The Co2 fraud is on a roll, misdiagnosing fires, squirting bleach into coral, and fraudulently screaming "warmest ever"

where do you get your ideas about desal and drought?


This really is not that difficult. On land, there are supplies of fresh water - rivers, lakes, streams, aquifers etc. Those are finite. Nature consumes water. Water comes from rain and snow to replace that. When you add in humans consuming more and more and more of that fresh water, you squeeze a finite supply, and you leave vegetation dry and ready to burn. Desalination of ocean water, in Hawaii for example, would reduce the human consumption of the island's finite supply of fresh water, leaving water in nature, and drinking and showering with ocean water.

Floods and droughts happen. The key is the long term. Keep increasing the human consumption and you make droughts worse. Hawaii has had plenty of droughts before, and this never happened. This happened in part because Hawaii keeps increasing human consumption of the island's fresh water, reducing what is left for nature.

Fires are not about 2 degrees of alleged "warming" that is not happening. Fires are about a lack of water in vegetation. Desalination is the immediate band aid solution. Long term, the problem is human overpopulation....
 
Hawaiian fires kill 80 people. Tragic. Fueled by fires in abandoned farm land. Yet, 80 people dont live in abandoned farmland.

What makes me wonder about competence, these people live on an island with a volcano. How many people will die if that volcano erupts? Why are there not fire breaks? Evacuation routes? Redundant sirens, warning systems?

A volcanic island where the people are not ready for fire?


Maybe in the past the vegetation was not DRIED OUT by HUMAN OVERCONSUMPTION, because human consumption of the fresh water is the only variable that has changed.
 
Maybe in the past the vegetation was not DRIED OUT by HUMAN OVERCONSUMPTION, because human consumption of the fresh water is the only variable that has changed.
Humans were not consuming the ground water where the fires were. Maybe you can explain exactly how you see this. Your comment seems to be missing something
 
This really is not that difficult. On land, there are supplies of fresh water - rivers, lakes, streams, aquifers etc. Those are finite. Nature consumes water. Water comes from rain and snow to replace that.
The area that the fire was in, gets very little rain. The area where the fire was, gets as little rain, maybe less than in southern california. That is literally a desert.

The population of the island of Maui, draws water from deep below the surface, so deep that the plants and vegetation are not effected by the aquifer's level.

The aquifer, being under the part of Maui that gets a huge amount of water is in perfect shape.

There is, was no, over-consumption that caused the plants to dry out. .
 
Humans were not consuming the ground water where the fires were


Groundwater is not stationary. It flows to where there is no water pressure.

There is no other variable to explain this event. Hawaii vegetation is usually flush with water and not at all ready to burn. What changed is too many humans on Hawaii sucking too much fresh water out of nature.

Really sick people who do not understand basic math still argue humans are not anywhere near overpopulation. The fires globally are proof humans are in overpopulation now. They are the only variable and hence the only suspect.
 
The population of the island of Maui, draws water from deep below the surface, so deep that the plants and vegetation are not effected by the aquifer's level.


Nonsense. Groundwater ends up in the aquifer. When water from the aquifer is removed, it gets replaced by the annual rainfall. Only when too much is removed does it drain, and in the process it drains groundwater from the surface.

The aquifer, being under the part of Maui that gets a huge amount of water is in perfect shape


because it was draining the water from the surface. It is all connected. The aquifer is not isolated. It refills. How? Rain hits ground. Rain enters ground as groundwater. Rain soaks and responds to gravity and ends up in the aquifer.

There is a ferocious Luddite nonsense jerkoff response of hostility and hate whenever the truth of HUMAN OVERPOPULATION is brought up.

This is because it is the only variable and many religious people just HATE IT because their church says HAVE BIG FAMILIES AND DON'T WORRY or ASK QUESTIONS...
 
There is, was no, over-consumption that caused the plants to dry out.


Hawaii has had droughts over and over for thousands of years. WHY THIS TIME did the fire torch the island???
 
Groundwater is not stationary. It flows to where there is no water pressure.

There is no other variable to explain this event. Hawaii vegetation is usually flush with water and not at all ready to burn. What changed is too many humans on Hawaii sucking too much fresh water out of nature.

Really sick people who do not understand basic math still argue humans are not anywhere near overpopulation. The fires globally are proof humans are in overpopulation now. They are the only variable and hence the only suspect.
again, you are very confused and do not understand how plants get there water from the roots, they only get surface water, not the aquifer water that is deep underground
 
Nonsense. Groundwater ends up in the aquifer. When water from the aquifer is removed, it gets replaced by the annual rainfall. Only when too much is removed does it drain, and in the process it drains groundwater from the surface.




because it was draining the water from the surface. It is all connected. The aquifer is not isolated. It refills. How? Rain hits ground. Rain enters ground as groundwater. Rain soaks and responds to gravity and ends up in the aquifer.

There is a ferocious Luddite nonsense jerkoff response of hostility and hate whenever the truth of HUMAN OVERPOPULATION is brought up.

This is because it is the only variable and many religious people just HATE IT because their church says HAVE BIG FAMILIES AND DON'T WORRY or ASK QUESTIONS...
you are an idiot, most likely a troll, in my entire life I have never heard an explanation that is as dumb as yours
 
Rain is not infinite. That vegetation was dry and ready to burn. Had Hawaii some desalination plants, the vegetation would have not been as dry. Desal ensures that droughts, as Hawaii is having this year, do not end up like what just happened, which NEVER happened, because it is a

DROUGHT

AND

HUMANS ARE SUCKING TOO MUCH WATER FROM NATURE

Sign of online mental patient #34: It comes up with one crackpot, idiotic notion then repeats it endlessly in the enduring faith that someone will finally call it genius.
 
Hawaii is volcanic islands, they have burned for many years, over and over and over. They have had fires forever, this is not the first time.


In the past, when the volcanoes went off, there was not an island wide fire issue. Lava will burn wet plants. But just on contact. Everyone 100 meters from the lava was safe.

This event is totally unprecedented. The difference is that Maui was loaded with dry plant life ready to burn with a single match. That is different from the past, when Hawaii's vegetation was NEVER that dry and NEVER BURNED LIKE IT JUST DID.
 
again, you are very confused and do not understand how plants get there water from the roots, they only get surface water, not the aquifer water that is deep underground


That depends on how deep the aquifer is.

To argue the aquifer is not partially drained and re-filled annually is laughable. The aquifer is a part of "groundwater" in that "groundwater" ends up where gravity and water pressure push it. "groundwater" ends up in aquifers. Nothing is isolated.
 
That depends on how deep the aquifer is.

To argue the aquifer is not partially drained and re-filled annually is laughable. The aquifer is a part of "groundwater" in that "groundwater" ends up where gravity and water pressure push it. "groundwater" ends up in aquifers. Nothing is isolated.
gottcha mr science
 
What is an aquifer?



Aquifers


An aquifer is a body of rock and/or sediment that holds groundwater. Groundwater is the word used to describe precipitation that has infiltrated the soil beyond the surface and collected in empty spaces underground. There are two general types of aquifers: confined and unconfined.May 19, 2022
 

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