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Captain Kundalini
01-01-2006, 08:08 PM
OKLAHOMA CITY - A rash of grass fires broke out Sunday afternoon across Oklahoma, fueled by unseasonably dry conditions and wind gusts of more than 50 miles per hour.
Oklahoma City firefighters responded to at least 15 grass fires in the metro area Sunday afternoon that burned more than 100 acres, said Oklahoma City Fire Major Brian Stanaland.
A few homes suffered minor exterior damage in northeast Oklahoma City after some power lines arced and caught some grass on fire. While firefighters battled that blaze, high winds blew up some construction material from a nearby construction site that hit the power lines, caught on fire and landed on a nearby nursing home, Stanaland said.
"You basically had flying, flaming debris," Stanaland said. "Luckily, we were already on the scene putting out the fires when it happened so we were able to put it out. We were very, very lucky."
No injuries or major structure damage were immediately reported in Oklahoma City.
At least a dozen wildfires continued to burn across Oklahoma on Sunday evening, including a large blaze near Guthrie that threatened several homes, said Michelann Ooten, a spokeswoman for the Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management.
"We have reports of a dozen fires that continue to burn across the state, and we know there are more than that," she said.

A fire near Wainwright in Muskogee County charred several thousand acres and was at least one-mile wide, but no injuries or structure fires were reported, said Bill Beebe, an information officer at a statewide command center established in Shawnee.
Army National Guard helicopters that were used to battle blazes over the weekend were grounded Sunday afternoon because of high winds and limited visibility, Ooten said.
A grass fire near Guthrie forced the closure of both the north and southbound lanes of Interstate 35 for more than an hour, said Oklahoma Highway Patrol Trooper Pete Norwood.
State Highways 33 and 105 near Guthrie remained closed Sunday afternoon because of smoke that limited visibility, Norwood said.

A grass fire also was reported Sunday afternoon near Bristow in northeast Oklahoma and another near Wellston in Lincoln County that threatened about 30 homes.
Meanwhile, firefighters and state emergency officials across the state continued to monitor areas that were scorched by wildfires over the weekend, while urging Oklahomans to comply with the statewide burn ban.
The major hot spots were in Bennington, Bristow and Pink, where grassfires charred hundreds of acres on Saturday, Ooten said.
"We are reminding the people that they should be extremely careful in any outdoor activity today," she said. "And remember that any firework activity is illegal, and taking a chance means putting Oklahomans, their homes and firefighters at risk."
High winds, record-high temperatures and drought-like conditions across much of the state increased the fire danger to critical levels.

"Weather conditions are gearing up," Ooten said. "We're working with military departments to make sure they have supplies on standby, and we are still receiving firefighters from Alabama and Tennessee."
Oklahoma has been locked in a dry spell, with winds easing at night and in the morning and then increasing in the afternoon. Dozens of fires began in the state Tuesday when winds gusted to more than 40 mph. The state is more than a foot behind its normal rainfall of about 36 inches for this time of year.
Officials declared a state of emergency for Oklahoma Friday because of wildfire conditions, sought a federal disaster declaration and enlisted firefighting help from other states.
The wildfires in the last week have ravaged more than 30,000 acres, destroyed nearly 100 homes and businesses, left one man dead and caused a handful of minor injuries.
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Gummer, be safe up there. If you need help, give me a shout.

Captain Kundalini
01-01-2006, 08:24 PM
My God, I can't believe what I'm seeing!
An entire subdivision of Oklahoma City is burning!
CNN is covering this.
The Inferno is a mile wide at Sooner and 63rd Streets.
Working against the Firefighters is the Wind and the darkness.
I think we should definitely hit our knees tonight, people
and pray for the folks in Oklahoma and those here in Texas.
If the Sheriff knocks on the door, it's already too late to get anything other than some clothes, pets and medical supplies.

Sean
01-01-2006, 08:59 PM
Crap! I haven't been paying attention to the news today so this is the first i heard of it. I got CNN on now.
What i'm seeing is a series of isolated fires.
Fireworks? Maybe?
Not good.

smadewell
01-01-2006, 10:59 PM
Crap! I haven't been paying attention to the news today so this is the first i heard of it. I got CNN on now.
What i'm seeing is a series of isolated fires.
Fireworks? Maybe?
Not good.

More "isolated incidents".... These will all be blamed on kids with fireworks and the dry season we had. Probable? Sure! Of course! But could it also be the group that the "lone OU suicide bomber" (http://www.homelandsecurityus.com/OUBombing.htm) belonged to is responsible? That's my belief! These are just more of the hit-n-run tactics that the Jihadists (both White and Middle-Eastern) are using in their war against the Great Satan. The Media dare not report that all these gas explosions and wild fires (et al) are Jihadists on our home turf. :shhh:

Steven Emerson-American Jihad: The Terrorists Living Among Us (http://iona.ghandchi.com/emerson.htm)

Do note the section that begins thusly, "In Oklahoma City, I found myself with nothing to do on Christmas Day. As I walked around looking for a place to eat, I passed a large group of men dressed in traditional Middle Eastern clothing. These men had congregated outside of the Oklahoma City Convention Center. I realized there was some kind of convention going on. Drawn to the scene, I wandered inside and found a bazaar of vendors hawking all kinds of radical material. There were books preaching Islamic “Jihad,” books calling for the extermination of Jews and Christians, even coloring books instructing children on subjects such as “How to Kill the Infidel.” It was a meeting of the Muslim Arab Youth Association (MAYA), an umbrella group that included many smaller groups."

