The recent Fires in Hawaii have raised a lot of controversy and outrage. There are so many things that just do not add up and so many more that give one pause. What exactly happened there? Where does the truth lie.
We know for certain that the fire in Lahaina was a true tragedy and it appears a real travesty as well.
Tragedy Definition & Meaning |
The History and Definition of ‘Travesty’ – Merriam-Webster Travesty came into English in the mid-17th century from the French travestir and the Italian travestire (“to disguise”), which in turn came from the Latin word vestire (“to dress”). |
All things point to the fact that the Elite have targeted Hawaii. Looks like it is the kind of place the Elite love to go to for fun and frolic in the sun. They don’t want locals or even middle class tourists traipsing around on their paradise.
As we continue to uncover the events surrounding this fire it is gut wrenching to learn the lengths to which the elite will go to accomplish their aims with no regard for human suffering, no respect for life, no mercy even for children, It is difficult to think of the fear, the pain and suffering of those who have been and are being subjected to through these man-made catastrophes.
The Globalists are already using the events of the past few weeks to push their Climate Agenda and Population Reduction Agenda. If you have not seen or heard, they are stating that it is necessary to reduce the population in order to avoid climate collapse.
Right on the heels of the Lahaina fire
They are blaming the Maui/Lahaina fire on Climate Change, even though that is NOT what was found to be the reason at all. Not only that, they are using the Fire as a focal point to introduce their plans for population Control/Reduction.
A population ecologist suggests that the only way to save the planet is through a population correction.
Should we not take advantage of this scientific study and its findings, taking a population correction into our own hands, Rees warns that there may be a civilizational collapse on the way. Essentially, if we don’t do the work and take the steps and sacrifices necessary to turn things around, the Earth will do it for us. Source
Book Linking Maui Tragedy to Climate Change Published BEFORE Wildfires Occurred
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It has been proven over and over again that our government, and many other governments are manipulating the weather, volcanos and earthquakes. Our government has been using geo engineering to control the weather for decades. At least since the created monsoons in Vietnam during the war. But, really much longer than that. So it is very likely that they were controlling Hurricane Dora and/or the winds created by it.
It has been proven over and over again that the government not only has Directed Energy Weapons, but that they have been using them. These fires that burn the paint off cars and melt steel rims but leave trees and other items still standing/sometimes seemingly unscathed, fires that burn trees from the inside…THESE ARE NOT NORMAL/Natural. Young people have grown up in this technological Dystopia have no understanding of what is natural and normal. They live in an artificial world. They have nothing in their memory banks to raise the red flag and trigger there critical thinking and enable them to discern TRUTH from LIES and RIGHT from WRONG. That is why they want to KILL all the people who are 50 and over. Once we are gone, the techno deception becomes the new norm, the new reality.
Whether the elite created the disaster through magic, through weather manipulation, or through Directed Energy Weapons, or any combination of the above, WE KNOW THEY DID IT! THE CLUES or as they would call it THE DATA adds up to their GUILT!
We know that we are in the ENDTIMES and we know that the BIBLE says the Earth will be destroyed by FIRE. The bible does not tell us who or what will cause the fires or how or when they will come. GOD KNOWS everything from the beginning and KNEW what the elite would be doing in the last days. He KNOWS the Fallen Angels and what they will be doing. SO, rest assured that GOD KNOWS exactly what is happening and HE is in Control! CHOOSE your side, and choose it quick!!! GOD takes care of His own. THE DEVIL WANTS YOU DEAD, but first he wants to take everything you have including your SOUL/SPIRIT. Who do you trust?? GOD or the DEVIL and his servants?
Of course you know me. I started my investigation into the Lahaina fire from the spiritual aspect. This lead me to some very interesting and revealing information.cer
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The very first headline that caught my attention was the following:
Mapping how the Maui fires destroyed Lahaina
Tuesday, Aug. 8 at 12:22 a.m. A brush fire ignites and begins to spread in central Maui. Strong winds, with gusts of up to 80 mph, made the area unsafe for helicopter operations.7 hours ago
We know that MAPPING is the final step in the Scientific Process. The last step before CONTROL which is always their ultimate goal.
The next thing I noted was the information on when this event occurred, or was reported to occur. It is the information that appears in print, especially immediately after the event that is most revealing. That is when they post their symbolism, the numerology and their magick workings. So, we will start with TUESDAY. Because that is where God lead me first.
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TUESDAY
Tuesday is ruled by the planet of action and energy, Mars Source
Tuesday’s element is fire and the day correlates with Mars, who is the God of War Source
Tuesday is named after the God Tyr. Tuesday is named after the Norse god Tyr. He is also known as Tiv and Tiwaz as a Germanic combat god. Source
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Tyr -Ancient god
Germanic deity
Tyr, Old Norse Týr, Old English Tiw, or Tiu, one of the oldest gods of the Germanic peoples and a somewhat enigmatic figure. He was apparently the god concerned with the formalities of war—especially treaties—and also, appropriately, of justice. It is in his character as guarantor of contracts, guardian of oaths, that the most famous myth about him may be understood: as a guarantee of good faith, he placed his hand between the jaws of the monstrous wolf Fenrir while the gods, pretending sport but intending a trap, bound the wolf; when Fenrir realized he had been tricked he bit off Tyr’s hand (hence Tyr’s identification as the one-handed god). Tyr came to be identified by the Romans with their own Mars, hence dies Marti (Mars’ Day) came to be rendered Týsdagr (Tuesday).
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Interesting, so this fire was a sacrifice to NODEN the ancient one handed GOD of the NORDICS. Tyr is the Guarantor of Contracts as in the Paris Agreements and the CLIMATE CHANGE Agenda. Guardian of OATHS…and if you follow my posts you know where OATHS began and how God feels about those.
See the following post for more information related to this topic:
THE HUNT – NODENS – The First will be Last.
They Swore an Oath – Octagon
Gifts from the Fallen – Part 3 – Hippocratic Oath – What you don’t know can kill you.
I Pledge Allegiance to the Climate Agenda
COP27 a NEW COVENANT WITH A NEW SET OF 10 COMMANDMENTS, for CLIMATE CHANGE!!
