Wednesday, February 27, 2019

India-Pakistan War Heats Up

Let's remember that India and Pakistan are both nuclear powers.  Let's also remember that Pakistan is a Muslim majority country and that they have been at war with India for decades.  It's a slow war that is happening on their border WAY UP in the mountains of the Kashmirs.

But last week it heated up when a bunch of Indian soldiers were killed by Pakistani agents.

"Dennis, I could care less about India and Pakistan!  What does this have to do with me or prophecy?"

A few things. First off the headline is more signs of what Jesus told us to watch for...WARS AND RUMORS OF WAR.

It also hints of what might be coming for planet earth after the rapture if some of the parties decide to shoot nukes at each other and the earth is devastated...like maybe a third of the green grass and a third of the fresh water polluted?

World War 3: India-Pakistan war could cause NUCLEAR WINTER – 'no one is safe'

WAR between India and Pakistan could plunge temperatures to below ice age conditions, bringing a nuclear winter which would “destroy civilisation” and starve 90 percent to death.

War between India and Pakistan, the two smallest nuclear powers, could destroy civilisation, warned a physicist. Brian Toon, a Professor of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, explained his theory at a talk in February last year. Speaking at a Tedx meeting, Professor Toon claimed: “War between India and Pakistan, two of the smallest nuclear powers, with only a few hundred weapons the size of the Hiroshima bomb. We might die as unintended consequences that the Indian and Pakistani generals never even gave us a thought about. My colleagues Luke Oman and Alman Roebuck calculated the spread of smoke after a war between India and Pakistan.

“It only takes about two weeks for the smoke to cover the entire earth, and it would rise to altitudes between 20 and 50 miles above the surface, at those altitudes it never rains. The smoke would stay there for years.
“This farmer may be in Europe or in the United States, but many thousands of miles from Pakistan and India, is looking at the smoky sky above him, and down at the crops that have died in his field from lack of light and cold temperatures.”
The Fellow at the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics at the University of Colorado Boulder continued: “It is estimated that in a war between India and Pakistan, that we would lose 10 to 40 percent of the yields of corn, what and rice for years afterwards because of the bad weather.

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