) occur, without a sharp u-turn by confused, materialistic, celebrity-obsessed (see Sean Diddy) America.
Bizarre scandals. Bizarre things in the public domain. Nothing seems of permanence (save the God Who awaits to many in His churches).
Statues are destroyed or desiccated. Satanist are granted public forums (in the name of religious freedom or freedom of speech!).
As we have pointed for what, next month, will be twenty-five years, events are intensifying around us.
We’ll have an online retreat addressing such matter shortly.
They may be coming, such events, more “slowly” than many who expected an apocalypse in the 1990s, or 200ss, or 2010s anticipated, but they are here, plain to see, and as potent as what prophetically has been expected.
Drought in Colombia. Wildfires in Chile. Brazil flooding. Nowhere immune.
“The trials of your time now head to the crescendo of meaning, whereby to each will be shown the imperfection of the past and the need for purification of the future,” said a word of knowledge in 2010, adding in 2017, “Those who framed the future in accordance with their own timetables now find disbelief in prophecies though they unfold around you.”
And in three years later it added (this anonymous series we’ve called the “1990 Prophecies” because they began that year), “This is the time written about by the seers of today and the prophets of long ago. Before all, the landscape will change. No longer will men command the forces around them. In the sky will be written the dangers of the day, and on earth will be the fear of misery as the ultimate plague. Only when men treat God for Who He is will events so foretold ease and the earth settle in the purity of love and obedience, in safety and harmony. Without obedience, the whole of hell will be unleashed and the warring spirit of man unchained. In your heart, see God for Who He is and what good He brings — the joy that can be yours even in consternation.”
Perhaps worth pondering.
[see also: the 1990 Prophecies]
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