by Leo Hohmann, Leo Hohmann:
The situation in Idaho is truly remarkable, and we will see more water deprivation in the months and years ahead. Why? Because the globalists have long sought to control water resources. It’s part of the U.N. Agenda 2030 strategy, which is really a strategy for the culling of humanity and much tighter control over those who are left.
Please watch and share the video below from an Idaho potato farmer.
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Notice, the farmer in the above video states that the reservoirs, streams, creeks and rivers are all full in Idaho and the mountains have plenty of melting snow draining into the valleys. Yet, we see poor water-management practices (whether intentional or due to incompetance) limiting critical water supplies to farmers, rendering their land worthless. If a farmer can’t get access to water, he’s done. It’s all part of the globalist plan to depopulate the earth, through endless wars, poison in the food and water, toxic vaccines, and engineered famine.
And it’s not just farms that are going to be affected.
Business Insider reports that Mexico City is on the brink of a water catastrophe. Experts predict that the city of 8.8 million people could run out of drinking water later this month.
Mexico City is not the first city with a water crisis and it won’t be the last. Of course they’re blaming climate change.
But Aditi Mukherji, director of the Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation Impact Action Platform, told Business Insider the biggest factor that makes a city vulnerable isn’t climate change, it’s poor water management.
She said:
“It’s not so much about the absolute quantity of the water per se, but it’s about how the available water is distributed. Water scarcity at the end of the day boils down to issues of policies and governance.”
According to the World Resources Institute, there are 11 other cities at high risk of running out of water. Many are located in the 25 most water-stressed countries – housing one-quarter of the world’s population. These countries regularly use up almost their entire available water supply. At least 50% of the world’s population — around 4 billion people — live under highly water-stressed conditions for at least one month of the year, including India, Mexico, Egypt and Turkey.