Anonymous ID: ff43a8 Oct. 11, 2021, 5:26 p.m. No.14768305   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8332

>>14768220

There has never been any need to decode. It's not predictive. It's explanative. New unlocks. Future proves past. When something develops look to what Q wrote with what you now know. It's a spin-preventive countermeasure to the MSM.

Anonymous ID: ff43a8 Oct. 11, 2021, 5:37 p.m. No.14768378   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8390 >>8411

>>14768358

GEOMAGNETIC STORM, SLIGHTLY DELAYED: A CME expected to hit Earth on Oct. 11th is running late. As a result, NOAA forecasters have shifted their prediction of a possible G2-class geomagnetic storm from Oct. 11th to Oct. 12th. G2-class storms are moderately strong, and can produce naked-eye auroras in northern-tier US states.

 

https://spaceweather.com/

Anonymous ID: ff43a8 Oct. 11, 2021, 5:45 p.m. No.14768432   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14768399

The NOAA Space Weather Scales were introduced as a way to communicate to the general public the current and future space weather conditions and their possible effects on people and systems. Many of the SWPC products describe the space environment, but few have described the effects that can be experienced as the result of environmental disturbances. These scales are useful to users of our products and those who are interested in space weather effects. The scales describe the environmental disturbances for three event types: geomagnetic storms, solar radiation storms, and radio blackouts. The scales have numbered levels, analogous to hurricanes, tornadoes, and earthquakes that convey severity. They list possible effects at each level. They also show how often such events happen, and give a measure of the intensity of the physical causes.

 

https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/noaa-scales-explanation

Anonymous ID: ff43a8 Oct. 11, 2021, 6 p.m. No.14768537   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8549 >>8610

>>14768511

>Sherman's 'Bummers'

The soldiers of the Army of Georgia were authorized to live off the land, since it was Sherman's intent to "make Georgia howl" and to lay just as heavy a hand on South Carolina, which many Federals considered a "hellhole of secession." On the road from Atlanta to the sea and then north, Sherman's columns left their supply bases far behind, and their wagons could not carry provisions sufficient for all. Nevertheless, the Union commander sought to regulate and limit foraging, keeping it within accepted rules of warfare. Each brigade leader was to organize a foraging detail under "discreet officers." The details were empowered to gather rations and forage of any sort and quantity useful to their commands and could appropriate animals and conveyances without limit. Soldiers, however, were not to trespass on any private dwelling, were to avoid abusive or threatening language, and, when possible, were to leave each family "a reasonable portion [of provisions] for their maintenance." In regions where the army moved unmolested, no destruction of property was permitted. But where bushwhackers or guerrillas impeded the march, corps commanders were enjoined to "enforce a devastation more or less relentless, according to the measure of hostility."

Many who marched through Georgia and the Carolinas disregarded these prohibitions. Too often, foraging parties became bands of marauders answering to no authority. One conscientious bummer wrote to his sister about the depredations inflicted on South Carolina:

 

How would you like it, do you think, Ab, to have troops passing your house constantly … ransacking and plundering and carrying off everything that could be of any use to them? There is considerable excitement in foraging, but it is [a] disagreeable business in some respects to go into people's houses and take their provisions and have the women begging and entreating you to leave a little when you are necessitated to take all. But I feel some degree of consolation in the knowledge I have that I never went beyond my duty to pillage.

Anonymous ID: ff43a8 Oct. 11, 2021, 6:14 p.m. No.14768656   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14768610

 

Bless you and yours, Anon. We can show others what happened before.

 

>Too often, foraging parties became bands of marauders answering to no authority.

“Sherman, with his hordes of depraved and lawless men, came upon us like a swarm of bees, bringing sorrow and desolation in their pathway. For days we had been expecting them and our loved boys in grey had been passing in squads, looking ragged and hungry. We gave them food and clothing, especially shoes and socks, for many were barefoot. The enemy seemed to be pouring in by every road that led to our doomed little town. Our cavalry [was]

 

contending every step, firing and falling back, covering the retreat of our gallant little band, Hardee’s forces, with Wade Hampton, Butler, and other – the scene in our town baffled description, all was consternation and dismay. In less time than I can write this, Sherman’s army was in possession of our once peaceful, quiet homes. Every yard and house was teeming with bummers, who went into our homes – no place was sacred; they even went into our trunks and bureau drawers, stealing everything they could find; our entire premises were ransacked and plundered, so there was nothing left to eat, but perhaps a little meal and peas, chickens, and all poultry was shot and taken. We all knew that our silver, jewelry, and all valuables would fall into their hands, so many women hid them in such places as they thought would never be found, but alas, for their miscalculations; one of my friends had a hen setting, and she took her watch and other valued jewels and hid them in the nest, under the hen; they did not remain long concealed, for they soon found them and enjoyed the joke. They went into homes that were beautiful, rolled elegant pianos into the yard with valuable furniture, china, cut glass, and everything that was dear to the heart—even old family portraits—and chopped them up with axes. They rolled barrels of flour and molasses into parlors, and poured out their contents on beautiful velvet carpets, in many cases set fire to lovely homes and burned them to the ground and even took some of our old citizens and hanged them until life was nearly extinct, to force them to tell where their money was hidden when alas, they had none to hide.” (31:274)

 

https://nccivilwarcenter.org/ten-days-of-hell-shermans-army-in-north-carolina/

Anonymous ID: ff43a8 Oct. 11, 2021, 6:47 p.m. No.14768878   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14768819

Drop this one. It was checked out here years ago. It was a family outing in Italy with other adults present. I remember many who sought to use this image but did not succeed. Let this one go.