Lately, every time I set out to write about something deeper and principle-based, I get distracted by the crazy news. I’ll try to tie this into something eternal in the end.
The cataclysmic news this week includes—well, let’s start with a massive hurricane.
Hurricane Helene, image from here |
Hurricane
Helene
Hurricane Helene, which hit the Florida panhandle as a category 4 storm a week ago, caused widespread devastation across 10-12 states. Some areas had 30 inches of rain—much of it before the storm actually arrived, so mudslides were a common outcome. The death toll is still unknown; compared to catastrophes in some third-world countries, deaths are low, but there are still a lot of missing people, maybe thousands. This may be the most devastating storm since Katrina. (I believe Hurricane Harvey was as devasting, with more than 50 inches of rain, as the storm stalled over Houston for days, but it was milder once it moved on to other areas.)
A bridge out near Ashville, North Carolina, photo from here. |
Communications, roads, water, and electricity are out—some of this may be long-term. Pack mules are being used to bring in supplies, which I thought was fascinating. If we ever get stuck in a pre-industrial situation, there are pack mules. This was probably common a century and a half ago, but now I see it as a rare and inventive solution.
Pack mule teams to the rescue, image found here. |
Churches (here’s one story; here’s another) and individuals are working together to bring relief. Glenn Beck talks about
the Hillbilly Airforce (similar to the Cajun Navy, citizen volunteers from Louisiana that helped us out in Houston
with Hurricane Harvey), in this story:
· "What Glenn saw while helping hurricane victims in Asheville SHOCKED him”
October 4, 2024.
He was there helping organize airlifting people in need. Government
tried to shut them down. The people, who had organized themselves and found
people with helicopters to come and volunteer, told the government guys, since
they weren’t there to help, to get out of the way: “Get off our land!”
Glenn saw one FEMA truck, behind a building. The US Rep. he was
with went with him to talk to them. It was a communications truck. The workers
were sitting around playing cards or something, doing nothing. Glenn said
almost nothing, to avoid lighting into them. There are government resources at
military bases as close as North Carolina. Meanwhile, Kamala continues
fundraising and avoiding media appearances, while the so-called president “commands
forces” from a beach in Delaware.
FEMA has instituted a priority system, based on DEI dogma. A
poor white Appalachian child cannot be prioritized over a suburban black,
because of, you know, privilege.
Chris Martenson of Peak Prosperity starts off a brief video
with, “Welcome to the quickening.” Maybe that refers to how fast news is coming
at us, or maybe it’s an end times reference. But he, as I am doing, will talk
about several big news stories: the hurricane and lack of response, the port
strike (which I mention below), and the unrest on the Israel/Lebanon border.
This 10-minute segment is limited to the hurricane and response:
· “Hurricane Helene and Government Inaction, Israel Invades, and Free Speech Under Attack” Chris Martenson, Peak Prosperity, October 2, 2024.
In the absence of true reporting and government distrust,
there are some conspiracy theories about attempts at weather control—that either
went awry or went as planned, not sure. I have no idea what may be true. I
mention it, but I’ll need more information to become a believer. But I know
enough not to put it past this current government regime.
Anyone who still trusts government—and turns to government
as their substitute for God—may need an experience like this to wake up. Some
note that, besides helping one another, the only place to turn is to God, and
that is happening.
There’s another named storm, Kirk, out in the Atlantic. A fearmongering press suggested it might take the same trajectory as Helene. But my weather app shows it much further east (Helene came up from the Gulf in the south) and heading eastward; it may be possible that it will hit the UK or France, but it’s definitely not going to hit the east coast of the US. Still, it is not a storm you’d want to meet out on the waters.
Iran
Attack on Israel
On the eve of Rosh Hashanah, Israel’s new year and high holy
days season—which starts on a new moon, and also happened to coincide with an
annular eclipse—Iran attacked Israel with a barrage of 180 missiles. (Iran
claims it was over 200.) Most of the missiles were intercepted. A few hit in
central Israel. Mostly administrative buildings were damaged, and some homes
received shrapnel damage.
There were no deaths. A few people were treated with
shrapnel wounds, mostly minor. Whatever else you might say, that outcome seems
miraculous. As in biblically miraculous. There’s the prophecy of the two
prophets raised up to Israel in the last days, who, according to Revelation 11:4-5:
“they
shall prophesy a thousand two hundred and threescore days [1260 days, or 3 ½
years] clothed in sackcloth….and if any man will hurt them, fire proceedeth
out of their mouth, and devoureth their enemies: and if any man will hurt them,
he must in this manner be killed.”
