🌊 Biblical
Water Crisis is Aboutto Erase Satan's ISLAM From the Map.
The always ungrateful
Ishmaelites waste their money and energy on polygamy, pedophilia,
invasion, abuse, hate, war and genocide. Built bombs, drones
and armies to massacre Christians instead
of water storage. Like locusts, whatever they touch, dies. These are
the fruits of their fleshly identity and
nature – their labor. This is practically
divine intervention.
🌊 Ghost
City Dubai Begins to Feel Impact of Iran War as Water Crisis Threat
Looms
🔥The
Warmonger Edomites & Ishamelites are Panicking as Iran War
BACKFIRES HUGELY... Now Begging Each other to Stop The War.
Day
of reckoning... Antichrist UAE funded and armed the genocidal fascist
Oromo Islamic regime of Ethiopia to massacred ancient
Christians....what you sow you reap.
🔥 As
the Iran war widens, experts say the Middle East's real strategic
weak point may be water — not oil.
“Everyone
thinks of Saudi Arabia and their neighbors as petrostates. But I call
them saltwater kingdoms. They’re human-made fossil-fueled water
superpowers,”
The
Arabian Gulf region is among the most dependent in the world on
desalinated water. Specialized reports indicate that it produces
about 40 percent of the world’s total desalinated water.
More
than 90% of the Gulf’s desalinated water comes from just 56 plants,
the report stated, and “each of these critical plants is extremely
vulnerable to sabotage or military action.”
A
leaked 2008 U.S. diplomatic cable warned the Saudi capital of Riyadh
“would have to evacuate within a week” if either the Jubail
desalination plant on the Gulf coast or its pipelines or associated
power infrastructure were seriously damaged.
Over
the weekend, the conflict was escalated by attacks on water
desalination plants in the Gulf region. This is huge.
Over
the weekend, airstrikes targeted water desalination plants in Iran
and Bahrain, threatening a vital life source in one of the most
water-scarce regions in the world. Analysts said that this
development was not only a “serious escalation” in the Iran war,
but also an indication that the conflict could have a wider civilian
impact.
Iran’s
foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, called a Saturday attack on a
desalination plant on Iran’s Qeshm Island “a dangerous move with
grave consequences” on social media and accused the U.S. of setting
a precedent. Capt. Tim Hawkins, a spokesman for the U.S. Central
Command, has since denied that the U.S. was behind the attack.
One
day later, Bahrain’s interior ministry alleged that an Iranian
drone caused material damage to a desalination plant in the Persian
Gulf island nation, accusing Iran of “indiscriminately” attacking
civilian targets. Bahrain’s water and electricity authority said
there had been “no impact on water supplies or water network
capacity.”
While
there has been no immediate response from Iran about Bahrain’s
allegation, Iranian officials have stated that their attacks on close
U.S. allies in the Gulf are a direct response to the American-Israeli
attacks in Iran. They have also stated that the attacks are aimed at
American military bases and U.S. soldiers, not civilians.
It
was not immediately clear whether either plant was still functioning.
Political experts have long warned about the plants’ vulnerability
as military targets.
Desalination
plants are used to convert seawater into water for drinking,
irrigation and industrial purposes. In an area where potable water is
scarce, the plants have become vital to life in the Gulf region.
According
to a 2020 report by the Gulf Research Center, groundwater, with
desalinated water, accounts for around 90 percent of the region’s
main water resources. And with groundwater fast deteriorating due to
climate change, Gulf countries have come to rely more heavily on
desalinated water.
About
42% of the UAE’s drinking water comes from desalination plants,
compared to 90% in Kuwait, 86% in Oman, 70% in Saudi Arabia and about
80% in Israel.
If
the attacks on desalination plants in Gulf countries continue, the
situation could very quickly devolve into a “massive humanitarian
catastrophe for the people living in the Gulf,” according to
Annelle Sheline, a research fellow in the Quincy Institute’s Middle
East Program.
These
attacks come after a leaked 2008 diplomatic cable sent from the U.S.
Embassy in Riyadh warned that the Saudi capital relied on a singular
desalination plant for more than 90 percent of its drinking water.
