
Daniel Whyte III, President of Gospel Light Society International, Has Been Saying For Over Fourteen Years Now, That God is Lovingly, Mercifully, and Slow-Rollingly Destroying and Dismantling America Due to the Gross Sins of the Church and America and For Much of the Church Colluding With the Government and Sanctioning the Abomination of Sodomy/Homosexuality and Homosexual Marriage. At the Pace He is Going, He May Destroy and Dismantle America Before the Rapture of the Church. Paradise, California, and Now Lahaina, Maui, WERE CITIES COMPLETELY DESTROYED BY FIRE LIKE SODOM AND GOMORRAH. Today, Dodger Stadium, Where the Dodgers Hosted the Demonic DRAG QUEEN SISTERS OF INDULGENCE, HAS BEEN FLOODED OUT WITH A MOAT SURROUNDING THE STADIUM; the Whole Area Has Been Hit With Floods. The Rich and Famous in Palm Springs Are Surrounded by Water and Cut off From the Rest of California. On the Same Day, California Was Hit With Another Earthquake, and the WILDFIRES Are Still Burning. And Like Never Before, the Whole State of Washington Has Been Placed on Alert Because of Wildfires That Are Burning Out of Control Stemming From the 1,000 Wildfires Burning in Canada, Which God is Evidently Destroying and Dismantling For the Same Sins and Abominations of the Church and the Government.
Pastors and Others who claim to be Christians need to do the following according to the Word of God: humble themselves, pray, seek God’s face, turn from their wicked ways, repent of their sins, and get back to their first love–the Lord Jesus Christ. And those who do not know the Lord Jesus Christ need to take heed to the most loving words ever said in the history of the world, the most important words ever said in the history of the world said by none other than the Lord Jesus Christ: “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.”
California received a one-two punch from Mother Nature as Tropical Storm Hilary unleashed torrential record rains and flooding across Southern California, and an earthquake struck near Ojai — all during what has historically been the state’s wildfire season. The wild weekend prompted Gov. Gavin Newsom to head south, declaring a storm state of emergency even before crews began struggling to respond across a wide swath of the state.
On Sunday afternoon, the tropical storm made landfall in the northern Baja California peninsula, with wind speeds over 60 miles per hour as it barreled northward across Southern California’s coastal cities and pushed inland, swamping parts of the desert in knee-deep flood waters. Though Hilary had been downgraded from a hurricane, officials early today continued urging residents not to underestimate the damage it could bring — including flash floods, mudslides, thunderstorms, strong winds and power outages.
The storm is the “wettest tropical cyclone in state history” according to Newsom’s office, and the first tropical storm to hit Southern California in 84 years. The National Weather Service issued what it termed “life threatening” flash flood and tornado warnings, the Navy pulled its ships out of San Diego’s harbor, Death Valley National Park shut down, and public schools in Los Angeles and San Diego announced they would close today, with plans to resume classes tomorrow.
The state deployed 7,500 personnel in Southern California — including 3,900 Highway Patrol officers and 2,000 Caltrans workers — to aid local communities, and it dispatched resources for swift water rescue teams in high-risk areas.
- Newsom: “There’s an old ancient curse that loosely is translated to, ‘May you live in interesting times.’ It’s certainly interesting times — tornadoes, lightning strikes, I’ve got CalFire worried about wildfires…. I walked out of the Office of Emergency Services in San Bernardino, check my phone and learned about an earthquake.”
A tropical storm is a rare problem for California, particularly in August. The state has been historically protected from hurricanes because of its cold Pacific Ocean ocean currents, a wind pattern that pushes out major storms from the mainland and a downward air flow. But as The Los Angeles Times explained, “an unusual set of weather patterns” and warm ocean waters (“essentially hurricane fuel”) enabled the tropical storm to take shape. The last time California experienced a tropical cyclone was 1939, when one made landfall near Long Beach and claimed nearly 100 lives on land and at sea.
Tropical Storm Hilary serves as another watery test for Newsom. Earlier this year, when devastating floods upended thousands of Californians, the governor said the state would provide relief to victims who did not qualify for federal emergency relief, namely undocumented residents. Months after his promise of “rapid response,” his office announced $95 million in assistance for those flood victims.
How the state will handle similar cases in the wake of Tropical Storm Hilary remains a question.
Just hours after Hilary made landfall, a 5.1 magnitude earthquake rattled the Ventura County community of Ojai and its nearby region. Though no significant damage was reported, the two simultaneous events prompted internet-goers to dub Sunday a #Hurriquake.
And in a challenge more typical of California in August, on Saturday the 3,000-acre Deep Fire forced residents and resort-goers to evacuate in Trinity County, and the National Weather Service issued a warning in Eureka for elevated fire weather conditions caused by lightning strikes.