Gatlinburg Hellfire Tennessee

Started by rmstock, November 29, 2016, 04:35:35 PM

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rmstock


Hellfire Journey Through Gatlinburg Tennessee
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qaV-B9Um4JY

They Almost Died in [the] Gatlinburg Hellfire For This Video!
Tuesday, November 29, 2016 10:28
http://beforeitsnews.com/alternative/2016/11/they-almost-died-in-gatlinburg-hellfire-shocking-video-3445040.html

  "Michael Luciana just released some incredible footage of his journey
   through the Hellfire of Gatlinburg Tennessee!  He literally thought he
   would die!  He says the government gave them no warning and nothing was
   on the news!  Was this fire intentionally set? 
   [ ... ]"


Gatlinburg Hellfire Tennessee


'Worst possible conditions': Thousands flee as flames engulf Tennessee resort towns
By Travis M. Andrews, Lindsey Bever and Peter Holley
November 29 at 12:50 PM
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2016/11/29/worst-possible-conditions-residents-flee-gaitlinburg-tenn-as-flames-lick-roads/

  "
   Wildfires raging in the Tennessee resort towns of Gatlinburg and Pigeon
   Forge, north of the Great Smoky Mountains have forced residents and
   visitors to evacuate. (Reuters)

   
   Fire is still raging through two Tennessee tourist towns on the edge of
   Great Smoky Mountains National Park, along with much of the surrounding
   timberlands.
   
   Officials said the blaze — which started on the Chimney Tops mountain,
   one of the most popular hiking destinations in the Smokies — spread
   Monday to the quaint resort towns of Gatlinburg and Pigeon Forge. By
   that night, winds had climbed to 87 mph — carrying away fiery embers
   and knocking power lines down to dry ground; then "everything was
   catching on fire," Gatlinburg Fire Chief Greg Miller said.
   
   By Tuesday morning, the flames had shut down the country's most visited
   national park
, forced thousands to flee their homes and vacation
   rentals throughout Sevier County and injured a dozen people. No missing
   people or fatalities have been reported, authorities said.
   
   "This is a fire for the history books," Miller said at a Tuesday
   morning news conference.

  [Few women fight wildfires. That's not because they're afraid of flames.]
   
   Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam (R) said Tuesday morning that more than
   14,000 residents and visitors have been removed from the area, which
   was described as dark, rainy and slick, with fires burning all around,
   according to NBC affiliate WBIR. Haslam said the Tennessee Emergency
   Management Agency (TEMA) has urged residents in Sevier County not to
   use cellphones to keep systems clear for vital communication, unless it
   was to make an emergency call.
   
   TEMA also announced a temporary flight restriction in the area "to
   prevent aircraft from complicating the response," and residents were
   asked to stay off the roads to make way for first responders.
   
   "The center of Gatlinburg looks good for now," Newmansville Volunteer
   Fire Department Lt. Bobby Balding told the Knoxville News Sentinel. But
   he added: "It's the apocalypse on both sides."
   
   Miller, the Gatlinburg fire chief, told reporters that firefighters
   were "still actively fighting fires," although wind gusts were down
   significantly from Monday night.
   
   "This is going to be a marathon, not a sprint," Michelle Hankes,
   executive director of the American Red Cross of East Tennessee, said
   about the response effort
.
   
   Hankes, who recorded a video statement at an emergency shelter in
   Pigeon Forge, said that about 130 people, including children and pets,
   have turned up there while fleeing their homes. Hundreds of others were
   sheltered elsewhere.
   
   "This fire is unpredictable," Hankes said, crying. "We still have wind
   gusts — the rain has helped, but it's still a devastating, devastating
   loss for the people here.
   
   "These are our community — this is East Tennessee and we're going to
   work together."
   
