Resurrection and Drought for breakfast this morning:
We first covered the coming California Drought/Panic (and potential Diaspora) back in January of 2014 for our Peoplenomics.com™ subscribers.
What I like to do with Peoplenomics™ (much more so than UrbanSurvival) is look into the future –toward where the data has been pointing – and project what that future will be like when it shows up.
So fifteen months ago, we were considering how the federal protections of frogs and such would lower reservoirs and how the rains had not come, nor would any be expected.
We know a couple of things about California – things modernists and Millennials try to paper-over with scare-tactics about Global Warming and – quick, hide under the bed! – climate change.
The fact of the matter is that climate always has been – and always will be – changing.
Al Gore and others currently reinventing climate as a business model tend to gloss over things like the floods in China 75-years ago – long before the effects of pernicious climate change.
To put a little hair on it, while the USA was going through the worst of the Dust Bowl from a lack of rain, as many as 3.7-million people died in China’s Great Flood of 1931. A factor not so deeply pondered in modern times is that populations density on the planet was much, much lower in the 1930’s…which means that a (population-inflation-adjusted) number could be in the vicinity of 6-10 million dead.
On the one hand, we can see that floods and droughts seem to be spread out over time and over large continental-sized areas. And, if we care to review the data, we will see that even in fairly close proximity, huge swings in climate always have been occurring at regular intervals.
2013 saw massive devastation in Afghanistan and Pakistan due to? Floods
Yet, right next door, temporally speaking, we had the drought of 1998-2002 in Pakistan and right now, the D-word is showing up in headlines again: “Ray of light in Pakistan’s drought-hit Thar desert.”
That BBC headline is perplexing. It leaves us staring into the coffee grounds this morning and wondering exactly what it is when a desert – already so-named because of a lack of rain – has what? A lack of rain. Most perplexing, indeed.
So let’s sit back and consider this California Drought problem a little more closely; without the climate hype and without the globalista’s minions who are trying to consolidate power, raise money, impose taxes, and thereby control lifestyles via whatever levers they can pull.
Don’t be fooled: There are lots of levers to be pulled: Racism, Terrorism, Global Warming….but it all comes back to what’s clearly explained in Report from Iron Mountain. This book – whose origins are still debated – explained back during the Vietnam era what the problem of government was: There needs to be a massive external enemy that presents such a threat, such an all-pervasive problem, that people will yield their freedom to government.
The book, by the way, points to only a few options, several of which are man-made disease, a massive global healthcare system, aliens from space (grown in Earth-based labs, of course) and a number of other problems.
Climate, I’m sure, would have been included in the book, but it wasn’t until the California Drought of the mid-1970’s that drought really surfaced as a government/citizen control point.
As I noted in my Peoplenomics report (again, this was 15-months ago):
Keep an eye on the major cities of California because a severe hit from the drought could be in the making there.
Just this week, the San Francisco Chronicle (the Chron) was advising its readers to be ready for things to get really, really tough.
Back in 1973 I was offered a job at KFRC and there was a drought on at the time. The radio station was full of “If it’s yellow, let it mellow, if it’s brown, flush it down” pointers for the local people. Putting bricks in toilet tanks was promoted, too.
That 2013 was a record dry year is not enough to get people to thinking about relocation. But another year, a serous lack of water continuing, and that could all change.
But the big picture is already shifting. In a report this summer for the Hoover Institute at Stanford, Carson Bruno wrote that there was already a 2% net out migration in the 2004-2012 data:
“Looking at age, we see the red flag: individuals are coming to California in their early 20’s and not sticking around. We find that only college-age individuals see a net in-migration into California; all other groups witness a net out-migration, with the 40-to-54 age group — those in the prime of their professional careers — having the highest level of net out-migration. Despite college age individuals experiencing a net in-migration, the drop-off in the 25-to-39 age group suggests that these individuals are not staying within the state, likely due to the high cost of living in California and/or the lack of employment. “
How Climate Hype Works
To be sure, California has a water problem. No arguing the point. As I pointed out in the more recent Peoplenomics piece “The Grand Canals of Earth and Mars – where we talk about two proposals to save California from the drought, there are some solutions available, but they will be the largest geoengineering on the planet yet, and their impacts will likely far surpass even the Three Gorges Dam project in China.