WATCH: Maui fire - natural, high-tech, or eco-terror?

The various anomalies and seeming coincidences surrounding the devastating Maui fire have led to speculation about the government's role in the disaster, with mainstream media examining the impact of policy decisions on the fire's spread, highlighting the refusal to allow water to run to fire hydrants until an indigenous farmer approved the move. 

DEWs

Citizen journalists looked beyond the poor decision making covered by mainstream media, taking an interest in the government's billion dollar climate altering technology, including weapons developed at the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory's (AFRL) Directed Energy Directorate located in, of all places, Maui. 

DEW military installation located on Maui

Car engines melted into slag

Not a theory

The Air Force itself posted a video revealing advances in Directed-Energy Weapon (DEW) technology already in 2018, with footage of a jet boasting a laser weapon on the nose of the aircraft. 

AFRL pioneered the first and only megawatt class airborne laser . . . The Air Force is focusing on directed energy technologies . . . The two classes of DE weapons, high-energy lasers and high-powered microwave systems, give the Air Force the capability to engage targets at substantial ranges with precision.

Some claim to have footage of DEWs being deployed in Maui. 

We'll never know?

Government officials are not only not discussing the use of DEWs, they are preventing licensed drones from flying over the area where the fire originated. 

Since videos may be manipulated or simply taken from different locations and times, and other geoengineering systems, like the wind tunnel effect, may be used to enhance fires, some investigators concluded that we may never know what caused or enhanced the fire.

Fact Checkers step in

Not waiting for an official government explanation of all the anomalies, Snopes debunked one such “DEW video" claiming to be from Maui.

Snopes linked to the original video taken five years earlier in Kenner, Louisiana, when a blown power transformer caused a series of electrical explosions. 

TechWar.Gr likewise found the below Instagram picture of an alleged use of a DEW in Maui to be a picture of a 2018 oil refinery fire.

The fact check went on to explain why the picture appears to show a beam of light leading to (or from) the fire.

Two more images with massive views show explosions and a column of light stretching across the sky. But they come from an explosion at an oil processing plant in Ohio, USA in 2018. The light beam is a "pillar of light", an optical illusion formed by reflections of ice on a cold day.  [Emphasis added].

TechWar.Gr also took on the claim that undamaged trees indicate the use of DEWs.

Another conspiracy theory is based on the fact that some trees are still standing, while the surrounding houses have burned down. This photo has over 24 million views. X's Community Notes dismissed the theory as some plants are known as pyrophytes, meaning they are adapted to survive fires thanks to their thermal insulation and other characteristics.

FullFact, for its part, claims to debunk the claim that forest fires do not normally "melt" cars. 

The average temperature of a forest fire specifically is around 800°C with extremes of up to 1,200°C—far higher than the melting point of pure aluminium (approximately 660°C). 

Bias? 

Snopes and other fact checkers claim to be non-partisan, but UncoverDC, reported on some of their conflicts of interest. 

Thomson Reuters Corp.—a $40 billion international multimedia company—is a significant and growing force in the “fact check” world, with a fact-checking unit based in its editorial department. Partnered with Facebook’s third-party fact-checking program since February 2021, the principal aim of the unit is to “fact-check visual material and claims posted on social media

Notably, when announcing the launch of its fact-checking initiative to identify misinformation in partnership with Facebook, Reuters made no mention of its ties to Pfizer, the WEF, or Trusted News Initiative (TNI)…

Mr. Jim Smith represents Reuters as the company’s Chief Executive Officer. He is also a Director of Pfizer, Inc., serving on the company’s Board since 2014. Known as James C. Smith at Pfizer, he is a member of the World Economic Forum’s (WEF).” [Emphases added].

Cherry picking?

Mainstream fact checkers may thus be inclined to dismiss claims that large corporations and the government have conspired to mislead the public, which could lead them to cherry pick the claims they set out to debunk. They did not, in fact, address all the videos claiming to show flashes of light before fires broke out, they did not identify all undamaged tress surrounded by destroyed homes as pyrophytes, and they did not address all the claims about the unusual and selective damage caused by the Maui fire.

Third possibility?

Another possibility is that the fire was created neither naturally nor by DEWs, but as a result of individual arsonists.

Who would have an incentive to do such a thing? The Gateway Pundit quoted political commentator Michael Knowles, who answers that environmental activists destroy the environment now allegedly to build up support to protect it later.

We can’t say for certain who might have done it here, but we can say for certain the answer to who would do such a thing. And the answer is environmentalists, because the Department of Homeland Security has observed for decades that radical environmentalists constantly start fires all over the country.

Between 1995 and 2010, environmentalist groups set off at least 239 arsons and bombings in the United States. They do this because people are not taking the theoretical threat of climate change seriously enough, so they make that theoretical threat practical by setting the fires themselves. [Emphases added].

Of course, those willing to ignite deadly fires to push the climate agenda may well consider the posting of years-old pictures of beams of light on an allegedly conservative social media account, knowing they would easily be fact checked, as a justified means of maligning all claims that government officials have conspired to misinform the public.   

See our previous article on the Maui fire:

'Wind tunnel effect' engineered to superheat Maui fire?

And check back as we continue our series on the government's geoengineering weapons as we focus on man-made earthquakes, chemtrails, and psychotronic attacks.