   
   
   Miller said Tuesday that 12 people were transported, mostly with
   injuries that were not life-threatening, from the Gatlinburg area to
   nearby hospitals. Emergency officials had said that three people with
   severe burns were transferred overnight from the University of
   Tennessee's Knoxville hospital to Vanderbilt Medical Center in
   Nashville, and a fourth with facial burns was being evaluated at the
   hospital in Knoxville.
   
   The town of Gatlinburg, with a population of about 4,000 about 43 miles
   south of Knoxville, is surrounded on three sides by the Great Smoky
   Mountains National Park. The Smokies, part of the Appalachian mountain
   range, straddle the border between eastern Tennessee and North
   Carolina. Considered the gateway city to the Tennessee side of the
   park, Gatlinburg draws more than 11 million visitors a year, according
   to tourism officials. It is known for its mountain chalets and ski
   lodge — drawing honeymooners and other visitors all year long.
   
   Gatlinburg's neighbor, Pigeon Forge, is home to the Dollywood theme
   park, country-themed music venues and attractions, and popular outlet
   malls.
   
   The fire exploded from 10 acres Sunday night into a 500-acre blaze
   Monday night, according to Reuters.
   
   Residents evacuated as trees caught fire on the low slope of the hills
   and mountains on either side of the road — the flames' orange tendrils
   licking at the asphalt and black smoke obscuring the sky.
   
   "Fire was coming over the mountains, and the smoke was so bad we could
   barely breathe as we were trying to pack up," Mike Gill, who was
   evacuating with his wife, Betty, told NBC News.
   
   
   A wildfire has struck the Chimney Tops mountain and the resort city Gatlinburg.
   November 2016 | A wildfire in Gatlinburg, Tenn. (National Park Service)
   
   Flames soon began engulfing private structures, including the 300-room
   Park Vista hotel in downtown Gatlinburg, and the Tennessee Emergency
   Management Agency declared a Level 3 state of emergency.
   
   Inside the Park Vista, dozens were trapped Monday by a wall of flames
   around the building.
   
   Logan Baker told WBIR that firefighters initially told hotel guests
   they would be safe. A short time later, though, "they saw flames coming
   down the hill."
   
   By the time the guests had packed their cars with luggage and tried to
   escape, it was too late, Baker told the station, noting that the only
   road leaving the area was covered in flames. "When you opened the
   doors, it just blew you back," he said. "Embers started flying into the
   hotel."
   
   Baker told WBIR he helped bring people back inside the hotel. Once
   inside, firefighters told them to remain in the lobby while they fought
   the fire outside.
   
   Video taken from inside the lobby shows massive flames licking at the
   windows. Guests can be overheard discussing a plan to "dive into the
   pool."
   
   https://twitter.com/Redwolfstone123/status/803387522445258752
   
   The fire also forced employees at Ripley's Aquarium of the Smokies to
   evacuate Monday, abandoning more than 10,500 animals, Ripley
   Attractions General Manager Ryan DeSear told WBIR.
   
   DeSear said the blaze was about 50 yards from the building when
   employees were forced to flee.
   
   "To them, every animal has a name," he said. "You don't give that up."
   But he added: "Nothing is more important than human life. Fish can be
   replaced. It sucks."
   
   Late Tuesday morning, however, Ripley announced that the animals were
   "safe and under care."

   [More than 10,000 aquarium animals, dozens of bald eagles spared as fires rage in Tenn.]
   
   Officials said Tuesday that both towns sustained widespread property
   damage, with no real relief in sight.
   
   TEMA said that "very preliminary surveys of damaged areas" suggested
   that "hundreds of structures are lost."
   
   "Westgate Resorts is likely entirely gone (more than 100 buildings),"
   TEMA said, "Black Bear Falls has likely lost every single cabin." The
   agency initially said that Ober Gatlinburg Ski Area and Amusement Park
   "reportedly is entirely destroyed." However, the mountain resort posted
   a video
Tuesday morning showing the facility still intact.
   