Also, if you need to refresh your memory:

Terrorism AGAIN in the Heartland: The "Lone-Suicide Bombing" at the University of Oklahoma. The paths of many terrorists intersect in Norman, OK. (http://www.homelandsecurityus.com/OUBombing.htm)

The 1995 Oklahoma City Bombing & the Definite Middle Eastern Connection. (http://www.homelandsecurityus.com/okc.htm)

Is Jose Padilla "John Doe Number 2" at the Oklahoma City Bombing? (http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/padillaJD2.html)

http://www.jaynadavis.com/

Captain Kundalini
01-02-2006, 12:29 AM
(Sigh!)
(Throws up hands in complete and utter exasperation)
If you look outside into your yard you might see a bull standing there.
A Gulli Bull.

smadewell
01-02-2006, 12:37 AM
(Sigh!)
(Throws up hands in complete and utter exasperation)
If you look outside into your yard you might see a bull standing there.
A Gulli Bull.Or ... you might see a car driven by a MiddleEastern looking man and his Redneck sidekick throwing a firecracker onto your dried up lawn. :tired:

Alternately, you could be seeing this view from your front door:

http://members.aol.com/egyptmouse/nile5.JPG

I hear De Nile is lovely this time of year. ;) Oh! Have it your way, CK.... It's kids and fireworks ... nothing more. Geeze! Where's the fun in that? ::::shuffling off to find a conspiracy under a different rock::::

smadewell
01-04-2006, 12:43 PM
Odd headline! Suspect Arson, but no a damn would about why arson is suspected. Pfft! Typical! Doubtless another ISOLATED INCIDENT!

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/nation/3564195.html

Jan. 4, 2006, 5:14AM
Suspected Arson Fire in Okla. Contained

By KELLY KURT Associated Press Writer
© 2006 The Associated Press

SHAMROCK, Okla. — Firefighters contained a grass fire that destroyed an abandoned schoolhouse and a home in this small northeastern Oklahoma town, while officials in Texas and New Mexico also worked to keep fires under control amid dry, windy conditions.

An air tanker repeatedly dropped fire retardant on the Oklahoma blaze Tuesday, said Loren Andrews, assistant fire chief in nearby Drum. The fire was likely set by arsonists because it began near a highway and other fires in the area appeared to have been set by people near roadways, she said.

Shamrock Mayor Melissa Lee, sitting on a four-wheeler in front of the smoldering ruins of the vacant destroyed home, said the school that burned dated back to at least the 1920s and many in the town of about 250 had graduated from there.

"It's a little town, but it's got a lot of history," she said.

Grass fires started by as little as a spark from a car or an arcing power line have burned more than 600,000 acres across a drought-stricken stretch of Oklahoma, Texas and New Mexico in the past week-and-a-half. The fires have destroyed at least 450 homes and killed four people.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency announced it had approved requests from Texas, Oklahoma and New Mexico for assistance from the nation's Disaster Relief Fund to aid in firefighting efforts.

In Texas, firefighters continued checking major blazes that appeared mostly contained as the threat of flare-ups and new fires lingered in windy, dry conditions.

They contained 60 percent of a fire west of San Angelo that had scorched about 40,000 acres in Irion and Reagan counties. A 6,000-acre blaze in Erath County that had become active and was threatening about seven homes earlier in the day also calmed by Tuesday night, the Texas Forest Service said.

Since Nov. 1 in Oklahoma, grass fires have consumed about 331,000 acres, destroyed 200 homes and businesses and been blamed for the death of one person. Authorities said they fear that dry, windy and unseasonably warm conditions will spark more fires until the parched region gets some rain.

"We're needing a little help from Mother Nature to put this thing to bed. We need some rain," said Michelle Finch, a fire information officer with the Oklahoma Forestry Division.

In New Mexico, firefighters worked to put out what remained of fires that blackened more than 53,000 acres in the southeastern section of the state, destroying 10 homes and three barns west of Hobbs.

A National Weather Service "red flag warning" was still in effect, meaning that heat, low humidity and wind could allow wildfires to spread quickly. Highs in the upper 70s to mid-80s were forecast in the region experiencing one of its worst droughts in 50 years, and winds could reach 20 mph, meteorologist Jesse Moore said.

Project
01-04-2006, 01:12 PM
I bet it was a disgruntled former military man, white, around 35, single, and just happened to take part in LSD mind control experiments in the 60s... you know, a lone NUT!

BenSlain
01-04-2006, 05:54 PM
I bet it was a disgruntled former military man, white, around 35, single, and just happened to take part in LSD mind control experiments in the 60s... you know, a lone NUT!


35?....60's?

in the womb maybe?:33:

Sean
01-04-2006, 06:01 PM
I bet it was a disgruntled former military man, white, around 35, single, and just happened to take part in LSD mind control experiments in the 60s... you know, a lone NUT!

Ben has a point. They would be more around my age by now, even older.
LSD experiments eh. Voluntary? :o

Project
01-04-2006, 06:22 PM
OK, in the 80s then... pick a decade. :)


Central Intelligence Agency documents suggest that the agency considered and explored uses of radiation for the purpose of mind control as part of MKULTRA. Other early efforts focused on LSD, which appears to have formed the majority of research as time went on. Experiments included dosing CIA employees, military personnel, other government agents, prostitutes, mental patients, and members of the general public with LSD to study their reactions, usually without the subject's knowledge. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_MKULTRA what do you suppose they are using now?

smadewell
01-04-2006, 08:20 PM
Alternately, ... with Oklahoma Natural Gas jacking their rates up to $15.73 a f@#$-a-therm, with the average screwee paying about $220 a month for their gas bill ... maybe someone decided to keep Oklahoma warm this Winter another way, yeah think?

Oil and gas companies making record porfits, the post office increasing stamps by 2 cents and Wal-Mart rolling up prices.... Yep! At this rate, I predict Titor's Civil War by year's end. Viva Zapata!!!