Big Brother "Disappears" Inconvenient Federal Wildland Fire Management Document - Granite Grok

Big Brother “Disappears” Inconvenient Federal Wildland Fire Management Document

Fire forest fire original Photo by Benjamin Lizardo on Unsplash

Shortly after assuming control of the US government’s executive branch, Whoever is Running the Biden Administration (WRBA) scrubbed 57 years of inconvenient forest fire data from public view. They didn’t stop there.

A 2001 PDF report on Wildland fire management is no longer available. It’s gone, but then it’s not. Tony Heller at RCSB found it on the Wayback machine in its entirety, a problem the Feds will have to address at some point if their 1984ish obsession with rewriting history is to succeed.

I’m sure they can get Google or that Zuckerberg fellow to buy the site and manage the material to suit the needs of their political masters.

In this case, what exactly do they hope to hide?

The 2021 data tampering I mentioned above looks like this.

 

US-wildfire-NIFC-data-compared-1024x609

 

The 2001 report, which you can read here, has a similar unadulterated graph to the one above. It looks like this.

 

 

That doesn’t prop up the approved narrative, so I can see why that had to go. But if you read the copy around it, you’ll find something that might be even more concerning to the Ministry of Truthers. The benefits and necessity of wildfires.

 

This decrease in wildland fire has been a destabilizing influence in many fireadapted ecosystems such as ponderosa pine, lodgepole pine, pinyon/juniper woodlands, southern pinelands, whitebark pine, oak savanna, pitch pine, aspen, and tallgrass prairie. Fuels increased and understory vegetation became more dense. As a result, those wildland fires that did occur were larger and more severe than historical fires. Eliminating fire also affected individual plant species. For example, Hessl and Spackman (1995) found that, of the 146 threatened, endangered, and rare plant species found in the conterminous U. S. for which there is conclusive information on fire effects, 135 species benefit from wildland fire or are found in fire-adapted ecosystems.

 

If true, wildfires, regardless of an ignition source, aid in propagating plant species that have and or will adapt further to the phenomenon.

Seeing as the Planeteers are big on evolution theory, having more species due to burning woodlands instead of fewer could befuddle the narrative.

And they can’t have that either.

 

 

>