Gail (10 Aug 2014)
"I warned about Zug Island in May 2012, the wings are coming off the eagle Daniel 7:4"
Someone had a dream or vision, God showed them a major explosion that would rock the U.S. when the moon is at 'the top of it's phase.'Is the U.S. in for a Great Lakes Area disaster?This summer's biggest supermoon on Aug. 10th, 2014On the 10th of August the biggest of three perigee moons this summer will appear.Supermoons occur when the moon is at perigee, the point in its orbit closest to Earth, as it becomes full. Those moons appear larger and brighter.On Aug. 10, the moon will become full within an hour of its perigee. It's expected to be as much as 14 percent closer and 30 percent brighter than other full moons this year according to NASA.Zug Island is a heavily industrialized island in the city of River Rouge near the southern city limits of Detroit in the U.S. state of Michigan.The Detroit Iron Works brought iron making to Zug Island in 1901 with the commissioning of a blast furnace built in 1902. Since then 2 more blast furnaces were added, now totaling 3 at Zug Island, they have been rebuilt and enlarged. The island's facilities were purchased, along with the rest of what is now called the Great Lakes Works, by United States Steel.One of the most pressing problems in the neighborhoods surrounding Zug Island is poor air quality. According to an article in the January 20, 2010 edition of the Detroit Free Press the neighborhoods around the area comprise six of the ten most polluted zip codes in Michigan.In 2011, the Zug Island area was identified by Canadian scientists and Ontario's Ministry of Natural Resources as the source of mysterious rumblings and vibrations that have plagued hundreds of area residents with cyclical vibrations reportedly being felt in the ground up to fifty miles (eighty kilometres) away. Another report released on May 23rd, 2014 confirmed that Zug Island was indeed the source of the hum.Zug Island has 3 blasts furnaces on site, and the U.S. isn't doing anything to shut it down and investigate.Unmeasuring the Rouge RiverNovember 23rd, 2009“Are you saying the USGS is shutting down water quality monitoring at this site?”“From all four Rouge sites,” he said. “Unless somebody else wants to pay for it, it’s finished.” He mentioned two entities involved in the decision – ECT and ARC. The Alliance of Rouge Communities, or ARC, is a consortium of several dozen local governments now challenging the state over terms of state-issued storm water permits. ARC had been underwriting the USGS cost of the data collection, Howell told me. ARC is run day to day by staff from ECT, or Environmental Consulting Technologies, Inc. ARC’s executive director is James Ridgway, a vice-president of ECT, who confirmed that ARC, funded 50-50 by federal and local money, did indeed cut the testing. A few days earlier, I had learned from MDEQ’s Christine Alexander that MDEQ stopped testing throughout the Rouge for E. coli in 2005, and there has been no testing for E. coli – an indicator of human and animal waste — in the area where I had canoed, the Main Branch of the Rouge. No Main Branch E. coli data for three years, yet we’re told it’s okay for swimming “most of the time.”I was told the Rouge E. coli monitoring was once done with federal funding, but that money is drying up.Bob Burns is the Detroit Riverkeeper, employed by Friends of the Detroit River to monitor water quality on the Detroit River and on its most important tributary, the Rouge. He drives up the Lower Rouge in a Riverkeeper boat watching for signs of pollution.“I’ve spent a lot of time on the Rouge, and I’ve never seen a day in the Lower Rouge when I would even remotely consider swimming in it,” Burns said. “It’s bad. We’ve had E. coli counts out of the Rouge of as much as 120,000,” meaning 120,000 colonies of fecal bacteria, far exceeding the maximum tolerance for human contact. The fact that high E. coli readings still occur where test samples are taken is a concern not mentioned in official reports.The Rouge River is 127 miles long with four major branches that start in farmland, wind through heavily-populated cities, converging to flow past one of the biggest auto factories in the world, two steel mills, open piles of salt, gypsum and cement and the biggest single-unit wastewater treatment plant in the country. All the water comes down those four branches, running past all that industry, passing a trio of iron blast furnaces on Zug Island where it dumps into a big stream called the Detroit River. Human waste is bad, but it’s not the worst thing in the Rouge, Detroit Riverkeeper Burns said. “The biggest concern I have is all the toxic chemicals and heavy metals and bio-accumulates getting into the system. The thing people don’t understand is that not only to you have the CSO discharges with large amounts of sewage, but you have all the pre-treated industrial wastes coming out of the 125,000 commercial entities connected to the system as well as 350 major industrial users like U.S. Steel, Marathon Oil, Ford and Severstal.”The Rouge, Kent Murray who is the professor and groundwater hydrology scientist at UM-Dearborn, told me, is “the dirtiest river in the country.”What else is going on, very close by?Toledo tells residents not to use drinking water due to algaeAug.3rd, 2014Toledo OH is right below Detroit MIJuly 29th, 2014$1Billion Detroit-Windsor bridge in the works for U.S. and Canada30 per cent of trade between Canada and the U.S. flowed through Windsor-Detroit area last year, accounting for $20 billion in goods hauled by 2.4 million trucks. Canadian Transport Minister Lisa Raitt said 8 million U.S. jobs and 2 million Canadian positions rely on trade between the two countries.“Our government is concerned about the reliability and vulnerability of this trade,” Raitt said.“We need to have efficient transportation networks. Nowhere is more critical than this area today,” She said.August 2nd, 2014City of Detroit Michigan files for BankruptcyDaniel 7:4 is the U.S. losing it's sovereigntyGod Bless,gail