I don’t yet see the two witnesses. But it sure looks like someone
is protecting Israel, so, if it’s them, we’re probably somewhere within those
1260 days.
Basic info is in this BBC News piece:
· “What we know about Iran's missile attack on Israel” David Gritten, Matt Murphy, and Patrick Jackson, BBC News, October 3, 2024.
Earthquake
in Tonga
There was a 6.8 earthquake in Tonga on October 2. I’ve seen very little news concerning it. (There is a story here.) I’m remembering the 6.8 earthquake that hit San Francisco in 1989, just two months after we moved away from there. The Bay Bridge collapsed. Roads and rails were torn up, and there was widespread devastation. That’s a very big quake.
image from here |
Fortunately, this quake in the island nation of Tonga was
about 6 miles deep and did not cause a tsunami. The nearby islands felt the
shock but did not suffer a great deal of damage.
But if you want to worry some more about earthquakes, there’s
this story:
· “Record spike in earthquakes around Washington's 'high threat' volcano” Ellyn Lapointe, Daily Mail, October 4, 2024.
Vice
Presidential Debate
There was a vice-presidential debate Tuesday night, October 1. “Catastrophe” is a word you might use, depending on which side you were on. J. D. Vance comported himself well, looked presidential and in control—dispelling the media lies about him being “weird” or unreasonable and angry. Tim Walz, Governor of Minnesota, looked like a wild-eyed and/or befuddled Elmer Fudd. Take just about any screenshot the entire debate.
J.D. Vance and Tim Walz, VP debate, random screenshot taken from a clip shown by Dan Bongino |
He badly fumbled such
questions as why he claimed to be in Tiananmen Square during the riots when he
was not there until months later—adding that to the list of stolen valor-type
lies. He said something to the effect that his people know and understand him,
and he’s sometimes a knucklehead. That’s really doesn’t explain why you would
invent a story to give yourself credit for some particular experience that you
didn’t have. The whole rest of the world has not gone, “Tiananmen Square, now
was I there at that time when the government mowed down civilians in the
street? I can’t quite remember.” Tim Walz is unique. In a bad way.
Another fumble—and this was a misspeak he didn’t seem to be
aware of—was trying to explain his change from supporting the 2nd
Amendment to wanting gun control. He intended, I think, to refer to a
conversation he had with parents of Sandy Hook victims, but he said he changed
after talking to the shooters. Oops.
He was in the unenviable position of trying to explain why
Kamala Harris would suddenly do everything right once elected—and be an agent
of change—when she’s had the power to effect those changes for three and a half
years so far. So, for him, and that side of the ballot, you could call the
night memorably catastrophic.
Port
Workers Strike
The hurricane aftermath, with roads wiped out and bridges collapsed, is going to cause some shipping problems. Quartz and lithium mines, necessary for making computer chips, are inaccessible for the foreseeable future. And people are going to prioritize getting food, water, and fuel. So the timing could hardly be better for a longshoreman strike all along the east coast, and even including the Port of Houston here. As I was writing, word came that they had settled for a sizable pay increase, or maybe have paused the strike until January.
Ports under threat of closure, image found on Facebook. |
Even with only a few days of buildup in the ports, the
ripple effect could still take weeks to work back toward normal. The big
concern for the overall economy was, if it lasted for as long as a couple of
weeks, we could be feeling the effects on through Christmas, with even early
orders not making it in time. This would have had a substantial impact on
businesses, many of which plan on making a large percentage of their annual
sales during the Christmas holiday season.
Avoiding
Prophesied Calamities
A prophetic scripture came to mind: Doctrine & Covenants 88:87-91:
87 For not many days hence
and the earth shall tremble and reel to and
fro as a drunken man; and the sun shall hide his face, and
shall refuse to give light; and the moon shall be bathed in blood; and the stars shall
become exceedingly angry, and shall cast themselves down as
a fig that falleth from off a fig tree.
88 And after your testimony cometh wrath and
indignation upon the people.
89 For after your testimony
cometh the testimony of earthquakes, that shall cause
groanings in the midst of her, and men shall fall upon the ground and shall not
be able to stand.
90 And also cometh the
testimony of the voice of thunderings,
and the voice of lightnings, and the voice of tempests, and the voice of the
waves of the sea heaving themselves beyond their bounds.
91 And all things shall be
in commotion; and surely,
men’s hearts shall fail them;
for fear shall come upon all people.
