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The Warnings: Reports from the desk of Mother Nature


Here are the links to the current, published reports. 

The Warning: Your Future Is Happening Right Now


These reports cover much information about what is happening inside the corporation that owns the entire planet.

You will learn about what is likely to happen to the planet you currently live off of.

And you will find out what the corporation who owns the entire planet is planning to do with the planet that it owns.

The corporation?

Mother Nature, Incorporated.

This is privately owned company, registered at the beginning of time. It is wholly owned by Mother Nature.

This company owns the environment of the planet you live on. It is the environment.

Your so-called eco-nomy is entirely owned by Mother Nature, Inc.

Let's put it this way: the eco-nomy of the planet is a wholly ownded subsidiary of Mother Nature, Inc.
The more you strip-mine your assets into what will end up in your garbage dumps, the faster you can turn my garden into a parking lot.

You see, you don't need my garden. You can grow everything you need using the parking lot as your garden.


Your Future?
A parking lot being used to grow food, with plants growing directly out of the asphalt. 

Approximately healthy, bioactive soil constitutes only about 50-60% of the world’s total arable soil.

Globally, it's estimated that there are around 15 billion hectares (150 million km²) of land on Earth, of which roughly 1.5 billion hectares are considered arable land (land that can be used for growing crops). 

However, not all of this arable land is bioactive and healthy. Due to various factors such as deforestation, overgrazing, industrial agriculture, pollution, urbanization, and climate change, significant portions of arable soil have degraded, losing fertility, structure, and microbial health.

It is widely accepted that between 30-40% of the planet's arable soil is degraded to some degree, leaving only around 50-60% of arable soil in what we would classify as bioactive and healthy

Healthy soils are rich in microorganisms, organic matter, and nutrients, supporting plant growth and sustainable ecosystems.

This percentage is shrinking as soil degradation accelerates due to human activity and environmental changes, raising concerns about future food security and ecosystem health.

The difference between healthy, bioactive soil and degraded, barren soil. The contrast between the thriving and deteriorated environments highlights the importance of maintaining soil health.









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