James Sternlicht, head of The Peace Department, called on faith leaders to take a climate vow: “I, as a person of hope, pledge to make the world a better place for people and planet, each day that I may live.”
Aug. 8 at 12:22 a.m. (8/8 12/22 or 88 222)
Infinity is characterized by a number of uncountable objects or concepts which have no limits or size. This concept can be used to describe something huge and boundless. It has been studied by plenty of scientists and philosophers of the world, since the early Greek and early Indian epochs.
In writing, infinity can be noted by a specific mathematical sign known as the infinity symbol (∞) created by John Wallis, an English mathematician who lived and worked in the 17th century.
The infinity symbol (∞) represents a line that never ends. The common sign for infinity, ∞, was first time used by Wallis in the mid 1650s. He also introduced 1/∞ for an infinitesimal which is so small that it can’t be measured. Wallis wrote about this and numerous other issues related to infinity in his book Treatise on the Conic Sections published in 1655. The infinity symbol looks like a horizontal version of number 8 and it represents the concept of eternity, endless and unlimited.
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Number 8 Symbolism, 8 Meaning and Numerology
RidingTheBeast.com
The Pythagoreans have made the number 8 the symbol of the love and the friendship, the prudence and the thinking and they have called it the Great “Tetractys“.
Tetra Definition & Meaning – Merriam-Webster
four : having four : having four parts. Etymology. Combining form. derived from Greek tetra- “four”Jul 27, 2023 |
T4 or Tetrad/Tetractys is the symbol for the Cosmos. This means that according to the Pythagoreans, the Tetractys represented the universal geometric, arithmetic, and musical ratios upon which the entire universe was built. Source |
Tetractys Meaning in Kabbalah The Pythagoreans weren’t the only ones to ascribe meaning to the Tetractys symbol. The mystical Hebrew belief system Kabbalah also had its own view on the Tetractys. It is a fairly similar interpretation on the symbol, however, the followers of the Kabbalah had arrived at it on a purely mystical ground while the Pythagoreans had formed their view on the symbol through geometry and mathematics. Source |
Eight “Ashtan”
The number eight represents the division of room and divinities into their constituent parts. In the Brahmanas we discover reference to Adityas or sun based divine beings. They are the children of Aditi, the Primal Goddess, and their numbers differ from 7 to 12. In the most punctual Vedic writings we discover references to eight Adityas: Mitra, Varuna, Aryaman, Amia, Bhaga, Dhatar, Indra, Vivsvant.
The best type of greeting to an individual divinity is viewed as the eightfold welcome ( sashtanga namaskaram), performed with eight appendages of the body as a characteristic of absolute regard, compliance and give up.
The study of yoga is known to have eight appendages, subsequently the name as ashtanga yoga or the eight limbed yoga. They are yama (control), niyama (rules), asana (stances), pranayama (breathing practice), pratyahara (withdrawal of faculties), dharana (focus), dhyana (reflection) and samadhi (condition of self-retention).
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88 | Hate Symbols Database
Anti-Defamation League
88 is a white supremacist numerical code for Heil Hitler. Read more about the meaning behind the numbers, as well as how it’s used in non-extremist forms.
The deadly wildfires in Maui, Hawaii, have left a mess, and now looters and land speculators are trying to cash in on the tragedy… First came the deadly fires on Maui, then the looters and speculators…
Man, returning to that house has got to feel so lucky and so shitty at the same time… Now I would like to know who owns this house… The red house that survived Maui’s fires…
The two people identified on Tuesday evening were:
- Robert Dyckman, 74, of Lahaina;
- and Buddy Jantoc, 79, also of Lahaina.
Meanwhile, in a news conference on Tuesday afternoon, Gov. Josh Green once again acknowledged the unimaginable scale of loss and offered his condolences to a state in mourning. In all, seven additional fatalities were announced on Tuesday.
In a major development Wednesday, the White House announced President Biden would visit Maui early next week to meet with survivors, first responders and state and local officials.
Biden, speaking at an event in Wisconsin, called the recovery operation “painstaking.”
“Our thoughts and prayers are with the people of Hawaii,” he added.
One week after a wall of flames tore through Lahaina town, officials say that remains are continuing to be found. The Maui wildfire is now the deadliest in the U.S. in more than a century, and just one third of the hardest-hit areas have been searched by teams with cadaver dogs.
“Some of the sights are too much to share or to see from just a human perspective.”
Also on Tuesday, Vice President Kamala Harris offered her support to the people of Lahaina and underscored the need for a speedy response to reduce additional suffering.
“We are all praying for the people of Maui,” she said. “Far too many lives lost, lots homes, lost businesses, lost livelihoods.”
While recovery operations ongoing, the state is also grappling with a humanitarian crisis.
With schools closed, Lahaina parents left children at home while they worked; confirmed death toll of 110 is expected to rise
Over 1,000 people remain missing a week after Hawai’i’s historic wildfires, as state officials warn the death toll will continue to climb while search and recovery efforts continue.
The big picture: The fire that razed most of the historic town of Lahaina on Maui last week is already one of the deadliest wildfires in modern U.S. history, but the full extent of its devastation may not be known for a long while.
- At least 110 people have died in the Lahaina Fire, Hawai’i Gov. Josh Green said Tuesday.
- “There will not be any survivors in the area left,” Green told CBS News on Monday. “Our hearts will break beyond repair, perhaps, if that means that many more dead. None of us think that, but we’re prepared for many tragic stories.”
Zoom in: Maui Police Chief John Pelletier said on Tuesday that rescuers who searched through the aftermath of 9/11 are now involved in the search in Lahaina, as well as 20 cadaver dogs.
- “I want people to understand the reverence with which we’re doing this,” Pelletier said about the search effort. “It’s not just ash on your clothing when you take it off. It’s our loved ones. That’s the reverence.”
- Many of the same people who were involved in search and recovery efforts after California’s Camp fire have traveled to Maui to help find and identify fire victims, the New York Times reports.
- Green said in a video address Tuesday crews had searched 38% of the fire disaster site.
