When you can’t tell the difference in the seasons, know that the end is near.

Greetings,

sat2 When you can’t tell the difference in the seasons, know that the end is near. All across the landscape of America she is being hit with one calamity followed by another one. Before she can rebound from the sores inflicted on her by the judgment, another moves in to make the cuts even deeper and more severe.

sat On one side of the country she is suffering wildfires, mudslides, and avalanches. On another side she is hit by heavy rain and hard winds. In the center there is a great chill.

Can you not see that God’s word is fulfilling and America, modern Babylon, is fallen. She cannot fight the forces of nature. They are too powerful for her. She will be overcome.

sat3As we are told and can see clearly….”Holy Qur’an, Ch. 13:41, “See they not that We are visiting the land, curtailing it of its sides? And Allah pronounces a doom — there is no repeller of His decree. And He is swift in calling to account.””–pg.161(tfoa)

    California Has Hottest Start to Year While Midwest Chills

he heat records keep falling for California. The state has had its hottest first seven months of the year, crushing the previous mark. Neighboring states have also baked, though not quite at record levels, helping contribute to both the spread of drought and large wildfires. At the same time, cool weather had a number of Midwest states experiencing July temperatures that were closer to September norms.

On Tuesday, the National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) released its monthly climate update for the U.S. and it contained more cruel news for California. Precipitation was near average throughout the state, but it had a negligible impact on the state’s record-setting drought because summer is its dry season. To reinforce that, NCDC noted that while San Francisco received 800 percent of its usual July rainfall, that equalled only 0.08 inches.

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Credit: NCDC
Heat continued to bake the state, fueling a drought that’s projected to cost $2 billion by year’s end. California had its fifth-warmest July on record, including pockets of record warmth along the northern coast. July’s heat kept the state on track for its warmest year in 120 years of recordkeeping. Since January, the state’s average temperature has been 4.6°F above the 20th-century average. That smashes the previous record by 1.4°F.

Five other western states had their top 10 warmest Julys as well, which helped to fuel large wildfires. In Washington, which had its fifth-warmest July, the Carlton Complex Fire burned more than 250,000 acres. In Oregon, which had its second-warmest July, the Buzzard Complex Fire charred more than 400,000 acres. Despite those two large fires, the amount of acres burned by wildfires nationwide is at a 10-year low…..MORE HERE

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