Last night, 1/01/2024 I was online when notifications came my way of a major quake in Japan. Although tsunami warnings and evac. instructions were issued, the expected 5 metre waves fortunately never came. Nevertheless, there was significant damage.
Martin Harris 2/01/24
Seismic Monitor – Recent earthquakes on a world map and much more. (iris.edu)
Strangely, our mainstream media appear, thus far, to have downplayed or ignored the story. However, what has me concerned for New Zealand is that over the last week or so, the EQC (NZs Earthquake Commission) has been pushing its “be prepared” advertising campaign hard. The last time this author heard/saw such a publicity campaign was in the weeks prior to the Christchurch quakes of 2010-2011.
The Christchurch quakes were closely followed by the massive quake and tsunami in Fukushima, Japan.
I do not pretend any predictive powers or clairvoyance. All I can do is ask my fellow New Zealanders to take head and ensure you have a plan. A basic survival kit. A wind-up dynamo torch/radio are cheap investments. First aid kit, bag with some basics if you need to GTFO.
New Zealand is “due” for an Alpine fault event according the experts, and if the EQC campaign is the canary in the coalmine, well, there is certainly enough evidence of foreknowledge among authorities of our last major quake events. Just check our archives.
The academia say “one in four chance within the next 50 years”:
We say take a look at “natural disasters” like Christchurch or the more recent Hawaii fires and suggest that certain secretive factions might want to harness, trigger, or even fully engineer such catastrophes to further certain agendas. Don’t fool yourself: The technology to geo-engineer catastrophes exists.
Never panic, don’t run around screaming that the end is nigh. No one will listen anyhow, they all have their heads in the sand and will brand you a nutcase. Just be calmly and quietly prepared. If nothing happens then you’ve lost nothing, but if it does, you’re in a better position to get through it.
Martin