JEWISH KING JESUS IS COMING AT THE RAPTURE FOR US IN THE CLOUDS-DON'T MISS IT FOR THE WORLD.THE BIBLE TAKEN LITERALLY- WHEN THE PLAIN SENSE MAKES GOOD SENSE-SEEK NO OTHER SENSE-LEST YOU END UP IN NONSENSE.GET SAVED NOW- CALL ON JESUS TODAY.THE ONLY SAVIOR OF THE WHOLE EARTH - NO OTHER. 1 COR 15:23-JESUS THE FIRST FRUITS-CHRISTIANS RAPTURED TO JESUS-FIRST FRUITS OF THE SPIRIT-23 But every man in his own order: Christ the firstfruits; afterward they that are Christ’s at his coming.ROMANS 8:23 And not only they, but ourselves also, which have the firstfruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body.(THE PRE-TRIB RAPTURE)
JUDGEMENT HITS OTTAWA-OTTAWA HATED THE TRUCKERS-GOD SENDS A STORM AS REVENGE FOR THE TRUCKERS.
OTTAWA
SUCK HOLE LIBERAL MAYOR IS COMPLAINING THE STORM HAS DEVISTATED SOME
PARTS OF OTTAWA. AND UXBRIDGE IS UNDER STATE OF EMERGENCY. IT WILL TAKE A
FEW DAYS TO GET HYDRO BACK ON. LETS SEE OTTAWA COMPLAINED ABOUT THE
TRUCKERS AND USED THE STATE OF EMERGENCY POWERS ON THEM. DO WE SEE THE
JUDGEMENT ON OTTAWA COMPARISONS. BECAUSE I SURE DO.
LIBERAL MEDIA WHORE FAKE NEWS HEADLINE THAT CAME FROM OTTAWA
Some trucker convoy organizers have history of white nationalism, racism
By Rachel Gilmore Global News-Posted January 29, 2022 12:34 pm
LIBERAL HATERS GET STATE OF EMERGENCY AGAINST TRUCKERS
Ottawa
mayor declares state of emergency over trucker convoy protest-Ian
Bailey-and Mike Hager-Ottawa-Published February 6, 2022
Powerful
storm leaves trail of death and destruction in capital region-Two
deaths were reported in Ottawa and Gatineau, one in the Renfrew
area.Matthew Lapierre-May 22, 2022
The storm came from the west
and hit the region with an abrupt combination of rain and wind. Clean-up
continues Sunday as crews grapple with downed power lines and trees,
battered neighbourhoods and increased calls for service.Hydro Ottawa’s
outage map as of 8:50 a.m. Sunday morning showed 560 outages affecting
172,265 customers, representing about half of its customer base.Two
people were critically injured at separate golf courses, as was one
person in a storm-related motor vehicle accident, Pierre Poirier, chief
of the Ottawa Paramedic Service, said during an emergency media
conference Saturday evening.An Ottawa Police Service spokesperson
reported the death of one person in the west end, though additional
details were not provided Saturday evening pending notification of next
of kin.One person died after a boat carrying two people capsized during
the storm on the Ottawa River, Gatineau police said.The Ontario
Provincial Police responded to a call about a fallen tree in the
Renfrew-Greater Madawaska area that resulted in the death of a
44-year-old man. The tree came down on a cottage property on Calabogie
Road. The man was taken to hospital by paramedics, where he was
pronounced dead.Wind uprooted trees across the city. On Paul Anka Drive,
near Hunt Club Road in the south end, it was almost more difficult to
find a tree that was still firmly rooted in the ground than one that was
not. A massive pine tree hit a house, shearing off part of its roof;
another crushed a car.Emergency vehicles were stretched thin across the
city Saturday, so neighbours helped each other and used chainsaws to
clear trees that were lying across the road.“I was upstairs reading a
book,” said Jim Carney, whose house escaped mostly unscathed. “I heard
the wind and three minutes after it was done. The sun came up and my son
said, ‘Dad, the trees are all down.’ I said, ’What?’”South of Hunt
Club, on Uplands Drive, hydro poles were shorn in half and metal lamp
posts were bent in two, presumably from the force of the wind.In an
online post in the late afternoon Saturday, Ottawa Fire Services
reported a tree down “on a patient” on Brigade Avenue between Cherry
Drive and Sunnyside Drive in the Stittsville neighbourhood in the west
end. Another Ottawa Fire post reported a silo collapse near Magladry
Road in Navan.Across the city, branches, water and sometimes entire
trees blocked roads and slowed traffic, even on Highway 417 and Highway
174, as drivers avoided obstacles that had been blown into their