- He told CBS News that the number of people missing after the fires decreased from 2,000 to about 1,300 after cellphone reception was temporarily restored in parts of the state.
Of note: Maui officials on Tuesday identified the first victims from the fires as Robert Dyckman, 74, and Buddy Jantoc, 79, both of whom were Lahaina residents.
- Maui County officials encouraged people to provide DNA samples to help authorities identify other victims.
- The deaths from the Lahaina fire have surpassed the toll from the (Paradise)2018 Camp fire in California, which killed at least 85 people.
- In addition to the fatalities, the fire destroyed more than 2,200 structures in the town.
By the numbers: Maui County officials said the fire that tore through Lahaina had burned an estimated 2,170 acres and was 85% contained on Tuesday night.
- It said another estimated 678-acre fire on the western-facing slope of Maui was 75% contained, while two other fires on the island were fully contained.
- Several other fires ignited on the other Hawaiian islands last week, as well.
- The 2020 census estimated Lahaina’s population was around 12,ooo at that time, though as a popular tourist destination, the number of people in the town fluctuates rapidly throughout the year.
Zoom out: The climate change-related fires were fueled by grasses dried by elevated temperatures and drought conditions and extreme winds from Hurricane Dora, which was passing the state hundreds of miles to the southwest.
- At least three lawsuits — including two seeking class-action status — have been filed against Hawai’i’s primary energy provider over the deadly fires.
- The lawsuits allege that the fires, the causes of which have not been officially confirmed, were ignited by strong winds or trees damaging Hawaiian Electric’s energized power lines.
- A Washington Post investigation using security camera footage and sensor data indicates that the first reported fire on Maui likely started from a power line faulting, meaning it either contacted vegetation or another line or was knocked down.
Go deeper: Why Hawai’i’s governor doesn’t want developers buying burned land
Editor’s note: This article has been updated with additional details, including to reflect that the death toll has increased from 106.
First came the deadly fires on Maui, then the looters and speculators
Nearly a week after Maui was ravaged by the deadliest wildfires in more than a century, and as residents continue to wait for word about their missing loved ones, a new set of problems has emerged: looters and speculators trying to cash in on the tragedy.
A local businessman said people desperate for gas and other scarce items are raiding the few businesses still standing in Lahaina, the historic city that was all but destroyed.
Bryan Sizemore, 48, a commercial sport fisherman and mechanical engineer who has lived on Maui for nearly 20 years, said he recently chased off several looters at gunpoint from his business.
“My boat exploded as a result of the flames, but my business somehow made it. But there’s been looters at my place, people stealing gas,” Sizemore said Monday. “I’ve been sleeping there in my car… They’re poking holes into the gas tanks and draining them off.”
The stealing and attempts at land grabbing are indicative of what locals are up against as they work to rebuild their homes and lives after deadly wildfires chewed through entire neighborhoods last week, killing at least 96 people and destroying irreplaceable Hawaiian cultural landmarks.
The fires displaced hundreds of families and became the deadliest in modern U.S. history, surpassing the 2018 Camp Fire in Paradise, California that killed 85 people, officials said.
Hawaii Gov. Josh Green estimated the fires have caused $6 billion in damage.
Now that the tourists have been evacuated and the search for the missing continues, some residents feel as if they’ve been left to fend for themselves, they said.
“Do not go to Lahaina thinking that you’re gonna get fed when you realize there are no resources,” said Cassidy Keilieha, who was at the War Memorial Complex donation center in Wailuku on Saturday. “There are no stores out there for you. Everything is empty. There’s nothing out there.
“A lot of people are angry. A lot of bad things are happening. People are going into survival mode.”
In Sizemore’s view, the looters are “just random people who are trying to get across the island to where there’s more aid.”
“We went to the Red Cross, but they can’t keep up,” he said. “They don’t even have enough drinking water for everybody. I finally gave up and drove across the island to some friends, where I was able to take a shower.”
When asked about reports of looting, Maui County Police Chief John Pelletier said, “the Hawaiian people are the most incredible, kind, loving people on the planet, period.”
But Maui fire survivors said they are getting calls from real estate investors seeking to buy up what remains of their island homes and property.
“This is disgusting,” Maui resident Tiare Lawrence told MSNBC’s Katy Tur on Monday. “Lahaina is not for sale.”
As the death toll continues to climb, police are searching the smoldering remains of Lahaina with cadaver dogs.
“I’ve seen dozens of bodies and I think when all this is over, there’s going to be a lot more deaths,” Sizemore said, adding that he still has not heard from at least a dozen friends.
Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Deanne Criswell declined to speculate on how many bodies search crews might find.
“The dogs can only work so long because of how hot the temperatures are,” she said Monday in a video teleconference from Hawaii. “There’s also hot spots, and so we have fire crews that are helping to cool down the area so the dogs can go in there.
“I hate to give an exact estimate because we want to make sure that we are precise and methodical and respectful as we go through this,” Criswell said.
Green said an additional 20 dogs have joined the search.
“I mean it’s a catastrophic loss, it’s our largest natural disaster since statehood,” Green said on NBC’s “Meet the Press NOW.” “It’s incredible what we’re seeing, it’s definitely like a nuclear weapon went off on Lahaina.”
FEMA has provided 50,000 meals, 75,000 liters of water, 5,000 cots and 10,000 blankets to Maui County for distribution, officials said, and more than 300 FEMA employees are on the ground assisting with the recovery effort.
“The coming days and the weeks, they’re going to be tough, they’re going to be difficult as people process what they have lost and what the road ahead looks like,” Criswell said. “But we are going to be with the people of Hawaii, as I have committed to the governor, every step of the way.”
But Sizemore said the aid isn’t getting to residents fast enough.
“People think everything is getting taken care of, it’s not,” Sizemore said. “It’s a s—show out here.”
One potential reason for the residents to feel as if there is a delay in resources headed their way is that the vast majority of good needs to be shipped to the island.
More than 90% of all goods consumed in Hawaii are imported from other states or internationally, according to Suwan Shen, an associate professor of urban planning at the University of Hawaii, who specializes in climate vulnerability and adaptation.
