07.06.2011

Piezoelectric Fire in New Ulm, Minnesota


Cause of New Ulm Fire Remains Mystery

by Alison Dirr for MPR News
July 6, 2011

The fire that ripped through New Ulm's Bohemian Bed and Breakfast Saturday, killing six, has captivated the attention of southern Minnesota.

New Ulm Police Chief Myron Wieland told the Mankato Free Press the fire was the worst in the city in recent memory.

The cause of the fire is still under investigation, though local papers have reported that the blaze started on the porch in the front of the house.

The New Ulm Journal provided the most coverage, publishing blogs, articles, editorials and obituaries chronicling the lives of Bobbi Mcrea, the Bohemian's owner, and her two daughters who perished in the fire.

In an article Sunday, the Journal's Serra Muscatello wrote, "The city lost a landmark building in the fire that destroyed The Bohemian Bed & Breakfast on Saturday, but moreso, it lost an energetic, enthusiastic woman supporter of the city's history, tourism and the creative arts."

Although officials have not released the names of the six victim, friends and family confirmed the deaths of Mcrea and her daughters. Names of the other three victims have not been released.




Analysis

These unusual fires are being caused all over the world by an unrecognized force: ultra-low frequency sound, far below the audible level of most humans. This infrasonic influence is building strong electrical currents in the metal objects like wheel-barrows and copper electrical wiring in the walls of homes, which then become hot enough to ignite the plastic sheathing surrounding the wires. This was the likely cause of the flames that burst forth from electrical wiring in the ceiling. In other cases, heated wires ignite bed mattresses and metal hangers ignite clothing.

The infrasound which is now being focused onto the New Ulm, Minnesota vicinity is being transduced by the Orion pyramids of present-day Giza, Egypt, which act as a nonlinear lensing system for resonantly balancing the geomagnetic fields of Earth as stimulated by coronal mass ejections from the increasingly active sun.

New Ulm, Minnesota (44.31°N 94.47°W) is 6,278 miles from Giza, or 25.22% of the Earth's mean circumference (of 24,892 miles). This resonant infrasound distance lies along a band of focused energy that is adjacent to other increasingly active bands in Minnesota, especially Soudan SP and Minneapolis. Crop circles have also been forming at this same resonant distance of 25.25% of the Earth's circumference from Giza, in the fields of Madisonville, Tennessee.

This website has covered many major stories involving infrasound resonance convergence points, including Llanidloes, Mawnan, Hull, Saffron Walden, Bridlington, Woodland, Bolton, Malta, Goa, Klai, Auckland, Sydney, Ontario, White Rock, Ranchlands, Panama, and in the US in Newport, Anderson, Kimberley, Rochester, Menomonee Falls, Pelham, Richmond, Wilmington, Virginia Beach, Nashville, Knoxville, Mobile, McCalla, northern Florida, Knob Noster, Denver, Seattle, Novato, Arroyo Grande and Atwater.

The cases have become so severe that spontaneous combustion of objects by piezoelectric induction has been recurring in spates - in areas such as Tenerife, Lalapansi, Bauchi, Babura, Abuja, Mapuve, Bodibe, Hopewell, Tsholotsho, Landovica, Longford, Hull, Egham, Wisbech, Glasgow, Messina, Peschici, Berici, across northern Greece, Ratria, Kakori, Mumbai, Kishtwar, Rangrik, Kota Baru, Kuala Lumpur, Santo Tomas, Adelaide, Sydney, Georgetown, La Pampa, Melipilla, and in the US in Seattle, Colorado Springs, Pueblo, Anderson, San Mateo, Vallejo, San Francisco, Santa Barbara, Clovis, Haverhill, Peabody, Brentwood and New York City.