paths.Some of the tulip beds near Dow’s Lake were devastated by the
wind.In Stittsville, one of the areas that felt the full brunt of the
storm, first responders blocked off a section of Main Street after power
lines and trees fell across the road. Shingles lay on the street,
freshly shorn from roofs, and trees, some of them two storeys high, were
uprooted.Residents cleaning debris off their lawns and sidewalks
described being hit by what some of them thought was a microburst or a
low-grade tornado.“It just came on quick,” said one woman who gave her
name as Bea, after the storm. “I’m a little scared of thunder and
lightning, but this was, ‘holy crap.’ You don’t know what to do. Go in
the basement? It was quite overwhelming.”A generator purred at Jo-jo’s
pizza Saturday evening, where people had flocked after becoming suddenly
unable to cook dinner at home due to power outages.“When (the wind)
started to spin around the house, I put down our drapes so that, if
anything hit the windows, it wouldn’t come through … hopefully,” Gail
Stratton said. “It was definitely intense.”Chainsaws sounded as the
cleanup got underway. Hydro workers scrambled to repair damaged lines
and restore power, while cellphone service was spotty in affected
areas.Strangely, though, despite tossing everything from election
campaign signs to fences, the wind spared some areas and items.“I was
waiting for my plants to fly off the hooks,” Stratton said, pointing to
rows of hanging plants nearby. “But they never did.”The storm hammered
the town of Perth, tearing off shingles and toppling trees and branches
and blocking several streets.Innisville was also hit hard, with trees
and branches littering Highway 7. Traffic slowed in one spot just west
of Innisville, where a pine tree, its top blackened by an apparent
lightning strike, smouldered and sent grey smoke drifting across the
highway.Nearby, a wooden hydro pole drooped crazily, pulling the wires
taut. An Ontario Provincial Police officer used the cable and winch on
his SUV to drag a heavy tree trunk blocking the westbound lanes off the
road. Several barns appeared to have had their roofs peeled back by the
wind, while roadside billboards lay flattened on the ground.Paul McMahon
(in a yellow hard hat) and his son Matt work to remove the enormous
tree that crushed their new Honda in the driveway of their Liard Street
home Saturday.Storm clouds roll over Ottawa’s west end before the heavy
thunderstorm hit the region on Saturday afternoon.Stittsville Coun. Glen
Gower, who was doing a walkabout on Stittsville Main Street post-storm,
said the winds damaged the roofs of several buildings and broke windows
in the area. City emergency services were scouting for a location to
set up an emergency shelter for those who needed a place to stay, Gower
said.“It’s for folks who have damage to their homes and it’s not safe to
return,” he said. “It’s still pretty early in the assessment and trying
to figure out how widespread everything is and where the needs
are.”Gower had been at the Stittsville Legion for a meeting.“All of a
sudden the winds and the rains picked up and we could see limbs coming
down off the trees and damage on Stittsville Main Street. We knew right
away it was pretty serious,” he said.Not far away, on Liard Street, Paul
McMahon and his son Matt were clearing up the damage that occurred
after the winds uprooted an enormous tree in their front hard, sending
it down crushing their new Honda Civic.“When the power went out, we all
took a look outside and almost in slow motion we saw the tree fall on
our car,” Matt McMahon said. “Fortunately it didn’t fall on our other
car or our house, but this car didn’t fare so well.”Weather officials
had earlier warned that the storm was potentially dangerous. In a
bulletin sent to cellphones at 3:58 p.m. Saturday, Environment Canada
warned the population to “take cover immediately if threatening weather
approaches.”The storm front had hit Toronto and the GTA hard earlier in
the afternoon, with trees blown over and dozens of power outages. Two
deaths were reported in southern Ontario.-With files from Blair Crawford