“We are in the ocean,” said Shen, speaking in general about the state and not specifically about the disaster.
Compared to the mainland states, which can more quickly receive supplies from neighboring states when a disaster hits, including by trucks and other land vehicles, Hawaii may not as rapidly dispatch the resources needed to affected areas.
Shen said it typically takes about a week for Hawaii to receive goods from California by sea. And then it might take another two to three days to transport the supplies from Hawaii’s main port in Honolulu to other parts of the island, she said.
“There’s a lot of unpacking and repacking in the process, too,” Shen said.
On its website, Hawaii’s Emergency Management Agency urges residents to prepare for disasters by having 14 days worth of food and water at hand.
Another Maui resident, Barrett Procell, a realtor who has lived on the island for seven years, said he his girlfriend fled their home with just the clothes on their backs.
They spent several nights sleeping in their car before they were able to escape to Oahu, where they’ve been staying at a hotel.
“We’re just grateful to be here,” Procell said. “There are so many people who didn’t make it out, so many dead bodies still to be found. There’s kids who were at home with their parents after work.”
Procell said that although they didn’t witness any looting, they saw Maui residents rise to the challenge.
“The community of Maui is amazing,” he said. “It’s just wild to see people whose homes burned down a couple days ago, and they’re out handing out water to people or even pulling dead bodies out of the water — it’s pretty incredible.”
In a visual timeline, survivors recount how they were overwhelmed by the fire’s speed, smothering smoke and lack of escape routes
What is known is that thousands of people on Maui experienced horrors on Aug. 8 that they had never imagined, and that unfolded hour after hour.
Lisa Vorpahl, a bank teller, woke to the sound of someone shuffling on her lanai. It was 3 a.m. on Tuesday when she looked out her bedroom window — along a dry, grassy slope overlooking her slice of tropical paradise — and realized it was just the wind.
Alexa Caskey couldn’t sleep, either. On the farm where she grew taro and breadfruit for her plant-based restaurant, she listened to gusts that would dislodge her garage door and topple the Hong Kong orchid tree outside.
Photographer Rachael Zimmerman woke up before dawn in her condo on Front Street, Lahaina’s seaside boulevard of restaurants and surf shops, to the howls rattling her window screens.
If there was any warning that fitful night that Hawaii was about to endure one of the most horrific and deadly natural disasters in the state’s history, it was only the wind.
For two days, National Weather Service employees in Honolulu had been sending out ominous alerts about powerful easterly gusts, whipped up by Hurricane Dora passing 500 miles to the south. They hit Maui at a time when much of the tropical island had been parched by severe drought, including the drier leeward side that includes Lahaina.
The next time Vorpahl woke up, she smelled smoke. The power was out.
A fire had started in the dry grass near her home on Lahainaluna Road, on a slope just east of the highway that bypasses downtown. Power poles fell in the neighborhood, and wires had snapped — leading several neighbors to later question whether electrical equipment had started the blaze.
Maui County authorities got the first reports of the fire by 6:37 a.m., and not long afterward, police were circulating in her neighborhood, calling out on megaphones for people to evacuate. Using a nearby hydrant, firefighters doused the flames.
She didn’t feel panicked. Fires were a regular occurrence. The blaze was small and didn’t appear threatening as she and her husband, Eddy, drove past.
“It’s Hawaii,” she said. “Nobody thought anything of it.”
They spent a few hours at their daughter’s apartment but returned home after Maui County — at 9:55 a.m. — sent out an alert that the brush fire was “100% contained.”
It looked that way to Eddy.
“Nothing was happening. A couple fire engines were there. They were all packing stuff up,” he said. “It looked 100 percent fine.”
Lahaina sits on Maui’s western flank, a historic town rimmed by white-sand beaches at the foot of the ancient Puʻu Kukui volcano. On most days, it’s a postcard-perfect symbol of tropical bliss. But an early-morning blaze was ominous. And Mark Stefl, a tile setter, had reason to be wary.
He lived down the hill on Lahainaluna Road in a home he rebuilt after another wildfire burned it down five years ago. He had heard that the early-morning blaze had been extinguished. Around 2:30 p.m., he heard his wife, Michele, shout: “Oh, my God.”
The blaze had kicked up again farther down the hillside. Wind dragged the flames toward Lahaina.
It was still a few hundred yards away. Mark tried to reassure Michele that firefighters would handle it. But the speed of its approach was like nothing he had seen.
“Within minutes, there was a wall of fire 30 yards from the house,” he said.
Overhead, dry air — the result of a high-pressure system — was jetting over and down the slopes of the volcano, sending ferocious winds into his town, spraying gravel and ripping shingles off the rooftops. It was a worst-case scenario that some emergency planners had long warned about.
The couple scrambled to gather their dogs and cats. One rescue dog, Poppy, got left behind in the chaos. Stefl hit the gas in his truck as flames licked at the side of the house.
“I was praying to God that we didn’t die,” he said.
Not far away, on Komo Mai Street, AnnaStaceya Arcangel Pang saw the distant fire marching closer. The Lahaina native and family members — her grandmother, her mother, various cousins — live within blocks of one another, and all had decided to leave.
Pang, 31, texted her husband, who had left early that day to work in another town, to see what he wanted her to pack for him. He replied eight minutes later, but by then, her backyard was in flames, and she hastily fled alongside a caravan of relatives.
As she drove away with her dogs and a few clothes she had grabbed she could hear the sound of propane tanks exploding up and down the street, one after another.
“When I looked back, all I saw was black smoke,” she said. “It was then that I knew: If we come back, we are coming back to nothing.”
By this time, that same black cloud was starting to smother Lahaina.
The town of 12,000 had been the capital of the former Hawaiian Kingdom and a trade hub for 19th-century whaling ships. Lahaina had the oldest house in Maui, the Baldwin Home Museum, and a treasured banyan tree that has grown in a courtyard by the sea for 150 years. These days, tourists come to surf or snorkel, sunbathe and zip-line.
