It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Then consider the farms that dumped millions of gallons of milk down the drain instead of donating it for write offs.
originally posted by: BlackArrow
a reply to: musicismagic
You live by the Mississippi? Main reason why I asked, is they literally did one news report that lasted like 20seconds before cutting it off here. I live in a state that borders that river so I can vouch temperatures. Then there wasn't another word on it. It wasn't being broadcasted like the Colorado River or the UK River.
But the interesting part is, it isn't even hot right now it's been as low as 40 and 60s during the day and the evap rate is insane. 10 feet in a week.
If you look into nestles past you will see they have the resources and tools to drain the water this quickly. So I would imagine if we pair it to the river being treated in the north, (if that river flows south). Them draining these rivers could literally be to kill something in the water.
It was so bad the southern state built a barrier to block ocean flow north which means either they are purposely trying to drain it to treat whatever is in the water or and block further spread of the contaminate. Or we are in some serious dog Doo.
Nothing else makes actual sense. If this was only occuring in hot temps I would be more inclined to say global warming. But the fact it's occuring at the pace it is in cold weather can only indicate forced drainage.
There’s also a risk for drinking water. The relative trickle that is reaching the river’s mouth in Louisiana’s outlying Plaquemines Parish is allowing salt water to intrude up the Mississippi from the Gulf of Mexico, threatening to taint drinking water drawn from the river and requiring emergency action by the Army Corps of Engineers.