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"Old ideological boundaries are now giving way to new operational alliances. A unified front between international Marxism and radical Islamic movements need not share the same ultimate vision to share the same immediate enemy of free and self governing societies. That convergence should concern every government representative in this room (...)"
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Forwarded from Tabz - Alternative Media (Tabz)
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🌬 🔥 🇺🇸 Chicago has disappeared from the shores of Lake Michigan
It was there the last two days.
📎 WindyCity Weather and News
It was there the last two days.
📎 WindyCity Weather and News
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Over 2,000 are estimated to have died in the country during the record-breaking June heatwave.
Agricultural losses are likely in the billions of euros.
📎 Colin McCarthy
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Over 8 million UK homes now have hosepipe bans due to low reservoir levels.
Natural England has declared an "exceptional" wildfire risk, its highest tier, across much of England.
📎 Colin McCarthy
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🌬 🔥 🇨🇦 This aerial footage was captured by Scott Hatton, who said that it shows smoke rising from fires in Thunder Bay, Ontario.
At least 183 wildfires were burning in Ontario as of Wednesday, July 15.
Credit: Scott Hatton via Storyful
📎 FOX 9
At least 183 wildfires were burning in Ontario as of Wednesday, July 15.
Credit: Scott Hatton via Storyful
📎 FOX 9
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📝 🔥 🇨🇦 Canada Is Primed to Burn. Why Aren’t We Ready?
Canada divides its wildfire-fighting responsibilities among provinces and territories, with a federal division for parks. How each agency manages its fires varies—Yukon, for example, lets most of its fires burn, jumping in only when they get close to urban areas, whereas BC and Alberta try to suppress the majority of fires wherever they are. Budgets and staffing are also decentralized, with each province and territory owning and contracting out their own firefighters and fleets of air tankers as needed.
When every wildfire fighter within Canada is deployed (NPL 5), CIFFC turns to countries like Australia, Mexico, and South Africa for help, a backstop that Canada has been increasingly leaning on. Between 2015 and 2022, the most international firefighters in Canada at any time was 785, with a yearly average of 350. In 2025, that number was 1,279. Two years before, during 2023’s record-breaking year for wildfires, it was 4,464.
A centralized, national body could make sure the country has a united and consistently funded approach to prevention and suppression, say advocates. Rather than coordinating scattered resources and personnel across jurisdictions with their own priorities and budgets, like CIFFC, it would have its own. They believe that if wildfire management was integrated into other national-priority areas like housing, infrastructure, green technology, health, and employment, there would be fewer gaps in resources and decision making.
Currently, Canada is the only G7 country that does not have a national agency to respond to wildfires. After the devastating 2023 fire season, then BC member of Parliament Richard Cannings called on the government to establish a national, non-military forest fighting force to be deployed when needed to support provincial teams. This prompted a survey by Abacus Data, which polled 1,500 Canadians and found that three in four are in support. An analysis of the data suggested that summer’s fires “left a lasting impression on the public consciousness, emphasizing that wildfires are not isolated incidents but a national problem requiring a national solution.”
📝 Maxwell Schaeffer: Ontario cut their forest firefighting budget by $42M last year.
And in 2023, “Canada’s wildfire season released the equivalent of the annual fossil fuel emissions of India.”
📝 Hotshot Anon: "Giant ass megafires shouldn't even be a thing. Nearly every forest that is managed, or has been managed in the past will explode because what should be a normal understory burn becomes an uncontrolled disaster. Poor logging habits compounded by the literal hippy environmentalist retards of the 1960s. A huge wave of legislation was passed in like the 70s and 80s to impair logging, and most companies basically just dropped everything and walked off. Most forests in the US are ugly and unhealthy. They're overgrown and scraggly, or sparse and overwhelmed. Where there should be ponderosa trees there are ugly field oaks; where there should be cottonwoods and birches there is barren soil. Decades of fire suppression has ensured the opposite of healthy resilience. In the east, they have terrible bugkill. Agencies typically don't do serious post-fire rehabilitation. We've taken natural fire out of the equation and now forests are slowly dying from poor care and misplaced priorities."
"Climate change is basically a slur for me at this point. Fires are getting larger and more dangerous because there isn't anything substantial being done to mitigate fuel loading and availability. Grass gets greener and grows taller; brush, vines, and smaller species grow thicker and die and are grown over by more of their offspring; and trees are haphazardly allowed to grow in dense stands with variable or no substantial forester oversight. Log-decks, slash piles, dead-and-down, harvest piles, junk wood that's piled high, all of these are growing because there isn't enough fire to keep fuel loading low. Fires aren't isolated, tragic events that just happen. I'd recommend reading up on the Big Burn of 1910 to better understand why it gets this bad."
https://thewalrus.ca/canada-wildfires/
Canada divides its wildfire-fighting responsibilities among provinces and territories, with a federal division for parks. How each agency manages its fires varies—Yukon, for example, lets most of its fires burn, jumping in only when they get close to urban areas, whereas BC and Alberta try to suppress the majority of fires wherever they are. Budgets and staffing are also decentralized, with each province and territory owning and contracting out their own firefighters and fleets of air tankers as needed.
When every wildfire fighter within Canada is deployed (NPL 5), CIFFC turns to countries like Australia, Mexico, and South Africa for help, a backstop that Canada has been increasingly leaning on. Between 2015 and 2022, the most international firefighters in Canada at any time was 785, with a yearly average of 350. In 2025, that number was 1,279. Two years before, during 2023’s record-breaking year for wildfires, it was 4,464.