Since then, the Saudi government has expanded their water storage,
however, the region’s cities have also continued to grow, placing
an undue burden on the water ecosystems that support them.
With
this in mind, water desalination plants in the region remain
essential for the region and represent a vulnerable military target.
Sheline said she wouldn’t be surprised if more facilities were
attacked in the future, despite international humanitarian law
prohibiting the targeting of civilian infrastructure that is crucial
to the survival of the population, which includes drinking water
plants.
“Laws
of war dictate that a military target is a legitimate target, and a
civilian target is not legitimate. Targeting, whether it's oil
infrastructure or water infrastructure, those are war crimes and
violations of international law,” Sheline told RS.
These
attacks could mark a major turning point in the war, escalating
existing tensions and indicating a new willingness to harm civilians
in an already deadly conflict.
🌊 Key
Concerns with Desalinated Water:
Lack
of Minerals: The distillation or reverse osmosis process removes
necessary minerals (calcium, magnesium). Without post-treatment to
add these back, this "soft" water can cause health issues
over time.
Chemical
Contamination: Residual chemicals used in the process, such as
chlorine, copper, or anti-scalants, can enter the final drinking
water.
Digestive
Issues: Some users report discomfort or digestive issues when
consuming desalinated water, often attributed to the lack of
minerals or residual chemicals.
Environmental
Impact: The process generates a high-salt byproduct (brine) that,
when returned to the ocean, creates oxygen-depleted dead zones,
harming marine life.
“But if the
Lord creates something new, and the ground opens its mouth and
swallows them up with all that belongs to them, and they go down
alive into Sheol, then you shall know that these men have despised
the Lord.”
❖[Revelation
9:1–4]❖
“And the
fifth angel blew his trumpet, and qI saw a star fallen from heaven to
earth, and he was given the key to the shaft of the bottomless pit.
He opened the shaft of the bottomless pit, and from the shaft rose
smoke like the smoke of a great furnace, and the sun and the air were
darkened with the smoke from the shaft. Then from the smoke came
locusts on the earth, and they were given power like the power of
scorpions of the earth. They were told not to harm the grass of the
earth or any green plant or any tree, but only those people who do
not have the seal of God on their foreheads.”
🛑 We
have to interpret these dramatic events as evidence that The Almighty
Egziabher God is on the move.
Enormous sinkholes
measuring hundreds of feet in depth have been appearing across
genocidal Abiy Ahmed's babysitter Turkey, prompting some observers to
draw parallels with biblical scripture.
The Book of Numbers,
Chapter 16, recounts the ground opening to consume people as divine
retribution for defiance, a passage that certain individuals have
connected to the ground collapses occurring in the Konya Plain.
Turkey's Disaster and
Emergency Management Authority has documented 648 substantial
sinkholes throughout the vital wheat-producing region.
Prior to the turn of the
millennium, such collapses were rare, with only a small number
occurring per decade.
Now, however, scores of
massive ground failures happen annually, with some exceeding 100 feet
in diameter.
Researchers at
Konya Technical University have identified over 20 fresh sinkholes
within the past 12 months, supplementing approximately 1,900
locations already charted by 2021 where subsidence or early-stage
collapse was detected.
Prolonged
drought over the past quarter-century has been identified as the
primary driver behind this dramatic surge in ground failures.
Declining water
tables beneath the surface are creating cascading problems, including
depleted wells, damaged ecosystems, failing harvests, and sinking
terrain.
Agricultural
workers extracting additional groundwater to sustain their sugar beet
and maize crops are worsening the crisis.
According to
Turkey Today, farmers have already suffered crop losses or been
compelled to vacate fields considered hazardous.
NASA's Earth
Observatory data indicates Turkish water reserves fell to their
lowest point in 15 years during 2021.
Researchers
caution that comparable dangers could materialize across portions of
the US, Asia, the Middle East, the Mediterranean, and Australia as
groundwater reserves continue to diminish.
Miami:
Man Enters Greek Orthodox Church, Screams
‘Allahu Akbar,’ Says He Has a Bomb