This week, some videos that appear to be an alien peering through a close-encounter witnesses window were teased to the public in the form of a couple of clips. The actual videos are being held back for sale, so nobody had yet seen them.

EXCEPT Paola Harris has seen them many times, and she’s coming on the subscriber section to describe them. Are they authentic? Could they be duplicated? When were they made, and why are they being released now? Paola has the answers!

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As of 2AM Friday: Storms, no deaths. – Forecasters using computers warn that current weather conditions in the Midwest are the same as those that caused 39 tornadoes to touch in the Great Plains over 30 years ago on June 8, 1974, killing 22 people.

MSNBC quotes meteorologist Brad Mickelson as saying, “The highest risk is central Kansas and the entire centralportion of the country. There is a high risk of severe thunderstorms.”

Art credit: gimp-savvy

As a wise man once warned us, we can’t plan for the future(or even predict it) without learning from the past!

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Wind turbines may soon seem hopelessly old-fashioned, since researchers have now found a way to generate electricity from the waves in the ocean. Now if the world’s major cities, many of which are situated on ocean coastlines, can stay dry enough to survive, they will be able to have plenty of water AND power far into the future!

The WaveRoller, which is being developed in Finland, is a device made of fiberglass and steel plates which is planted on the bottom of the ocean. The back-and-forth motion of the waves drives a piston that creates hydraulic pressure, which eventually produces electricity. In C/Net News, Michael Kanellos quotes inventor Tuomo Hyysalo as saying, “It is like building a bridge.”

Art credit: gimp-savvy.com
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There is a fear that has always been with the human race. No, it’s not terrorism or even war, it’s….

snakes. Humans have always feared them. Now it’s been discovered that the ability to spot snakes may actually be in our genes. We’re afraid of sharks too, and it’s hard to feel feel sorry for them but we can certainly feel sorry for their prey and global warming has warmed up the waters around Antarctica to the extent that sharks have returned to those waters?after 40 million years.

It’s been that long since the waters around Antarctica have been warm enough to sustain populations of sharks and most fish, but they may return this century due to the effects of global warming. If they do, the impact on Antarctic ecology could be serious.
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