When the testimony of the Elders ceases to be
given, and the Lord says to them, “Come home; I will now preach my own sermons
to the nations of the earth,” all you now know can scarcely be called a preface
to the sermon that will be preached with fire and sword, tempests, earthquakes,
hail, rain, thunders and lightnings, and fearful destruction. What matters the
destruction of a few railway cars? You will hear of magnificent cities, now
idolized by the people, sinking in the earth, entombing the inhabitants. The
sea will heave itself beyond its bounds, engulfing mighty cities. Famine will
spread over the nations and nation will rise up against nation, kingdom against
kingdom and states against states, in our own country and in foreign lands; and
they will destroy each other, caring not for the blood and lives of their
neighbors, of their families, or for their own lives (Discourses of Brigham Young, 111–12).
Dan Bongino has a T-shirt he sells that says, “Is it bad
enough yet?” Some people read about apocalyptic times and think it is all going
to be much worse than what we have seen, as if to say, “You ain’t seen nothin’ yet.” And,
granted, the book of Revelation, among others, looks pretty scary in places. But
for people in North Carolina and Tennessee right now, without roads,
electricity, food supply, or communications, seeing entire cities wiped out by
flood and mud, unable to reach loved ones to find out if one another has
survived—for these people this is probably bad enough.
In Houston in 2017, with biblical downpours of rain, watching
boats go up and down the water-filled streets to rescue people, we thought that
was probably bad enough.
People in war-torn countries probably think what they’re
facing is bad enough. People caught in human trafficking (more human slavery now
than at any time when it was considered legal and acceptable, which included
most of human history) probably think this is bad enough.
I thought things were bad enough in the 1990s, but then I was surprised by the 2000s. I was certain things were bad enough in the 2010s. Then 2020 came, when we began playing apocalypse bingo as we read the news.
A meme I saw in May 2020; I don't know the original source. |
While it’s true we are often blessed in our personal lives,
going on with things—as they did in the days of Noah, right up until it began
to rain—that doesn’t mean the prophesied pouring out of desolations isn’t
happening somewhere else in the world. And, because of our communications,
we’re likely to hear about these things, wherever they happen.
Another prophecy warning outcome caught my attention this
week. This is the next-to-last paragraph of The Family: A Proclamation to the World:
We warn
that individuals who violate covenants of chastity, who abuse spouse or
offspring, or who fail to fulfill family responsibilities will one day stand
accountable before God. Further, we warn that the disintegration of the family
will bring upon individuals, communities, and nations the calamities
foretold by ancient and modern prophets.
There is a way to forfend the foretold calamities; it is to
strengthen personal families, and to strengthen the concept of Family within
our communities. We should “promote those measures designed to maintain and
strengthen the family as the fundamental unit of society” (final paragraph of
the Family Proclamation).
This is not to say that all those negatively affected by the
hurricane and other catastrophes in the news have failed to support their
families and Family in general. Some of the outpouring of desolations will rain
down upon the just and the unjust. But, as God “preaches His own sermons to the
nations of the earth,” He is saying, “Turn to Me.” If government has been your
god, you can see what a puny, powerless god it is in such times. If you’ve been
depending on your own strength and control, that doesn’t stand up well to the
power of nature and Nature’s God.
A starting place is to honor family, to keep commitments to
those we are closest to in love. And we support that for others as well. This
may lead to the essential place: honoring God, through His Son Jesus Christ.
I recommend a couple of video conversations from this week,
toward this end:
· “General Relief Society President - Family
Proclamation, 'Family Is The Doctrine Of Christ'” September 29, 2024 Greg Matson, CWIC Media, September 29, 2024. He repeats the point from of
former general Relief Society President: to be anti-family is to be
anti-Christ.
· Stu Does America, September 26, 2024. Stu Burgiere talks with Ryan T. Anderson about the post Dobbs world of abortion. Anderson, with the benefit of much research on top of seeking moral ways of living, points out that people in general favor abortion in just three circumstances: when the life of the mother is at stake, as a result of rape or incest—and when it’s their personal situation (their own or their child’s). It’s that last one that is the problem. We need a people moral enough to prevent such circumstances whenever possible, and to face them when they show up even after all you could do.
So, the way to avoid prophesied calamities is simple, if not
easy: Turn to Christ, and share Him—by example and word—with your immediate family.
And then share Him with your extended family, friends, and community. People
who do that will get through these times. People who don’t have no such
promise.
No comments:
Post a Comment