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Massive quake coincidentally falls exactly on anniversary of massive 8.0 Mexican quake? (U)
Not everyone survived this second mysterious and massive quake. See PHOTOS(AP)
Puebla is about 70 miles from the capital of Mexico City. Cuba is just to the right of map.
Cuba is enormous, and surrounded by land, Mexican and Central American
El Grito dice el Homeboy
HAARP is being used to manipulate weather and guide hurricanes currently rolling through the Atlantic Ocean into the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico. Last night in Westwood (the town surrounding UCLA), Los Angeles, we had a little earthquake. Then this morning Mexico was hit by a killer quake less than two weeks after a massive shocker. There are 79 139 reported dead so far. Aftershocks continue. Meanwhile, Hurricane Maria with sustained winds of 175 MPH, stronger than Hurricane Irma ("the strongest Atlantic storm ever to hit land"), is hitting Dominica and aiming for Puerto Rico. The mystery goes further.
How could this killer quake fall to the day on the anniversary of a previous 8.0 quake that so shocked Mexico in 1985, it spent the morning running earthquake drills in remembrance. Moreover, Saturday was the Mexican Fourth of July called El Grito de Dolores, "The Shout" or "Scream" or, literally, "Cry of Pains." One should never confuse Cinco de Mayo with Mexican Independence Day. May 5th only celebrates a successful battle against the French. Mexico gained independence from 500 years of oppressive Spanish rule and colonialism and the Conquistadors, the "Conquerors," who came from Spain and Europe to enslave and rape the indigenous people of the America in a slow genocide that continues.
Mexican Independence Day (El Grito)
(Gobierno de la República, streamed live on Sept. 15, 2017) Así se vivió el Grito de Independencia, en el Zócalo de la Ciudad de México. ("This is how the Shout of Independence took place, in the town square of Mexico City"). This killer quake was also covered by Univision Noticias ("One Vision News").
The ruins of collapsed buildings in Mexico, where building codes and regulations are lax
L.A. ("Latin America") runs from Los Angeles to Patagonia
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