In a previous article on this blog, I asked whether the cataclysmic chaos and imminent possibilities of realizing global extinction from Earth changes, would eventually be syncretized by the arrival of extraterrestrials as our saviors. Several months ago, the now deceased former NORAD officer Stanley A. Fulham, predicted that a Council of 8 extraterrestrial civilizations will appear in 2014 at the United Nation's General Assembly to formally introduce and implement plans to cleanup the atmosphere of our planet and institute a new world order of governance.
Today, the United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon, in a pretextual move that will ultimately lead to the justification for these alien saviors, said that urgent action was needed on climate change, pointing to the famine in the Horn of Africa and devastating floods in northern Australia as examples of the suffering caused by global warming.
Ban lashed out at climate change skeptics during a speech at the University of Sydney, arguing that science has proven climate change is real. Ban is in Australia for a series of meetings following his attendance at an annual forum of South Pacific island leaders in New Zealand earlier this week. He also made stops in the Solomon Islands and Kiribati, low-lying South Pacific island nations threatened by rising sea levels. "Watching this high tide standing on the shore of Kiribati, I said, 'High tide shows it's high time to act,'" Ban said. "We are running out of time." Ban has repeatedly highlighted the issue of climate change during his South Pacific tour, which comes ahead of a major climate summit in Durban, South Africa, in November.A race to save the planet, or to impose a global totalitarian New World Order using these Earth and climate changes, as the pretext or thesis/anti-thesis for an extraterrestrial invasion?
Delegates from 193 nations will try to hammer out a global agreement to curb emissions of carbon dioxide and other gases that scientists say are behind climate change. Ban dismissed accusations that previous summits haven't resulted in any measurable changes, pointing to the 2010 meeting in Cancun, Mexico, where countries agreed to try to keep the global average temperature from rising 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) above preindustrial levels. Scientists say there could be a severe impact on agriculture, sea levels, water resources and human health were the temperature to rise more than that. Drought and conflict in the Horn of Africa have left millions of lives at risk, and extreme weather events such as severe flooding that devastated northern Australia earlier this year will only grow more frequent as climate change accelerates, Ban warned. "This is a global race to save the planet," he said. - Huffington Post.








