Global Mass Migration

Americans are moving out of urban counties like never before
By Grace O’Donnell Adriana Belmonte – Bing video

Abbott Threatens to Declare an ‘Invasion’ as Migrant Numbers Climb

Top Honduran official says mass migration to US ‘possible’ when title 42 ends,
stresses economic help

“The bones of Agenda 21/2030 were laid out in a series of Club of Rome reports, one of the first being Limits to Growth (1971) this was mainly about ‘overpopulation. What we are experiencing now has been a very long-term plan. The technocracy movement of the 1930” s had its roots in Eugenics. It was put on ice during WW11, but Zbigneiw Brezinzky (Club of Rome) revived it in 1971.

To quote: “The technotronic era involves the gradual appearance of a more controlled society.
Such a society would be dominated by an elite, unrestrained by traditional values. Soon it will be possible to assert almost continuous surveillance over every citizen and maintain up-to-date complete files containing even the most personal information about the citizen. These files will be subject to instantaneous retrieval by the authorities.”  
SOURCE: https://www.technocracy.news/club-of-rome-planetary-emergency-plan-declared/
Club of Rome was originally founded at a meeting in David Rockefeller’s house in Bellagio, Italy, and promoted alarmism over population growth. Its 1973 book, Limits to Growth, coincided with the creation of the Trilateral Commission, also by Rockefeller.
They are still at it. This text is taken from the Club of Rome’s 2002 report, Planetary Emergency Plan: Securing a New Deal for People, Nature and Climate. – Bing video
Since the Great Panic of 2020 (pandemic) is currently dominating the new cycle, don’t think for a minute that radical climate change alarmism has gone away. 
To the contrary, it is just waiting for the massive funding that will be sprung during the Great Reset. ⁃ TN Editor

Source: Club of Rome: Planetary Emergency Plan Declared – United Nations Plan Agenda 21 / 2030 (sandiadams.net)

The economy of the Illegitimate Regime— April 2022 one of the worst months in almost 50 years —- and much worse is to come ~ Steve Bannon

 Cruelest Indeed: There Have Been Just 4 Months Since 1973 As Horrific As April!
“It will be possible. I think this issue has been a part of the worries and we understand
that many people internally and with the different policies that the US has to decide.” He spoke. 14% of migrants who have been expelled using Title 42 originated from Honduras. The policy was put in place in response to the Covid-19 Pandemic in March of 2020. Already over 100,000 migrants have been encountered from Honduras since the beginning of the Fiscal Year according to CBP data. 
The Biden administration posted that they would end Title 42 on May 23rd, but a Federal Judge in Louisiana blocked that order earlier this week. “A main issue that we will have to work together with the Biden administration in order to provide some alternative to develop this possibility of all economic growth in Honduras”.
He said Honduras has been a key fixture for the Biden administration in solving the migrant crisis. It is part of the Northern triangle in Central America where over 680,000 migrants originated in FY 2021
 In January, Vice President Kamala Harris attended the inauguration of President Xiomara Castro, head of the left-leaning Libre party, with a focus on combating corruption and irregular migration. Foreign Minister Reina traveled to Washington and New York with a series of White House and State Department officials, including senior director of the NSC department for the Western Hemisphere Juan Sebastian Gonzalez.
They discussed the need for more direct aid to Honduras to prevent the flow of migration
to the US. Which country of migrants are coming across The U.S. southern border?

  The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) began working in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) in 2002 with an initial focus on capacity building and health system strengthening. The launch of the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief in 2004 and the U.S. The President’s Malaria Initiative in 2005 expanded CDC’s support. CDC also works closely with the DRC to address other infectious diseases and strengthen laboratory, surveillance, and workforce capacity to respond to disease outbreaks, including Ebola. On August 1, 2018, the Ministry of Health of the DRC reported an outbreak of Ebola virus disease in North Kivu Province in the Eastern part of the country.
This is the 10th Ebola outbreak in the DRC since the virus was discovered there in 1976 and it has grown to become the second largest.

 Diseases in Republic of Congo – Search (bing.com)

Diseases in the democratic republic of congo – Search (bing.com)
  Diseases in democratic republic of congo – Search (bing.com)

 Democratic republic of the congo diseases – Search (bing.com)

       Democratic republic of congo diseases – Search (bing.com)

Americans leaving urban counties reached a new high in 2021 as droves of people settled in suburban and exurban counties. More than two-thirds of large urban counties saw their populations decline, according to a recent report by the Economic Innovation Group (EIG) that used federal statistics. This marked the first time in 50 years that counties with an urban center and more than 250,000 people experienced negative growth as a category.

