When a tropical storm recently moved up from the southern US coast, it dropped a high rate of rainfall per hour over the New York City area. The city’s storm drains are not designed for that rate of rainfall and flash flooding occurred. Images of cars, subway stations and basement apartments submerged gave opportunities for key individuals to connect this type of storm to a climate change agenda. One of those individuals was New York’s chief climate officer Rohit Aggarwala. He was mentioned in a newspaper article saying he quote stressed that climate change probably contributed to the intensity of the rainfall and that it overwhelmed storm water systems not designed for such precipitation. “The sad reality is our climate is changing faster than our infrastructure can respond.”

According to his biography, he is a widely recognized expert on urban sustainability, technology, and mobility. He led the creation of the Mayor’s Office of Long-Term Planning and Sustainability under Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, and served as president of the Board of Directors of the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group. He was part of the founding team at Sidewalk Labs—Google’s urban technology startup—and more recently was a senior urban tech fellow at the Jacobs Cornell-Technion Institute.

I want to point out Rosa Koire’s warning about Agenda 21 buzzwords. She’s author of the book, Behind The Green Mask, a must read. The first word she warned about was sustainability, mobility is another one. Koire has pointed out for decades how there are people embedded into positions of leadership in municipalities across the country that answer to non US government bodies and are involved with making UN Agenda 21 changes to public policy and law.

New York City’s climate change expert is a founding team member of Sidewalk Labs. A Google funded, failed smart city in Toronto’s waterfront built out with 24/7 sensors in nearly everything, cameras to capture all activity. One primary reason for the failure is the lack of privacy after promising privacy would be intact. Critics say, smart cities exist to profit from collected data under the guise of controlling resources for a better environment. The utopian smart city model would be sensors embedded in everything including the human body. All of that data collected by transmitting and receiving from sensors to an environment saturated with cancer causing microwaves. That data is then traded on the stock exchange and ledgered with block chain. All of this lines up with digital currency systems.

Political candidates know this. Remember what Professor Charles Lieber was up to at Wuhan University of Technology ? He was developing human nanosensor implants. Getting back to New York City’s climate change expert’s bio, was also on the Board of Directors of the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group. This group are known to impose changes such as meat and dairy dietary restriction and increased surveillance not unlike what they tried to do and failed with Sidewalk Labs. Its known governments, military and private contractors deploy real time weather control technology. Why wouldn’t this technology be used to create the appearance of a climate crisis? For most listeners tuning in to this type of research and information, the climate change agenda and climate engineering go together. They’re not fooling anyone. Many saw the heavy spraying prior to the storms arrival into the New York City area.

As seen by the public response to the disastrous event on the island of Maui, the climate change agenda connects to willful arson and geoengineering, which connects to the 15 minute smart cities. which connects to 24/7 surveillance and digital slavery. We hear the voices from a climate engineering documentary.