Caresse Carson, 41, catered to those visitors at her job at Captain Jack’s Island Grill. She had spent nearly two decades in Lahaina and valued its rich history. Mark Twain had visited the Pioneer Inn — across the street from Captain Jack’s. She liked to imagine herself tracing his long-ago footsteps.
Even though the power was out, Carson had reported to work that afternoon to help keep food from spoiling. On the drive in, she passed the home of her boss, Sam, and watched a chunk of his roof as big as her truck get ripped off by the wind. As she and Sam hauled bags of ice, black smoke started billowing through town.
It came on in an instant.
“All of a sudden, it was starting to barrel over the building,” Carson said. “It was completely black. You couldn’t see an inch in front of you. This was broiling smoke.”
Zimmerman, the photographer, was also downtown. She grabbed a small safe with her hard drives, passport and some cash. Plus her computer, some food for her dog, Zya, and a handful of shirts.
At 3:38 p.m., already fearing the worst, she snapped a few hasty photos of their rooms, their closets, their furniture — thinking she might need the pictures for insurance claims.
She called her parents in Colorado a half-hour later, saying she and her partner, Nicole, were stuck in traffic as the fire bore down, and she didn’t know whether they would make it out. They encouraged her to stick close to the ocean, and to just keep going.
Carson was also trying to drive out of Lahaina in her Nissan pickup. Glowing embers showered into her open window, perforating the blanket in the back seat.
There was gridlock downtown as panicked people tried to escape and others abandoned their vehicles. Carson watched a couple running barefoot through the street pushing a stroller. She watched person after person run down the side streets until they got to the sea wall and then threw themselves into the Pacific Ocean.
Carson recorded video on her phone as she drove, searching for a way out. Power lines and palm trees whipped around wildly. She came to a road that was blocked by a downed utility pole.
“I don’t know if I’m going to make it,” she recorded herself saying. “I don’t know what I’m going to do. Look at that. That’s all burnt debris. The fire’s getting closer and closer.”
It was 4:25 p.m. when she saw her friend, Kaleo, get hit in the head by a piece of debris.
“Get in the car,” she screamed to him. “Get in my car.”
He was panting.
“Oh, my God,” she said.
The air was black. Carson was disoriented. A light emerged in the sky.
“Look at the moon,” she told him. “Look at the f—ing moon, dude.”
It was 4:30 p.m. He told her it was the sun.
There was no emergency siren. No organized evacuation. Few instructions about how to proceed. Just a headlong grasp toward survival.
Annelise Cochran, a 30-year-old who worked for an ocean conservation nonprofit, couldn’t get out by car, and the building next to her was on fire. So she ran to the water. She saw her neighbor, Freeman, 86, struggling to walk. Another neighbor, Edna, was with him. Together, the three climbed over the rocky barrier to get away from the flames.
They spent hours in the water and on the rocks, Cochran said, trying to stay away from flying embers and choking smoke. Cars abandoned on Front Street began to explode. Waves of heat and toxic fumes washed over the sea.
At times, they had to move toward the fire when they began to feel dangerously cold. Cochran watched in horror as people held onto debris and floated away from shore.
“People still chose just to drift out,” she said.
Note: Background satellite image is from 2:24 p.m., Aug. 9.
Sources: Landsat infrared satellite imagery via U.S. Geological Survey. Background satellite imagery via Planet Labs PBC.
By that time, Kevin Foley, 42, was stranded in a Safeway parking lot, flames encroaching on multiple sides. He had been heading to his bartending shift at Longhi’s Kaanapali, an Italian restaurant in Marriott’s Maui Ocean Club, when the smoke forced him off the bus. He walked back to where he had left his bike.
Worried about his roommates, Foley tried to ride home but kept getting blocked. As he moved, he recorded fires all around him. When darkness fell, the sky turned a menacing orange. He watched flaming utility poles spraying showers of embers onto the pavement. He saw the fire consume a three-story apartment building on Keawe Street.
He narrated the conflagration as he traveled. When sparks landed at the base of a palm tree and blossomed into flame, he said: “This is how it starts. One little spark flies to an area, and the next thing you know, it goes up, just like that.”
Sometime after midnight, a man staggered out from the burning homes, toward a Shell gas station. His shorts were smoldering. Skin was peeling from his face. He collapsed on the pavement. Foley encouraged the man to stand and led him toward Safeway. Foley rode around looking for help until he found a police officer.
Maui police and firefighters had been out throughout the day trying to save lives and help people evacuate. But the fire was overwhelming.
“The cop couldn’t do anything for him,” Foley recalled. “He just gave him water.”
Foley and some other people entered the Lahaina Cannery Mall — connected to the supermarket — to try to escape the smoke and wait out the night.
Every so often, he would go outside to see whether the Safeway had started to burn.
In the dark, cold water off Lahaina on Tuesday night, Cochran and her neighbor Edna clutched each other, both women shivering and struggling to breathe through the smoke and fumes. Cochran felt like she was losing consciousness.
The women tried to stay awake. They talked about their families and promised each other they’d make it.
At one point, Cochran called out to Freeman, her elderly neighbor, who was a little farther down the rocky beach, and asked how he was.
He smiled and made a shaka gesture with his hand — hang loose — to indicate he was all right. Later, she saw him slumped against the wall, unmoving. She believes he might have died from the smoke.
Sometime around midnight, firefighters rescued Cochran and several dozen other people from the water. She has spent the past few nights at shelters. Her body is covered with bruises and lacerations; her feet and face are burned.
“I feel blessed to be alive,” she said.
Partlow and Sacks reported from Lahaina. Farrell and Slater reported from Washington. Dennis reported from Rhode Island. Reis Thebault in Lahaina and John Muyskens in Washington contributed to this report.
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Numerology Number of the name Lahaina is 1, Numerology is a practice that assigns numerical values to letters in a name to determine the significance of the name.
The expression number, also known as the destiny number of the name Lahaina is 1 |
Angel Number 1 Meaning And Symbolism – | Sarah Scoop
The number 1 is associated with beginnings, newness, and change. When you see the number 1, it is often a sign that something new is on the horizon. This could be a new opportunity, relationship, or project.Apr 4, 2022
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ANGEL NUMBER 1 (Meanings & Symbolism) thesecretofthetarot.com
Jul 15, 2023 — Across most cultures, the number 1 is seen as a mark of new beginnings. 1 is the next step after 0, which represents loss or nothingness.
