The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEW) will publisha report on Wednesday stating that more than 11,000endangered animal and plant species, including more than1,000 mammal species, or 1/4 of the world’s total, arelikely to go extinct over the next few decades. 12% of birdspecies and over 5,000 different plant species are alsolikely to die out. In the oceans, the loss is already almostimmeasurable, with almost all major species of larger fishat risk, and massive diebacks of plankton in the Antarctic,the North Sea and elsewhere contributing to the destructionof whole ecologies.
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As predicted by global warming models, Europe continues tobear the brunt of unusually ferocious seasonal storms. Thelatest devastation took place over the past 48 hours when awinter storm generated sustained winds of over a hundredmiles an hour in many areas, leading to extensive damage andat least fifteen deaths, mostly in road accidents associatedwith the extreme weather.

In Bavaria, wind gusts in excess of 112mph were recorded,and heavy snow fell on lower Saxony. Road traffic wasseriously disrupted, and there were incidents of heavytrucks being blown over by wind gusts, including fire trucksattempting to respond to emergency calls.
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Mark Macy of Worlditc.org is oneof the world’s leading exponents of spiritualtranscommunication using technological devices such as taperecorders, televsion and radios.

His interview for our subscribers has been extremelypopular, and we are presenting the text of the live chat hedid on Saturday in the subscriber section for everybody whouses this website.

As Mark Macy has said, “there are two obstacles to ITC: mostpeople have never heard of the research, and those who havedon’t believe it.” But the researchers have used rigorousprotocols to prevent errors, and ITC is well worth carefulinvestigation.
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Mystery booms are being heard in Ft. Wayne, Indiana,Richmond, Virginia and in England. As reported byUnknowncountry.com in September, Ft. Wayne has experiencedthe sounds before.

The sounds have the “snap and roll” characteristics of sonicbooms made by high speed jets when they fly at supersonicspeeds, but so far there has been no evidence of thepresence of such planes in any of the three areas.

The boom that was heard across north-east Norfolk in the UKtoday was not caused by a British aircraft, according to aBritish Ministry of Defense spokesman. Lt. Col. Stuart Greenof the Ministry said that the sound, which rocked the wholeregion at noon on November 7 was not made by “one of ours.”
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