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Posts Tagged ‘Planetary Healing’

Water Management, Not Carbon Tax: Earth’s Silent Cry for Balance


By Marivel Guzman | Akashma News

Originally published on June 27, 2017

Updated on May 03, 2025

In the global effort to combat climate change, carbon taxes have emerged as a popular policy tool. Proponents argue that putting a price on carbon emissions incentivizes industries and individuals to reduce their carbon footprint. However, this approach often overlooks a more immediate and tangible crisis: water mismanagement.

I’m not a scientist. But my common sense, my emotional intelligence, and my deep symbiotic bond with Mother Earth compel me to question the climate change narrative being pushed by policymakers, financiers, and lobbyist-backed scientists. The climate is indeed changing—but it’s not just because of carbon emissions. It’s because Earth is thirsty.

I coined the term “dry surface syndrome” to describe this condition—one caused not by abstract greenhouse gases, but by the damming of rivers, the clear-cutting of forests, the overuse of groundwater, and the destruction of Earth’s natural hydrological systems. When Earth is parched, it does what every living organism does: it adapts. It melts its glaciers. It shifts its winds. It tries to rebalance itself.

Let me be clear: I believe lobbying companies have manipulated have the scientific discourse around climate. Some of the data pushed over the last 25 years, especially by the proponents behind “An Inconvenient Truth,” was crafted not to empower the planet—but to sell the carbon tax agenda. We’ve been sold a smokescreen, while the real damage continues in our rivers, forests, and oceans.

This infographic reveals the stark contrast between the U.S.’s massive daily freshwater use (322 billion gallons) and its CO₂ emissions (6.3 billion metric tons). As Marivel Guzman writes, “Earth is not just warming—she is thirsty.”

Water, the Forgotten Crisis

According to American Rivers, the U.S. alone diverts and manages its water through more than 241 dams in California—part of a global network of over 57,000 dams disrupting natural ecosystems. Dams fragment rivers, kill fisheries, and stop sediment from replenishing coasts. The Guardian reported extensively on this issue, which remains largely ignored in global climate talks.

Even worse, freshwater from melting glaciers is described by some scientists as “wasted water” because it mixes with the oceans. But water doesn’t die—it transforms. As sunlight causes evaporation, that moisture joins the rain cycle, replenishing rivers, aquifers, and life. To call glacier melt “waste” is to deny the sacred role water plays in Earth’s renewal.

Lungs of the Planet: Forests and Oceans

BBC once called the Amazon the “lungs of the planet,” covering over 5.5 million square kilometers. But it isn’t just forests. According to the Earth Journalism Network, oceans also act as Earth’s lungs—producing between 50% to 80% of the world’s oxygen and absorbing over 25% of its CO₂. WWF’s Yolanda Kakabadse put it best: “We should call it Planet Ocean.”

And yet, we are suffocating these lungs. If you trap the water responsible for ocean currents and cut down all the trees, what do you expect will happen to the climate?

Pollution vs. Responsibility

Pollution is real and deadly—particularly in the developing world. The World Health Organization states that over 3 billion people, mostly women and children, still inhale toxic smoke daily from polluting stoves. But not all pollution comes from oil or cars. We ignore the role of fast fashion, agriculture, and consumer habits in water waste and environmental degradation.

Take cotton: India, the world’s largest producer, uses 22,500 liters of water to produce just one kilogram of cotton.According to The Guardian, in 2013 alone, India’s cotton exports consumed enough water to supply 85% of its 1.24 billion people with 100 liters per day for a year. Yet 100 million people in India lack safe water access.

Since 1991, the World Bank has been deeply involved in multiple phases of India’s water infrastructure development—channeling billions in loans toward rural water supply, dam rehabilitation, and urban water management. Yet despite these investments, India now has significantly less water per person than it did in 1951.

According to India Today, per capita water availability dropped from 5,177 cubic meters in 1951 to just 1,545 cubic meters by 2011, with current estimates nearing 1,000 cubic meters in several regions

Toward a Real Climate Agenda

If climate change is a fact—and it is—then the preservation, distribution, and restoration of water systems must be central to every climate summit and sustainability agenda. Instead of investing billions in carbon markets and surveillance, we must dismantle destructive dams, reforest ecosystems, and return rivers to their natural paths.

We must acknowledge Earth as a sentient, self-regulating being—not just a resource to be taxed, but a life force to be nurtured. Earth is not just warming. She is bleeding through her glacier tears. And she is asking us to listen.

Further reading:
When Earth Thirsts: Glacial Tears and the Wisdom of a Living Planet

HAARP and Earth’s Magnetic Field: Tuning the Frequencies of a Living Planet


By Marivel Guzman | Akashma News
Published: May 2, 2025, 22:45 UTC

Microwaves, Magnetism, and the Matrix

What if the so-called blackouts across Europe weren’t just infrastructure failures — but signals in a deeper electromagnetic disturbance? What if the protective field around Earth isn’t failing naturally, but being disturbed, nudged, maybe even provoked by artificial experiments cloaked in atmospheric research?

The HAARP (High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program) facility in Alaska has long raised questions. Officially decommissioned in 2014, and then quietly transferred to the University of Alaska Fairbanks, it continues to beam high-frequency radio waves into the ionosphere — the electrically charged region of the upper atmosphere. What’s not up for debate is its ability to superheat localized pockets of this atmospheric layer and trigger artificial auroras. What is still debated is the long-term, planetary-scale effect of such actions.

HAARP and the Ionosphere: A Targeted Relationship

HAARP operates far below the magnetosphere, technically targeting the ionosphere. But the electromagnetic relationship between these layers is tightly woven. HAARP sends 3.6 megawatts of RF (radio frequency) energy upward — not enough to melt the poles or crack open the planet, but enough to create electrical turbulence and interfere with natural wave behavior.