   Dollywood, in Pigeon Forge, is the largest theme park in the area. In a
   public statement,
   https://twitter.com/kchirbas/status/803451501335216128
                                park officials said there was no damage to the park
   as of late Monday, but 50 rooms in the park's DreamMore Resort and 19
   of its cabins were evacuated.
   
   "Dollywood crews and firefighters are working to protect the park areas
   adjacent to a fire burning on Upper Middle Ridge," according to the
   statement.
   
   Park officials said in a statement that "extreme weather conditions" in
   the Great Smoky Mountains National Park "led to the exponential spread
   of fires."
   
   "Conditions remain extremely dangerous with trees expected to continue
   to fall," they wrote Tuesday morning on Facebook. "Officials are asking
   that motorists stay off the roadways throughout the area. Travel in the
   Gatlinburg area is limited to emergency traffic only."
   
   "Even with the rain that is currently falling there," TEMA said
   Tuesday, "the fires continue to burn and structures remain engulfed
   with little hope that the rainfall will bring immediate relief."
   
   https://twitter.com/JasonZacharyTN/status/803442276991168512
   
   More than 1,300 people have been sheltered at the Gatlinburg Community
   Center and at Rocky Top Sports World, a sports facility in town.
   
   "It's very dangerous weather conditions," Dana Soehn, spokeswoman for
   the National Park Service, told ABC affiliate WATE-TV. "We've had trees
   coming down, limbs coming down, and the fire is continuing to grow."
   
   Park officials explained that the severe wind gusts of more than 80
   mph, combined with "unprecedented low relative humidity, and extended
   drought conditions," caused the fire "to spread rapidly and
   unpredictably."
   
   "Wind gusts carried burning embers long distances, causing new spot
   fires to ignite across the north-central area of the park and into
   Gatlinburg," park officials said. "In addition, high winds caused
   numerous trees to fall throughout the evening on Monday, bringing down
   power lines across the area that ignited additional new fires that
   spread rapidly due to sustained winds of over 40 mph."
   
   The conditions made it difficult — if not impossible — for firefighters
   to contain the flames.
   
   "The wind is not helping, and the rain is not here yet," Miller, the
   Gatlinburg fire chief, said earlier at a news conference, according to
   CNN
. "These are the worst possible conditions imaginable."
   
   https://twitter.com/kingofkingsport/status/803464455157936129
   
   https://twitter.com/jnbeatlefan/status/803472022416265216
   
   "If you're a person of prayer, we could use your prayers," Miller told
   reporters Monday night.
   
   The Southeast has spent much of the past few weeks battling forest
   fires, which began after one of its worst droughts on record. Several
   states have been affected.
   
   As The Washington Post reported Nov. 16, when there were 17 active
   fires in the southern Appalachians, "The entire state of South Carolina
   is covered in an unhealthy haze from fires burning in the Blue Ridge
   Mountains."
   
   At that time, more than 80,000 acres had been burned.
   
   
   A raging wildfire spread into downtown Gatlinburg, Tenn., on Nov. 28.
   Onlookers and residents captured images of the leaping flames and
   smoke-filled skies as police issued evacuation orders. (Jenny
   Starrs/The Washington Post)

   
   This is a developing report, and it will be updated.
   
   More from Morning Mix "

``I hope that the fair, and, I may say certain prospects of success will not induce us to relax.''
-- Lieutenant General George Washington, commander-in-chief to
   Major General Israel Putnam,
   Head-Quarters, Valley Forge, 5 May, 1778

MOVINGTARGET

Beware, the Gatlinberg Tennessee fires, may be coming to a town near you...

In the aftermath of the fires that all but destroyed Gatlinberg Tennessee, and as a result of some of the nasty comments on social media, that have been made about that fire by liberal Hillary supporters. Some have speculated that the Tennessee fires may have been ignited as a result of Mr. Trump being elected as President.

Liberals are stupid, and are capable of doing dumb things, but I don't think they are willing to do something as evil as burning down a resort town. That kind of evil is usually reserved for Covert Government Operations.