A centralized, national body could make sure the country has a united and consistently funded approach to prevention and suppression, say advocates. Rather than coordinating scattered resources and personnel across jurisdictions with their own priorities and budgets, like CIFFC, it would have its own. They believe that if wildfire management was integrated into other national-priority areas like housing, infrastructure, green technology, health, and employment, there would be fewer gaps in resources and decision making.
Currently, Canada is the only G7 country that does not have a national agency to respond to wildfires. After the devastating 2023 fire season, then BC member of Parliament Richard Cannings called on the government to establish a national, non-military forest fighting force to be deployed when needed to support provincial teams. This prompted a survey by Abacus Data, which polled 1,500 Canadians and found that three in four are in support. An analysis of the data suggested that summer’s fires “left a lasting impression on the public consciousness, emphasizing that wildfires are not isolated incidents but a national problem requiring a national solution.”
📝 Maxwell Schaeffer: Ontario cut their forest firefighting budget by $42M last year.
And in 2023, “Canada’s wildfire season released the equivalent of the annual fossil fuel emissions of India.”
📝 Hotshot Anon: "Giant ass megafires shouldn't even be a thing. Nearly every forest that is managed, or has been managed in the past will explode because what should be a normal understory burn becomes an uncontrolled disaster. Poor logging habits compounded by the literal hippy environmentalist retards of the 1960s. A huge wave of legislation was passed in like the 70s and 80s to impair logging, and most companies basically just dropped everything and walked off. Most forests in the US are ugly and unhealthy. They're overgrown and scraggly, or sparse and overwhelmed. Where there should be ponderosa trees there are ugly field oaks; where there should be cottonwoods and birches there is barren soil. Decades of fire suppression has ensured the opposite of healthy resilience. In the east, they have terrible bugkill. Agencies typically don't do serious post-fire rehabilitation. We've taken natural fire out of the equation and now forests are slowly dying from poor care and misplaced priorities."
"Climate change is basically a slur for me at this point. Fires are getting larger and more dangerous because there isn't anything substantial being done to mitigate fuel loading and availability. Grass gets greener and grows taller; brush, vines, and smaller species grow thicker and die and are grown over by more of their offspring; and trees are haphazardly allowed to grow in dense stands with variable or no substantial forester oversight. Log-decks, slash piles, dead-and-down, harvest piles, junk wood that's piled high, all of these are growing because there isn't enough fire to keep fuel loading low. Fires aren't isolated, tragic events that just happen. I'd recommend reading up on the Big Burn of 1910 to better understand why it gets this bad."
https://thewalrus.ca/canada-wildfires/
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The Walrus
Canada Is Primed to Burn. Why Aren’t We Ready? | The Walrus
The country still lacks the people and equipment to handle our record-breaking wildfires
Forwarded from Tabz - Alternative Media (Tabz)
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U.S. Marines from the 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit conduct a verification boarding aboard M/T Wen Yao in the Gulf of Oman, July 16.
As of today, American forces have redirected 3 commercial vessels trying to run the blockade, disabled 1 that didn’t comply, and boarded 1 to ensure full compliance with the ongoing U.S. naval blockade against Iran.
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Forwarded from Tabz - Alternative Media (Tabz)
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Forwarded from Middle East Spectator — MES
—❗️🇺🇸/🇮🇷 NEW: In a reckless move, the U.S. targeted several railway bridges in southern Iran during the past 6 hours
Only a limited amount of bridges were attacked, this was not a widespread attack on infrastructure, but this is a clear red line for Iran.
@Middle_East_Spectator
Only a limited amount of bridges were attacked, this was not a widespread attack on infrastructure, but this is a clear red line for Iran.
@Middle_East_Spectator
Forwarded from Geopolitics Watch (CK)
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Forwarded from Alsaa Plus EN
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NYC Mayor Mamdani cautioned New Yorkers to stay indoors or wear masks outside due to a "code red" air quality alert
📎 Insider Paper
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Forwarded from Rerum Novarum // Intel, Breaking News, and Alerts 🇺🇸
🇺🇸🇮🇷 - The locations of the two destroyed bridges in southern Iran.
Forwarded from Rerum Novarum // Intel, Breaking News, and Alerts 🇺🇸
Rerum Novarum // Intel, Breaking News, and Alerts 🇺🇸
🇺🇸🇮🇷 - The locations of the two destroyed bridges in southern Iran.
🇺🇸🇮🇷⚡️- The U.S. strikes on Iranian bridges were aimed at cutting off supply routes to the port city of Bandar Abbas, where Iran has a naval base it uses to attack ships in the Strait of Hormuz. - WSJ citing a senior U.S. official.
Forwarded from Kurdish Front Reports (Heval Makuî)
Advisor to Mohsen Rezai, Mostafa Najafi:
A major decision has been made in Tehran: if the Jolani government, at the request of Trump and under pressure from the United States, takes action against Hezbollah, it will face direct Iranian missile and drone attacks. This warning has been issued to Jolani.
@KurdishfrontReports
A major decision has been made in Tehran: if the Jolani government, at the request of Trump and under pressure from the United States, takes action against Hezbollah, it will face direct Iranian missile and drone attacks. This warning has been issued to Jolani.
@KurdishfrontReports