While some migration patterns had been in effect before the pandemic, COVID-era remote work and delayed immigration accelerated the shift. “The big key takeaway to me was just how dramatic the effect was in 2021,” August Benzow, the lead researcher on the study, told Yahoo Finance. 
Exurban counties saw the biggest increase across the board, with about 80% gaining population. These counties are defined as areas with “a population smaller than 50,000,
at least 25 percent of their population in a large or medium-sized suburb, and must be in a metro with a population of 500,000 or higher.”

“While there has been much discussion of a flight to the suburbs, the share of suburban counties growing actually declined,” the report stated. “Instead, exurban and rural counties saw a rising share of counties that gained population, with non-metropolitan rural counties seeing the highest population gain since 2008.”
The share of rural counties with population growth underscored the demand for more remote places. ‘Bigger, cheaper housing’ …Housing affordability and spaciousness are likely culprits for the shift away from major cities. 
“The tendency is just for people to maybe be attracted to cities when they’re younger and then move out to the suburbs and exurban places to find bigger, cheaper housing when they choose to have families,” Benzow said. “That trend has always sort of defined the map.”

Urban counties saw huge gains in the early 2000s that began petering out after the Great Recession. In 2011, nearly all of the top 15 counties for population growth were large urban counties, whereas just three were in 2021.
“That trend really picked up after COVID hit and during the pandemic as people started, for different reasons, exiting these more urban counties and moving further out,” Benzow said. “Suburbs are the dominant forces of the landscape in terms of being where the cheap affordable big housing is.”

(Photo by Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images)
© Provided by Yahoo Finance U.S. (Photo by Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images)

The result of the outward expansion from major metropolitan areas such as New York City and Washington D.C. created a phenomenon that has been called the “donut effect.” 
As counties farther out from city centers grow their populations, city centers become hollowed out due to departing residents. However, the influx of people to suburbs and exurbs is more welcome in some places than in others. 
In some areas like Billings, Montana, the housing inventory hasn’t been able to keep up with the increased demand, which has driven up housing costs for new and long-time residents alike. Other counties surrounding major cities hope to make the most of the population growth.
“There are definitely some negative effects in places that are getting too many people at once,” Benzow said. “But then there’s also the places that have been on the outskirts of metros and have maybe not seen a lot of populations grow and now are benefiting from having more people coming in and creating more jobs and more economic activity.”
Benzow added that “it’s a mixed bag, and it depends on how places can soak up all these newcomers and to what extent that’s a permanent shift too.”

More people left urban areas between 2020-2021, particularly in New York City and the San Francisco Bay Area. (Chart: National Bureau of Economic Research)
© Provided by Yahoo Finance USMore people left urban areas between 2020-2021, particularly in New York City and the San Francisco Bay Area.
(Chart: National Bureau of Economic Research)

‘Sunbelt and the Mountain West continued to outshine’ 
Another population dynamic that showed no indication of slowing down was migration Westward. For instance, Phoenix’s Maricopa County, Arizona, experienced the most significant population growth despite being classified as a large urban county.
“Overall, the Sunbelt and the Mountain West continued to outshine the rest of the country,” the report stated. “Remote rural counties in eastern Oregon and northern
Idaho experienced robust population growth while every single county in Nevada
gained population.”
Urban cores in the Great Plains and Midwest generally fared worse, with some exceptions, while all large urban counties lost population in the Northeast.
In the South, Wake County in North Carolina, which encompasses Raleigh, bucked the trend by adding 16,651 residents, and metropolitan areas in Texas and Florida largely retained their populations.

(Getty Images)
© Provided by Yahoo Finance U.S. (Getty Images)

How these demographic shifts affect key issues such as labor markets, political maps,
and resource distribution has yet to unfold. “We’re still kind of waiting for the dust to settle” from the upheaval that the pandemic brought about, Benzow said.
“Some of the effects of the pandemic that drove this outmigration are likely temporary, such as young people moving back in with their parents and the more affluent retreating
to vacation homes,” Benzow wrote in the report. “However, it seems less likely that those who purchased homes in the suburbs and exurbs during the pandemic, motivated in part by new remote work options, will be selling and moving back to cities.”