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Lahaina – Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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A Local’s Perspective On What’s Happening in Maui
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BREAKING NEWS: Oprah Winfrey INVESTIGATED for Maui Fires!
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The Maui Fires – REAL Reason They Happened.
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Lahaina Front Street Walking Tour Maui Hawaii Shops Restaurants Galleries Historic District
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Maui fire: Many missing in wake of Lahaina disaster/Live Now from FOX
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It happened During the Maui Fire (Death Toll)
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BREAKING Maui Fires & WEF plan for Hawaii/ Redacted with Clayton Morris
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Maui fire: Will residents lose their land now that Lahaina is wiped out?
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New Footage From Maui (THIS IS NOT NORMAL) /WHERE IS JOE BIDEN?
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Locals Tell What REALLY Happened Maui Fire
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Oprah PANICS As Her SICK PLOT to PROFIT from Hawaii Fires LEAKED
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DEW’D LAHAINA, “NO ONE IN..NO ONE OUT “HAWAII, ONLY LAHAINA NO OTHER ISLANDS OR LANDS TAKE OVER !!!
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Land Grab in Paradise?
A perfect storm of Hurricane Dora, a convenient summer drought, and fallow plantations went straight for the heart of Maui. Coincidence or something more sinister?
Maui Wildfires series
“The government of Hawaii states goal for rebuild is to make the entire island of Maui the first Smart ISLAND. They want the entire island governed by AI as outlined in the Hawaii Digital government summit of 2023 that they have planned to host next month Monday, September 25, 2023 on Maui.” — sent in by a reader of CRAZZ Files two days ago
Just when you thought this was just an unfortunate natural disaster, in come the conspiracy theorists making very good, factually-based points, pointing to a land grab and planned Smart Cities.
Apparently, Maui was supposed to be the first. Think Smart Island.
This is already being fact-checked/handled by Google and even DuckDuckGo up the ass. But even they can’t hide Build Back Better Redevelopment and that telling Jan. 2023 Smart City Conference.
Also, big land owners and corporations like Black Rock and Vanguard are rumored to be trying to buy up property at cheap rates from Hawaiians who stood their ground — pre-wildfires.
They stood their ground, so a natural disaster moved them all the way over to Kahului and Wailuku. Just a coincidence. Nothing to see here.
Wear your mask. Social distance. Lock down. Vaxx up. Don’t kill grandma.
How Did The Devastating Maui Fires Really Start?
Btw, you can’t find info on this via the usual search engines anymore. Big Brother stepped in as cover. You must now rely on your fellow citizens, as you were forced to during the pandemic.
Or, as they say in Hawaii: The Coconut Wireless.
None of this is fake news. People who know people living in Maui attest to the land grabs and to Hawaiians refusing to be bought off.
“The revolution will not be televised.”
Maybe the wildfires helped force the issue. If there isn’t a home or any historic ancestral structures left to hold onto, and the entire area is toxic for god knows how long, then why stay? Why not let the elite help themselves to more and more until — before you can say, “Aloha” — the entire island is transformed into their own private playground, entirely run on A.I.?
“‘Hitachi recently announced that it has begun operations on the demonstration site for the “Japan-U.S. Island Grid Project” (commonly referred to as the “JUMPSmartMaui”) on the island of Maui, Hawaii, in collaboration with the New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO), Mizuho Bank, Ltd. and Cyber Defense Institute, Inc. An opening ceremony was held on Maui to coincide with the launch of site operations.’” — “Maui – Plans for A High Tech Prison Island?,” CRAZZ Files, Aug. 13, 2023
What you don’t hear is how the sudden, unpredictable wildfires went and ravaged the resorts up north toward Kaanapali-Kapalua…because they didn’t.
Just Lahaina.
What’s so special about Lahaina (“Cruel Sun” in Hawaiian)? Let’s take a look…
Where are the hotels and resorts? Where are the foreign-owned skyscrapers sitting empty most of the year? Where is Waikiki blocking priceless ocean and mountain views?
There is only one hotel allowed to stay in Lahaina and it’s historic. Pioneer Inn — all of two stories — blends in architecturally with the rest of the period buildings, somewhere after the whaling industry took off. Now burned to the ground.
The entire town is historically protected from development. In order to open a store or restaurant or gallery, you must renovate an existing building through an arduous permitting process…to preserve the town.
UNESCO World Heritage
Heritage is our legacy from the past, what we live with today, and what we pass on to future generations. Our cultural and natural heritage are both irreplaceable sources of life and inspiration. Video provided by the Austrian Commission for UNESCO
The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) seeks to encourage the identification, protection and preservation of cultural and natural heritage around the world considered to be of outstanding value to humanity. This is embodied in an international treaty called the Convention concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage, adopted by UNESCO in 1972. What makes the concept of World Heritage exceptional is its universal application. World Heritage sites belong to all the peoples of the world, irrespective of the territory on which they are located. |
So, why is UNESCO not moving in to protect the heritage of Hawaii? Are their pagan gods not as WORTHY as Egypt’s and Syria’s?? There should be an outcry from the masses demanding equal protection for Hawaii. Is the United Nations prejudiced and promoting a political Agenda?
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THE MAUI EXPERIMENT! HOW THEY DESTROYED LAHAINA TO BRING…
“Lastly there was a contract last year that was signed to build high rise condos and businesses in Lahaina. which was a historical town that couldn’t have any new development done to it… but now? It can.” — “Maui – Plans for A High Tech Prison Island?,” CRAZZ Files, Aug. 13, 2023
Maui is not for sale
Hawaiians still own land there. Unlike most white Mainlanders, most of them refused to sell to developers. It’s their home…what’s left of their home after the haole came and took over, diluting their pride, shaming them to blend in, worship their god.
Well, aren’t these wildfires convenient.
