Across the street from my house, oil is seeping out of the ground. I see it in the gutter on its way to the drain. Roughly a dozen square feet of land uphill from that drain is just squishy oily mud that sucks on my shoes.
Now the planet Earth produces oil and gas like the human body produces urine, feces, and gas (I am a nurse). While the human body expels its waste products through its urinary and gastrointestinal tracts, the earth expels them through its volcanoes. The emptying of
Underground spaces result in earthquakes.
Since man has been smartly digging up these products and using them for fuel, the earth has relaxed its reliance on volcanoes and earthquakes. However, in 1992 the United Nations produced Agenda 21 (read more about that in my book Undermining the U.S. Constitution). It makes the earth’s excrement untouchable.
So that means the inevitable return of volcanoes* and earthquakes on a large scale. I know without question that I do not want to live on an island or a mountaintop, where obvious volcanic activity erupts. But should I question the location of my own home, because of the
oil across the street?
Diane S. Vann
For an outstanding and rather recent (1816) example of a volcano’s possible impact on both climate and the environment, read about the eruption of Mount Tambora on 10 April 1815 starting the Year Without a Summer. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Year_Without_a_Summer