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Cities Ablaze
The Zetas have repeatedly stated that all forests will burn
during the Pole Shift, but as usual gave no dates nor timeline.
It appears that urban areas are not exempt. The Japan
blaze has been followed by Hong
Kong high rise buildings, which went ablaze en masse.
Where is this trend going? The Zetas explain.
- Japan on Fire
https://t.me/ZetaTalk_Followers/79487
- The fire broke out around 5:40 pm
on November 18, 2025 in the Saganoseki district of Oita
City, located about 770 km southwest of Tokyo. Over 170
buildings were reduced to ashes, including homes and
shops, devastating an entire neighborhood. 175 residents
evacuated to emergency shelters as the flames spread
rapidly through the hilly coastal town. Firefighters
battled the blaze overnight, assisted by military and
firefighting helicopters dropping water. Strong winds
worsened the situation, spreading flames to forested
slopes and even an uninhabited island offshore. The Fire
and Disaster Management Agency confirmed this was Japan's
largest urban fire in nearly half a century, surpassing
most modern disaster records. The cause of the fire has
not been identified.
- Over 250 Missing after Hong Kong's
Deadliest Blaze in Decades
November 26, 2025
https://apnews.com/article/hong-kong-highrise-fire
- Hong Kong firefighters were
scouring scorched high-rises Thursday for over 250 people
listed as missing, a day after the financial hub's worst
blaze in decades killed at least 55 in an apartment
complex. Over 24 hours after fire broke out in the
eight-building housing estate with 2,000 units, flames
were still visible in some windows as crews sprayed water
on the blackened exteriors. Authorities have begun
investigating what sparked the disastrous blaze, including
the presence of bamboo scaffolding and plastic mesh
wrapped around the structures as part of construction
work.
ZetaTalk Confirmation
11/20/2025: At
the start of the ZetaTalk Saga we stated that all
forests would burn during the forthcoming Pole Shift as
a result of burning Petrol descending to Earth. We did not
predict a timeline. Sky Fire has emerged, with burning Petrol
balls descending worldwide. This has now been followed by Sky
Glow where the upper atmosphere is peppered with Petrol,
causing a glow. This is causing fires not only in forests but
cities too. The majority of cases are caused by burning
Petrol.
An example of a city set on
fire by burning Petrol is Japan on November 18-19. The video
shows Sky Glow overhead. How will the populace react to
burning forests and cities? Forests will regrow
from the ashes and many seeds need this scorch to
activate them. But burning cities will incite migration, with
the populace leaving and then returning as no city will be
safe. Until there is nothing left to burn. Winds will blow
embers about. The cities will become like forest fires.
Upper atmosphere explosions of Petrol have been of record for
years, causing a Sky Blink. None but the Zetas prediction these
Petrol fires on the upper atmosphere.
- SkyBlink
https://www.zetatalk.com/newsletr/issue970.htm
- What would cause the sky to
suddenly flash brightly for a moment and then fade again?
Lightning storms can do this, but if there are no storms
about, clear skies, then what on Earth happened? More and
more people are noticing these instances and they are
indeed related to Nibiru s approach. Six years ago in 2019
Russian Lomonosov satellites noted explosions on the outer
edge of the upper atmosphere. Red Sprites and Blue Jets
are known to dance there, but are always associated with
lightning and atmospheric turmoil below. But the Lomonosov
explosions were not associated with either lightning or
storms.
ZetaTalk Prediction
7/15/1995: With
the atmosphere scattered, chemicals in the comet's tail
similar to your petrol chemicals do not flash in a quick
consummation into water and carbon dioxide, but descend close
to the surface of the Earth before bursting into flame. A fire
storm, killing all beneath it. All this has been reported in
ancient times, as humans observed accompaniments to the
cataclysms. This type of activity sets forests afire. Where
vegetation regrows, from seeds and roots, many areas will
nevertheless be denuded of vegetation for some time.
ZetaTalk Confirmation
3/31/2021: As
could be seen from the number of Petrol Bubbles descending
through the atmosphere, while afire, it was inevitable that
ground fires would be started by this route. Wildfires are
nothing new, but with the increase and severity of drought
this will be problematic in some locations. We have stated
that the Pole Shift fires will burn all the forests, which
will then regrow from seed. The Earth will become green again.
But in the meantime, the firemen will be busy.
City fires are very noticeable as they disrupt human activity,
but forest and wildfires have been on the increase stealthily.
Flaming petrol is to blame.
- Wildfires in the U.S. have been
Getting Larger
https://science.nasa.gov/earth/explore/wildfires-and-climate-change/
- The size and number of wildfires
in the United States has been recorded since 1983 by the
National Interagency Fire Center. Over the past 20 years,
the amount of land area burned each year has increased as
wildfires have grown larger, while the number of fires
each year has remained fairly constant.
- Fire Season is Getting Longer, and
Emissions Larger
https://science.nasa.gov/earth/explore/wildfires-and-climate-change/
- In 2021, a destructive wintertime
wildfire in Colorado became part of a growing trend of
wildfire activity extending well beyond the summer. By
looking back at 35 years of weather data, U.S. Forest
Service scientists found that fire seasons are starting
earlier in the spring and extending later into autumn.
Parts of the Western United States, Mexico, Brazil, and
East Africa now have fire seasons that are more than a
month longer than they were 35 years ago.
- Extreme Wildfire Activity has more
than Doubled Worldwide
https://science.nasa.gov/earth/explore/wildfires-and-climate-change/
- NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites
detect active wildfires twice each day. Scientists studied
this data over a 21-year span and found that extreme
wildfires have become more frequent, more intense, and
larger. The largest increase in extreme fire behavior was
in the temperate conifer forests of the Western U.S. and
the boreal forests of northern North America and Russia.
Warmer nighttime temperatures are a major contributing
factor, allowing fire activity to persist overnight.
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