Mixed Emotions, Earth Changes Escalate...06/25/99
by Mitch Battros (ECTV)

This is a time when I feel a sense of excitement, passion, and perhaps even vindication. This is also a time when I feel sadness, fear and vulnerability. I do not think I would be much of a human, if I did not react to the current events in this or similar way.

As a mental health therapist, I can tell you such reactions are perfectly reasonable and expected. Now that the Red Cross has gone public, (which in my opinion means you can hang your hat on it), I am making myself available for a lecture tour to teach the five point Red Cross protocol for disasters. As a volunteer for the Red Cross Disaster Team, Mental Health Unit since 1995, I will also cover the trauma and emotional disarray many will go through as the Earth Changes escalate.

I cannot tell you how difficult it was to speak my truth of what I believed the coming months and years would bring. Now that it is occurring with "Records" breaking on a weekly basis, as you can see from the article below, the two visions I experienced in
January of 1995 are indeed coming true.  See:http://www.earthchangesTV.com/mitch/index.htm

It was this extraordinary transpiration that directed me with a passion I have never experienced before. It is like I was groomed my whole life for these times. Oddly enough I never had a clue until my 1995 experience of what my journey would be. It was just three months after the visions , I started "Earth Changes TV".

Red Cross Sees ‘Superdisasters’ Ahead...06/25/99

(MSNBC) GENEVA, June 24 "Last year's natural disasters were the most damaging on record but it's likely we haven't seen the worst, the International Federation of the Red Cross reported Thursday. Climate change, deforestation, poverty and overcrowded cities will likely mean more frequent and more severe "superdisasters," the charity said in its annual report on disasters around the world.

 "EVERYONE IS aware of the environmental problems of global warming and deforestation on the one hand and the social problems of increasing poverty ... on the other," said Astrid Heiberg, president of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies. "But when these two factors collide, you have a new scale of catastrophe" one the report described as the age of "superdisasters."
 
Peter Walker, head of disaster policy for the federation, predicted "more extreme events, and this is the stuff of disasters ... If we look at 1998 it gives us some sense of what we are going to get in the future."
 
"Countries that have not had a major disaster in living memory will start having them," he added. "Those that have had one or two a year will have more."
 
CHAIN REACTION
 
The "World Disasters Report" said more natural disasters occurred in 1998 than in any other year on record, leaving an overall bill of more than $90 billion. Climate change, it added, has made the consequences of the disasters more complex, creating chain reactions.
 
Scientists agree that Earth's climate has natural cycles of change, as does El Niño and its La Niña counterpart, and many but not all believe humans are having a significant impact via "greenhouse" gases like carbon dioxide that trap heat inside Earth.
 
One chain reaction cited by the report is El Niño's impact on Indonesia, where it caused the worst drought in 50 years.
"The rice crop failed, the price of imported rice quadrupled, the currency dropped by 80 per cent, food riots erupted in the capital Jakarta and in the countryside, massive forest fires burned out of control, paralyzing parts of the country with a toxic layer of smoke" the report said.

Mitch Battros
Producer - Earth Changes TV
http://www.earthchangesTV.com

 

Main Menu