Suspiciously, government officials seem to have an answer for everything, as early as Wednesday, hours after the wildfires took Lahaina. Loaded with excuses, but very little in compassion or common sense.
“They haven’t seen a government employee in days”
As more news sank in, and reporters started doing their jobs — going on the field and interviewing locals and tourists — the accounts started contradicting the official response:
- A FEMA rep stated to the media yesterday that West Maui (where Lahaina sits) finally received Internet connection again. Fact-checked to be false: a realtor reporting on-location in Napili insists there is still no connectivity. People he’s interviewed back him up.
- Two men who survived told a reporter that they called the police about the oncoming wildfires on Front Street, and a cop told them to “jump in the water.” Days later, an official-looking drone from one of many government departments told another reporter on-air that people took it upon themselves to jump in the water. False.
- Initially, government reps said warnings via text, TV, radio did go out, but were spotty because of a power outage the day before due to high winds. Some gov. jackass said, “We never saw this coming!,” twice, in the first of several press conferences. He must’ve been on Oahu, because several citizens did, in fact, see it coming, and kept checking to see if the government did, too. False: most people said they never received any warning. Many of them kept going to their phones, the radio, weather reports, noticing a discrepancy between what they saw with their eyes versus the “all-clear” as early as 4:30 a.m. that morning.
- The electric company, now undergoing a lawsuit, turned off the power lines as wildfires hit an Upcountry area. But a rep later said they can’t just turn off power lines without proper authorization from a government agency going through proper channels first. (Kind of defeats the purpose.)
- The Powers That Be keep opening, then closing the only main highway into and out of Lahaina, preventing families from providing aid to loved ones left behind, or protecting what’s left of their property from looters. Citing short-handed staff spread out all over the island, a few bad apples trespassing onto Lahaina town during assessments and still dangerous conditions and redirecting precious resources to dealing with interlopers, cops are now either refusing to allow anyone in or letting only residents and medical-needs people in based on incongruous whims, but, maybe not letting them out. No one knows for sure because…
- …nobody in the government is doing jack shit for the people they’re supposed to serve. They’re in Lahaina assessing the damage for camera crews and thanking their Lord Biden for FEMA aid (which is reserved only for FEMA-approved serfs).
- The sirens, which are tested the first Monday of every month, never went off. Well, that’s odd. Why? A bureaucratic smart-ass piped up last week that people would’ve heard it and gone to tsunami/hurricane shelters, not dealt with wildfires. But still, a warning is better than nothing at all. People are shown standing in the middle of the street gawking at the apocalypse headed their way. Nobody warned them of what was coming.
- And what in the hell was the white 9/11-like powdery residue in the air the day before? Locals are reporting on this, as well. One lady, Sheila Walker, lived in New York City on the day of 9/11 and said this was the same stuff she saw…but in Kihei. Is this the hairspray prep the day before, just waiting for a match?
- What’s with the government telling tourists to shelter in place at their hotels, and everybody else to simply “evacuate” without any further guidance if they “never saw this coming?” It’s almost like they knew tourists would remain safe from the wildfires up in Kaanapali-Kapalua and left the locals to fend for themselves, leaving them no way out anyway (see interview with Fish). Remember north of Lahaina are where all the resorts are.
“What you’re not hearing from our local government: I just got out of a meeting where I was informed by someone in the mayor’s office about developments that are being kept from the public. I’m not a conspiracy theorist and don’t wanna make trouble, but here’s what I’ve heard: The amount of fatalities is expected to be more than 500, but less than a thousand. Many of these fatalities are children who were at home, because they canceled school. Parents worked [in Hawaii, everyone works, often more than one job] and they were not able to evacuate the children. Children had no idea they needed to leave and by the time they noticed their homes or apartments were on fire, it was too late. The government is worried about how we are going to react when we learn that the fire department left the fire early in the day and claimed it was 100 percent contained, knowing that the winds were expected to be 70 to 80 mph in the afternoon. This is against all fire control policies. The fire department should not have left the original fire unattended. They are scared that the public will call for accountability, and that accountability will be more than they can control, and protests and riots will occur. They plan to lock down Lahaina for several months. It will take months to clean up the hazardous and environmental contamination. They won’t have enough housing for all the displaced. There were 2,000 unaccounted for, as of this text. They have a list, where they are trying to keep track. They found 700 that day and over 1,300 still missing. They are very worried that the community is going to freak out when they find out how not a single fire truck responded to those fires once it flared up. Emergency sirens were not activated, hurricane sirens, and loss of life would have been kept down by emergency management, which utterly failed us. I’m not trying to make waves or stir up problems, but I was so angry and sad when I found out how many children are dead that I knew I had to post this.” — gov. whistleblower
- Did they let children out of schools early and not tell the parents? That’s what I heard among the news reports yesterday. Where were the children? An Oahu-based gov. whistleblower — see Red Pill video below at the 43:11 mark & pull quote above — claims that’s what TPTB are hiding…the death total and who were among the dead, because of fear of uprising…because many of the dead are children. Children.
More contradictory information will come pouring out from real people on the ground. Already, there’s talk of land grabs and government malfeasance — at best. Modern-day genocide of indigenous peoples and forced Smart Cities, where only the elite benefit — at worst.
Genocide is nothing new to the government. To deny it, to fact-check it as false…is to deny the very fabric of our lives.
We stand on the ashes of their ancestors, profiting off the misfortune of the other, time and time again.
Lahaina is no exception.
What did the beaches, the mountains and valleys, the soft, gentle tradewinds, the swaying palm trees, the beautiful local people always with their arms outstretched…what did any of them do to you?
They calmed your nerves. They made you feel alive. They soothed your worried spirits. They sat with you and let you grieve. They put a smile on your face. They made the most of a bad situation brought in by the haole with their gentrification and their tin god. They gave and they gave and they gave until you took too much and looked away, while the businessmen hiding behind the Bible snuck in and stole everything they ever had, leaving nothing but dust and disease and climate change.
People are naturally blaming Oprah and other wealthy land barons like her, questioning why her ever-expanding properties — in Maui and California — are never touched after wildfires. She owns acres and acres in Kula and Hana. They’re invoking Einstein’s flight logs and climate change, which, curiously, only seems to affect the poor.