Artificially induced currents can alter the conductivity of the ionosphere. When this happens on a large scale — or in resonance with natural geomagnetic storms — ripple effects may occur in ways we don’t fully comprehend — and consequently, cannot fully control, potentially unleashing phenomena with catastrophic consequences.

Tesla’s Echo: The Theories That Shaped HAARP

To be fair to Nikola Tesla, the theoretical groundwork that would later influence HAARP was born not from militarism, but from a dream of universal energy. Tesla’s experiments with resonance, wireless transmission, and the Earth’s natural frequencies were visionary.

In 1905, Tesla filed patents for a system that could transmit electrical energy through the Earth’s atmosphere, using resonance between the Earth and high-frequency oscillations. He envisioned a world where electricity was distributed wirelessly and harmonically — not weaponized, not monopolized.

The infamous Eastlund Patent (US4686605A), often cited as the basis for HAARP, borrows heavily from Tesla’s ideas, but twists them. Where Tesla saw a unified global grid of free energy, others saw potential for atmospheric manipulation, mind control, and defense technologies.

The tragedy isn’t that Tesla’s ideas were impossible. It’s that they were appropriated — and distorted.

The Bigger Picture: Solar Storms, Oceanic Conductors, and Magnetic Shifts

Earth’s oceans, rich in salt, act as massive conductors of electromagnetic energy. The poles — especially those draped in ice — serve as guardians of balance, insulating and tuning Earth’s magnetic field like sacred instruments. As glaciers melt, it is not merely a sign of disruption, but perhaps a deliberate response: Mother Earth drawing upon her ancient reserves, rehydrating her fractured systems. This release may temporarily shift oceanic salinity and density, yet beneath it lies a deeper intelligence — one that seeks not to weaken, but to recalibrate the planetary pulse.

What happens when a solar storm hits Earth at the same time that HAARP (or similar atmospheric technologies) are in operation? Could that combination push Earth’s already drifting magnetic pole a few more inches — or more?

Could the energy be absorbed unevenly by the oceans, triggering tectonic micro-shifts or internal resonance within the mantle-core boundary?

We may never get a peer-reviewed study to confirm it. But those who observe intuitively — those who feel the pulse of the planet — know that something deeper is moving.

Timeline: Major Blackouts and Atmospheric Anomalies

April 28, 2025 — Widespread blackout across Spain, Portugal, and parts of France. Authorities cite grid synchronization failures possibly linked to atmospheric oscillations.

December 4, 2023 — Sudden electromagnetic interference reported across Nordic regions during a geomagnetic storm. Minor blackouts and satellite malfunctions observed.

August 12, 2021 — High-altitude VLF (very low frequency) testing reported in northern Alaska. Coincides with minor seismic uptick and localized communication failures.

July 23, 2012 — “The Near Miss”: A massive solar storm narrowly misses Earth. NASA later confirms it could have caused global blackouts had it hit directly.

August 14, 2003 — Northeast U.S. and parts of Canada suffer massive blackout. Official cause: grid failure — but it coincides with unusual magnetospheric activity.

While correlation does not imply causation, patterns like these demand deeper scrutiny. As our dependence on electromagnetic infrastructure grows, so too does our vulnerability to disruptions — natural or engineered.

Conclusion: Tuning Earth’s Heartbeat or Scrambling It?

HAARP may not destroy the magnetic field directly. But it is undeniably capable of disturbing the harmony that sustains it. Like playing a tuning fork next to a glass — resonance matters. Earth has a natural electromagnetic song, shaped by Schumann Resonances, solar winds, and deep mantle flows.

When we inject artificial frequencies into this system — whether for “research” or defense — we are not observing. We are interfering. The question is: Are we prepared for the note that breaks the glass?

Author’s Statement

I am not a physicist, geophysicist, or climatologist.
I am a journalist, a researcher, a question-asker — guided by intuition, emotional intelligence, and a reverence for truth in all its layers.

My work is born not in institutional labs, but in lived experience, data literacy, and the insatiable drive to understand what hides beneath headlines and behind veils. I do not claim to hold all answers — but I do claim the right to ask bold questions.

I research because I care.
I write because silence isn’t an option.
And I share because, in this collapsing moment of noise and denial, awareness may be our most sacred responsibility.

— Marivel R. Guzman
Akashma News


References & Acknowledgments

Eastlund, Bernard J., “Method and Apparatus for Altering a Region in the Earth’s Atmosphere, Ionosphere, and/or Magnetosphere,” U.S. Patent No. 4,686,605 (1987).

Tesla, Nikola. Patents and writings on wireless energy transmission and Earth resonance (1900–1905).

Begich, Nick & Manning, Jeane. Angels Don’t Play This HAARP: Advances in Tesla Technology (1995).

HeartMath Institute, Global Coherence Monitoring System (Schumann Resonance Data): https://www.heartmath.org/gci/gcms/live-data/

Wikipedia: HAARP Overview

NASA Archives: The 2012 Near Miss Solar Storm

MarketWatch: Europe Blackout Mystery

New York Post: Spain/Portugal Blackout Coverage


This investigation will continue.

Marivel Guzman
Investigative Journalist | Documentary Photographer | Truth Seeker

Marivel Guzman is passionate about investigative reporting and photography. She loves to dig for information and get to the bottom of what is really going on. Her work often focuses on following the money and exposing how public funds are allocated—or misused.

Her bylines include Lariat News, Orange Coast Report, and The State Hornet. She has also worked remotely as Proof Editor for the Baluchistan Red Crescent quarterly magazine and volunteers as a photographer for UNRWA at their local community events.

She has been the voice behind Akashma News for almost two decades, sharing uncensored stories that challenge dominant narratives and amplify the voices of the oppressed.