Adriana Belmonte is a reporter and editor covering politics and health care policy for Yahoo Finance. You can follow her on Twitter @adrianambells and reach her at adriana@yahoofinance.com.

See the source image
Climate change: ‘Nature bounces back when given a chance,’ Planet CEO says
Grace O’Donnell · Assistant Editor – Wed, April 27, 2022, 

As climate change increasingly disrupts complicated earth systems in unprecedented ways, one company hopes to use high-resolution satellite imaging to better understand how the planet is changing.
“We are seeing more climatic events of extreme weather, and that’s driving challenges around the world such as the collapsing of our coral systems and so on,” Will Marshall,
the CEO and co-founder of Planet, a satellite data company, told Yahoo Finance Live video here: Earth Day: Planet CEO details how satellite images can be used to assess ESG risks (yahoo.com)
“But then, even worse than that, we have seen an absolute decimation of ecology on the planet. 70% of fish in freshwater rivers and lakes, 82% of mammals — all of these numbers gone in the last 40 years. So we’ve decimated the populations of animal species of all kinds around the planet.”
However, despite this bleak outlook, Marshall added that there is a glimmer of hope: “What we are also seeing is that nature bounces back when given the chance. And so,
if you protect an area of land, nature bounces quickly back. If you protect an area of the oceans, nature quickly bounces back.”  

image.png
Coral reefs are seen in Matemwe, Zanzibar, on January 10, 2022. 
(Photo by SUMY SADURNI/AFP via Getty Images)
.
The San Francisco-based company, founded in 2010, has been using its 200 satellites to help groups collect data on everything from forestry and agriculture to defense operations and developments in the Russia-Ukraine war. The company is also helping to launch a cluster of satellites that will pinpoint where CO2 and methane super polluters are.
Although humans’ impact on biodiversity is looking direr every year — especially from
the view from space — Marshall argued that the solutions to climate change are fairly straightforward.
“We need to stop deforestation, we need to protect those marine protected areas,
we need to transition to sustainable agriculture, and so on,” Marshall said. “I’m inspired by the wicked tools that we have to bring to bear on the challenges, despite the… pretty sad starting point that we have positioned ourselves in.”

‘Helping people make real decisions’
With the growing challenge of climate change hanging overhead, Planet (PL) sees a huge opportunity in serving insurers and financial markets. Marshall predicted the company will double or triple its revenue growth rate year after year. The demand for better data comes as more companies issue climate targets and governments look to strengthen climate disclosure regulations.
Planet hopes to step in and provide information to help these enterprises to assess their strategies. Recently, the company partnered with Moody’s Analytics to help investors better grasp environmental, social, and governance (ESG) risks.
“We’re really excited about that because… a company has to measure its ESG targets, and we are partnering with Moody’s to try to better use satellite data to do global reporting standards, understand global asset risk, and develop products that enable the whole financial sector to transition to a sustainable one,” Marshall said.

Warm weather crops such as dates thrive along the lower reaches of the Colorado River in Bard, California, USA on Jan 25, 2020. (Photo: Planet)
Warm weather crops such as dates thrive along the lower reaches of the Colorado River in Bard, California, USA on Jan 25, 2020. (Photo: Planet)

Planet has a slew of other partnerships as well. NASA is “tracking key kinds of variables and helping us as a whole society to respond to climatic events more directly,” Marshall said. “We are working with FEMA now to help them have data to ensure that they do rapid response to disasters. We are working with Bayer environmental sciences to enable ranchers to assess their pastures from invasive species that are becoming more common with climate change.”
“These are real things,” he added. “They are helping people make real decisions.”
In order to deliver for these partners, Planet is beefing up its fleet of satellites with 32 new Pelican satellites that will provide 30-centimeter resolution imagery and faster download times. The idea is to not only monitor natural phenomena changing over the course of years but to respond quickly when climate-related disasters strike.
“With climate, we’re seeing more rapid needs for our data from things like disaster responses after floods and fires and earthquakes,” Marshall explained. “We need quick data. So this will be able to be very fast, you know, really rapid response — at times just minutes after delivery, and then getting that data in the hands of the users in the most sophisticated way.”

Tulsi Gabbard suggests Obama behind ‘Ministry of Truth,’ says Biden just ‘front man’.

Migrants being brought to shore by the UK Border Force
.

Controversial Rwanda migration policy – Search (bing.com)
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