Like the recent fires in California and Australia, the Hawaii fires are "unlike anything we've ever seen before," to quote Greg Reese of Infowars, who put together the following informational video about what many believe really happened in West Maui.
"They are being called 'forest fires' and 'wildfires,' but they are clearly something very different," Reese explains.
"These fires are burning homes into a white powdery ash footprint while often leaving the surrounding green trees and shrubs practically untouched. In extreme cases, forest fires can reach temperatures of up to 1500 degrees Fahrenheit, and the melting point of aluminum is 1220 degrees Fahrenheit, so it is possible for an extreme forest fire to melt aluminum."
"But there are cars with puddles of melted aluminum that were clearly not in the wildfire area, and melted glass, which has a melting point of around 2500 degrees F. These are unexplained anomalies."
As was also the case with the 2018 California fires, objects such as
cars and homes burned to a crisp and basically collapsed into their own
footprint, leaving behind nothing but white ash...<<<Read More>>>...