For more than 20 years, we have seen many wildfires erupt in the Western States, and burn uncontrollably for weeks at a time, causing damage to homes and property.

As a result of various life threatening events, we have the idea of "heading for the hills" when trouble is on the horizon. This concept goes back as far as Biblical times, and there's even a verse in the New Testament where Jesus tells his disciples to head for the hills when they see the city of Jerusalem under attack.

Most preppers have the same idea when it comes to bugging out of town in case the proverbial SHTF event occurs. Many people have purchased cabins, or bought land, and built small structures to retreat to, and stocked them with survival food in preparation for the feared TEOTWAWKI (The End Of The World As We Know It) event.

But, there's a possibility that TPTB (The Powers That Be) are working to eliminate your hidey hole in Idaho, or any other location that people have been planning to hunker down, to escape the chaos of the cities.

Lets look at the evidence.

Are Chemtrails causing drought?


"Chemtrails create a hot air layer at 30,000 feet, capping inversion," that hot air layer will overrun the low pressure area and prevent the low pressure from forming, as low pressure is what produces precipitation.

Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V7iBUkshzHE

Story: http://www.naturalnews.com/049793_HAARP_chemtrails_California_drought.html

Drought of course causes dangerous high fire conditions, so people are urged to be extra cautious about burning debris. Most people are conscientious of this danger, and are careful because it's in their own best interest.

Are their ways for fires to start without lightning, yes there are. But if it happened would you know how it happened, probably not, especially if it happened at night, just before a windy cold front was approaching, as it did with the Gatlinberg fire.

Story here: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/capital-weather-gang/wp/2016/11/29/this-is-how-the-devastating-gatlinburg-tennessee-wildfire-erupted-overnight/?tid=a_inl&utm_term=.67cd4bb1b1cc
___________________________________________________________________________________________

Now we have,
Secret Rocket Balls: A new tool for aerial ignition.


The Pentagon has a new secret weapon: rocket balls. These are hollow spheres, made of rubberized rocket fuel; when ignited, they propel themselves around at random high speed, bouncing off the walls and breaking through doors, turning the entire building into an inferno. The makers call them "kinetic fireball incendiaries."

Story: http://wildfiretoday.com/2008/11/13/secret-rocket-balls-a-new-tool-for-aerial-ignition/

There is another type of Aerial Ignition Device, (meaning, they are designed to be dropped from an airplane or helicopter) that is about the size of a ping pong ball, and has been used for Prescribed Burning in overgrown forests for many years, it's called Dragon Eggs, see the pdf ad for Dragon Eggs below.

Dragon Eggs pdf here: http://www.typeoneproducts.com/DragonEggs.pdf

Red Dragon spheres dropping from the helicopter Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NVs45BthPcI

Here's a picture that looks similar from the Denver International Airport Murals, that were sponsored by the Freemasons.  In both images we see the forest on fire, I guess we are supposed to  think it's just a prescribed burn,

Yea right, I doubt it.


Above image is entitled  "Peace and Harmony with Nature"

At the bottom of the image we see what looks like a Christ figure, but he is beneath them, from the underworld, and he is the Evil Christ, or Antichrist.

Funny how these ping pong balls are called Dragon Eggs, and the Secret Society that worships the Dragon, sponsored the Denver International Airport Murals.

The Denver International Airport is also called, "The New World Airport."

Is there a message here?

Are you connecting the dots yet?

Denver Airport Murals here: http://vigilantcitizen.com/sinistersites/sinister-sites-the-denver-international-airport/

Conclusion:

It seems our Government is hard at work causing drought, and has a covert way of causing forest fires, without leaving behind any evidence. So, a word of caution, if your a prepper, keep the dry material away from your retreat or home, and off your roof, and if your experiencing drought, like many of us are, have a garden hose handy.

It may be more important than you think...
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