
The Fire Season Psyop
Every summer now we are told the same story: “record-breaking fires” spreading across multiple countries at once. Spain, Greece, Canada, the U.S., Russia — the reports all sound eerily alike. And when you dig into the details, you find the same strange patterns repeating: fires breaking out simultaneously in numerous places, with officials unable to explain how so many ignition points appear at once. We are simply expected to believe it is all “heat” and “drought.”
It doesn’t add up.
Of course dry conditions make fires more likely, but the idea that massive blazes just erupt in dozens of different locations at the same time is simply not credible.
What it does do, is create the perfect narrative cycle. News outlets plaster images of smoke and flames across the headlines, politicians rush to declare emergencies, and the chorus begins again: climate change, climate change, climate change.
We are being conditioned to accept that “fire season” is a permanent feature of life, that nature itself has become our enemy, and that only sweeping government powers can save us. And what follows? Land closures, new fines, restricted access, surveillance under the pretext of safety.
In Canada, people are already facing penalties of up to $25,000 simply for entering forested areas during declared emergencies. Step by step, ordinary freedoms are being eroded by the policies that are wrapped around these crises.
This fits neatly into the 2030 Agenda and the WEF’s vision of centralized control: the reframing of land as dangerous, the conditioning of citizens to view movement and freedom as privileges rather than rights, the slow tightening of a technocratic net under the banner of “saving the planet.”
https://t.me/LauraAbolichannel
Active Wildfires at a Glance
Spain
• 14 major wildfires burning across western and northern regions including Galicia, Castile and León, Extremadura, and Ourense .
• Over 157,000 hectares scorched—nearly double Spain’s average for the year .
• Death toll rising, including volunteer firefighters; evacuation orders and transport disruptions in place .
• The EU’s civil protection mechanism has been activated; Spain has requested Canadair water-bombers and allied support
Greece
• Multiple fires across mainland and islands (Cephalonia, Chios, Zakynthos) are active
• Evacuations ongoing, especially on Chios; tourism mostly unaffected but risk remains high .
• Scenes of dramatic escapes—families fleeing into the sea in some areas as fires surged .
Canada
• In Newfoundland and Labrador, a massive wildfire has led to a state of emergency, with over 6,000 hectares burned and ongoing threats to rural communities .
United States
• 46 large fires are active across eight national regions, with thousands of personnel—including hotshot crews and 135 helicopters—responding .
• Notable fires include:
• Lee Fire (Colorado): More than 133,000 acres burned, 12% contained, one of the largest in state history .
• Elk Fire (Colorado): Over 14,500 acres, now 93% contained, two homes destroyed .
• Dragon Bravo Fire (Arizona): ~144,000 acres burned, destroying the Grand Canyon Lodge and ranked the season’s largest wildfire .
• Canyon Fire (California): 5,370 acres, now fully contained, caused evacuations and minor structural damage .
Russia
• In the Far East, wildfires have burned ~629,000 hectares across regions like Zabaykalsky and Buryatia, triggered largely by dry conditions and traditional grass burning .
United Kingdom
• A serious moorland fire is active at Langdale Moor in North Yorkshire, England, burning several square kilometers near RAF Fylingdales
https://t.me/LauraAbolichannel
Glyphosate in the Sky: The Hidden Fuel Behind Canada’s Wildfires
As fires rage across Canada, the question no one seems willing to ask out loud is whether the very chemicals being sprayed into our skies are fueling the crisis.
Glyphosate, the infamous herbicide made notorious through Monsanto’s Roundup, is documented in government records as a component of aerial spraying programs across North America.
Officially, this spraying is justified as “vegetation management” for forestry and hydro lines, but what it really does is kill plants by drying them out, leaving brittle, flammable remains that linger for months or even years. When vast areas are treated from the air, year after year, the result is a landscape that has effectively been primed for fire.
Glyphosate not only accelerates the drying of vegetation but also destroys insects and microbial life that naturally contribute to the resilience of an ecosystem. In other words, what should be a living, balanced forest becomes a fragile monoculture that burns hotter, faster, and more destructively when fire comes. And yet this practice is approved, endorsed, and subsidized — while the public is told that the cause of record-breaking fires is simply “climate change.”
https://t.me/LauraAbolichannel
‼️Last year, 12,812 hectares of B.C. forest was sprayed with the herbicide glyphosate.
It’s an annual event — a mass extermination of broadleaf trees mandated by the province.
The eradication of trees like aspen and birch on regenerating forest stands is meant to make room for more commercially valuable conifer species like pine and Douglas fir.
But experts say it also removes one of the best natural defences we have against wildfire
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Notes to Readers:
Through my years of being a hiker, backpacker, and skier, I noted severe changes in our forests, especially the ones in the West. From healthy conifer forests, we saw an influx of budworm infestation, but why? Healthy trees are resilient. One reason was unnatural fire suppression by the Forest Service. And then there was the aerial chemical spraying, the chemical trails that started showing up in the skies over Washington State in the late 90’s. I saw entire forests change, with formerly strong trees dying, desiccated, creating potential fuel for swiftly moving fires. Once I spoke with an experienced Forest Service employee at one of the isolated fire towers that was still in operation. She noted that the area was in the midst of an unusually severe drought, something that could weaken trees, especially conifers who require more water than some. Fire seasons starting getting more and more severe. I lived in SE Washington one year when it was almost impossible to go anywhere in the mountains due to the widespread fires and smoke.
It is my contention that the droughts in the West are unnatural. Sure, droughts are cyclical, but run on cycles. Nature has been nudged into odd patterns by chemicals, EMF, and frequency warfare. Arsonists have been hired by the globalist interests to set fires in isolated woods that spread quickly.
Why, control. Power. Money.
Weather warfare is real. Question is, who is in control right now? Agenda 2030 is still looming over parts of the EU and Canada.
Eliza