Articles came out about her land grabs months before these wildfires. Try finding them now.
They’re even pointing to the DEW (Directed Energy Weapons) skies not months earlier, the Chinese weather balloons and green lasers floating above.
If all the conspiracy theories about land grabs and Smart Cities are true, then god help the elite and all who conspire with them, just for a piece of paradise. They might want to crack open a Hawaiian history book and read about Māui, the demi-god, Pele’s curse, and the righteous retribution of the ancestors these stupid fucking haole trod upon.
Whatever you believe, in the end, G-d wins. He has a punishment more horrific (but just) than any we humans can imagine.
G-d help them all and G-d protect the people of Lahaina.
Two more points…
Maybe conservative talk show hosts like Dan Bongino might want to start investigating what’s going on in Lahaina, instead of devoting all their air time to sucking Trump’s dick. What’s happening there could easily happen anywhere else in America, like his precious Florida or New York. Hawaii is the 50th state, bozos. If the conspiracy theorists are to be believed, the elite are coming for their piece of paradise next. By then, it’ll be too late. They ignored the warning…they were looking the other way at their pet projects.
Stop looking for answers on YouTube. Mainstream media’s already taken over and resident videos are being removed or censored. Head over to Rumble from now on for all your news and perspectives. The people will save each other, not government. We saw how that worked out in Lahaina.
Resource links:
- “Maui Fire – Smart City Sacrifice with Scott Adam on Red Pill News” • Red Pill News
- “Maui Wildfires and the Theft of Sacred Hawaiian Land” • Greg Reese Report
- A perfect circle all around Lahaina… “Planned Destruction Maui the first Smart ISLAND” • Watchman’s Duty
- “I saw what happened [on 9/11] and it’s happening now…” “The Pathetic Lahaina/Maui Fire Media Coverage Misses the Obvious Truth!” • The LionelNation Channel
- “RFK Jr.: Qualified Stupidity Wildfire DESTROYS Lahaina, Maui” • Revolutionary Blackout Network
- “Lahaina Resident Exposed the Real Truth Behind Maui Wildfire Massacre” • DeVeRneY
- “The Curious Case of the Lahaina Wildfire: Houses and Boats Burned, Why Not the Beach Resort Hotel?” • Global Agenda
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ACTUAL FOOTAGE OF THE DIRECT ENERGY WEAPON USED IN LAHAINA FIRE ON MAUI -WATCH FOR THE PULSE FLASHES
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AGENDA 2030 FAKE ‘CLIMATE CHANGE’ AGENDA BRUTALITY ‘APOCALYPTIC’ FIRE DESTROYS MAUI!
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🚨SKYDOME ATLANTIS: DIRECTED ENERGY WEAPON (DEW) HAWAII LAHAINA MAUI WILD FIRE (SEE DESCRIPTION)
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How a devastating combination of conditions triggered America’s deadliest wildfire in more than a century – CNN
As the fires grew last Tuesday, they were buffeted by extreme winds caused by Hurricane Dora, which was passing hundreds of miles south of Maui. Those winds also battered power lines on the island, and dramatic videos show lines swaying and being toppled in the gusts.3 days ago
Dora remains as a Category 4 hurricane, as it spins south of Hawaii on Tuesday, August 8, 2023.
Watch the Video
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Invasive Plants Brought to Maui by Colonists Helped Fuel the Wildfires – Time
There are a lot of things that have made the Maui wildfires—which have so far claimed a confirmed 111 lives—so widespread and deadly: drought conditions that have prevailed in the state since the end of May; hurricane Dora, which lashed the islands with 45 mph winds; and downed power lines—blown over by Dora’s gusts …8 hours ago
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Hurricane Dora is fuelling Hawaii wildfires. Here’s how
Maui Fires Burn Historic Lahaina
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This Proves Everything about Maui Fire as Officials Set Report Straight
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Maui Fire Insurance WARNING
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Chaotic Maui Evacuation: Police Block Exits As Wildfire Forces Ocean Escape
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DISGUSTING! Mark Zuckerberg STEALS Maui from Native Hawaiians. LAND GRAB!
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Mark Zuckerberg sued native Hawaiians for their own land/AJ+
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Locals Tell What REALLY Happened Maui Fire
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Dramatic video shows family escaping into ocean as Lahaina burns
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MAUI FIRE SCANDAL: Obama Agent WITHHELD WATER from Town as Children Burn!
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7JEQRPkC-a
“No Comment” As Death Toll Rises From Maui Wildfires While the U.S. Sends Another Billion to Ukraine
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Maui Fire Update #LFG
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Maui Lahaina Wild Fire Escape
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Last View of Lahaina before Fire – Visit to Lanai by Ferry
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Lahaina Maui – Front Street August 10th 2023
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The Big Bad Whoosh
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Hawaii Fire victims demand to know why warning system failed: DW News
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Families Flee wildfires into ocean as Maui Boats Aid Fire Relief Efforts
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Security Video appears to show what triggered deadly Maui Fire /GMA
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Maui Fire Update August 14, 2023
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What Sparked the Deadlient Wildfire in Modern U.S. History?/Faith Nation – August 1
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Aerial drone video of fire damage in Lahaina, Aina Nalu, the Banyan tree, pioneer landmarks
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Why is There a Frenzy to Buy Up Properties Just Burned Down in Hawaii?
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How Native Hawaiians have been pushed out of Hawaii
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How Hawaii Was Stolen by the US / ENDEVR Documentary
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THEY CAN’T HIDE THIS!! MASSIVE MAUI FIRE COVER-UP EXPOSED. Biden Admin BUSTED!
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Hawaii wildfire survivor escaped with her kids, saw mom’s apartment burn “I was so…
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PROOF THE GOVT. IS STARTING ALL WILDFIRES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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PROOF THEY ARE MAKING THE WEATHER. AND IT AINT CLIMATE CHANGE
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TAKING OUT THE POWER WITH SPIDERWEBS OR “CARBON FIBER BOMBS”
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