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Does God Still Judge the Nations?


Does God Still Judge the Nations?
Amos 3:6 “When disaster comes to a city, has not the Lord caused it?”
Midwest baby-dumping capital Granite City, Illinois declared a disaster area as power and water outage is into fourth day. Tempers flaring!
Written by: Angela Michael

Does God still judge the nations? He sure does. If you don't believe it, ask Granite City, Illinois, home of the Hope abortion Clinic that has killed 400,000 babies over the last thirty years. According to Ameren Electric, this was the largest storm that ever hit the St. Louis and Metro-East area, as over 500,000 people were left without power, with the Granite City area being hit the hardest.

Hope(less) abortion mill has been without power for days. The electric came back on for a couple of hours Friday and they opened up shop, only to be hit with more violent storms.

On Saturday, a small remnant was the watchmen on the wall as we prayed and interceded for the innocents. We held a sign stating God is still speaking, "Can you hear Him now? Amos 3:6” and a "Do You Care" with Baby Malachi on it, as Granitonians drove by. It looked like a war zone. The only up and running business was the baby-killing factory.

Desperate for innocent blood and revenue, they rigged up a generator Saturday morning to complete the late-term abortions from Friday.

An hour into daily operations we noticed employees leaving and returning with ice and bottled water.

Pregnant mothers were being turned away, Praise the Lord! We spoke with a few and three mothers confirmed they were not going to reschedule. We explained this was a sign from God, that He loved their baby, and He had a plan for them. They agreed, and accepted our literature and left.

Over a million people in the metro-east area are without water and electricity. Tempers are rising and so are the flood waters in Granite City, due to their deteriorating streets and sewer system. What would anyone expect when you continue to clog it up with aborted babies?

Century old trees lay twisted onto downed power lines throughout the city, roofs and houses lay open, and many people are wandering the streets in search of gas, water, food, and relief. One woman stopped by and asked us if we had any diapers for her infant baby, which we handed her.

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Yogendra Shah carrying trash bag full of dead babies
Can You Hear God Now?

Three hours into the grisly operations, abortive clients began staggering out and into their cars. They did not look good carrying their brown bags to vomit into from being overly sedated, or were they? Chief serial killer Yogendra Shah walked out clutching a filled over-sized black trash bag which he gingerly placed inside his car. Since there has been no refrigeration inside this deathcamp, they cannot house the dead babies' body parts and must be removed from the building. Can you imagine the stench if the city morgue was not air-conditioned? Shah then drove off.

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Firefighters & ambulance on crime scene
Granite City firefighters & police officer on the crime scene Auschwitz East

Minutes later employees began coming out. We then watched as two fire-engines with sirens full blast, a police cruiser, and an ambulance rolled onto the crime scene. They rushed inside with full-gear and masks on. They evacuated the building and declared it unsafe for inhabitants. Hope Clinic assistant director Deb Wiedhardt put the lock on the front door and left the area. Only the two deathcamp guards were left behind to watch over the carbon-monoxide filled death-camp. Literally, you could call it the Auschwitz-East deathcamp. History is repeating itself.

At posting time, power was still out See earlier article Hope Abortion Clinic SHUTDOWN Due to God's Judgement July 21

Related news article

http://www.belleville.com/mld/belleville/15100399.htm

Posted on Sat, Jul. 22, 2006

Madison County takes another big hit Friday

St. Clair Square, countless homes find power out

BY BRIAN BRUEGGEMANN, MARIA BARAN, MELANIE MEYER AND JAYNE MATTHEWS
News-Democrat

Madison County was battered Wednesday, baked Thursday, battered again and then dried Friday.

Storms on Wednesday night knocked power out to large portions of northern and western Madison County. The storm Friday afternoon hit central, southern and eastern portions of the county.

"My understanding is, the areas that didn't get hit last time got hit this time," Madison County Board Chairman Alan Dunstan said. "This just multiplies the problems. In almost the whole county, the power is gone."

Customers lined up to buy gas and ice at the few convenience stores with electricity.

"A ton of people are trying to get ice," said Jennifer Cary, clerk at a MotoMart on Club Centre Court in Edwardsville. But the MotoMart had already run out of ice on Thursday.

"We've been getting Granite City people over here," Cary said. Granite City got slammed during the storm on Wednesday and lost power. Friday's storm knocked out a water plant in the city and left faucets dry.

Terri Adams, an employee at Glen Mart 66 in Glen Carbon, said while the station was without power and unable to sell gas, it still had ice.

"We've got ice right now because we just got a delivery in, but we've already sold about half of it," Adams said.

Tractor-trailers were overturned at Interstate 55-70 near Troy and at the intersection of Interstate 255 near Interstate 270. Traffic on Illinois 159, a north-south artery that often has clogs, was barely creeping along at spots as most traffic signals in the county were not operating.

Almost all of Edwardsville was without power Friday. Restaurant owners scrambled to find dry ice to save food, department stores shut down and grocers made plans to bring in refrigerated trucks.

Edwardsville Fire Chief Brian Wilson urged residents to prepare for several days without power.

Madison County Sheriff Robert Hertz said Friday's storm predominantly damaged the southeast side of Madison County, causing some roof and structural damage.

"The only good thing is that this wasn't as destructive as Wednesday," he said.

In Troy , several large trees were knocked down, including a big one that fell from the yard of the former home of the late Sen. Paul Simon onto a garage and two vehicles owned by neighbor Beckie VanScoyk.

"The oldest tree in Troy probably just fell," VanScoyk said.

Organizers canceled the Troy Homecoming on Friday night, but it was expected to continue today.

Roofs were damaged, including a building attached to the Carrollwood Phillips 66 service station at Interstate 55 and Illinois 162. Two houses in Troy were damaged by fallen trees.

In Collinsville , police said the northern three-quarters of the city was without power. Police said the biggest problems were traffic issues due to roads closed by downed trees as well as lines of cars backing into the street from the few open gas stations.

All of Highland lost power, but it was back on within a few hours. Maryville Police reported that about 90 percent of residents were without power after the storm Friday.

Live electrical wires trapped Maryville Police Chief Richard Schardan in his police car, after the collapse of two utility poles near the intersection of Illinois 162 and 157 in Glen Carbon.

"I had a shocking experience," said Schardan, who was not injured.

Schardan said he remained in his Chevrolet Tahoe for about 90 minutes while Ameren workers removed live wires.

"The training kicked in -- stay in the car, don't step out in the water, stay on the rubber," he said.

Schardan said he saw the swaying poles in time to move his car between them and avoid a direct hit.

"I saw the utility poles start to rock," Schardan said.

In Granite City, the loss of electricity at City Hall on Friday also meant the loss of one of Granite City's cooling centers, said Jeff Connor, assistant police chief.

Besides City Hall, cooling centers have been operating at Six-Mile Public Library, Granite City Township Hall and several churches. Only the Nameoki Township Hall cooling center has been operating 24-hours-a-day and serving meals.

Dunstan asked that residents check on neighbors and elderly people who do not have electricity.

The loss of power on Friday shut down the Madison County Courthouse in Edwardsville, but that didn't stop Associate Judge Barbara Crowder from holding weddings on the plaza outside for about 15 couples who showed up for their nuptial appointments.

"They set them up in front of the flowers on those trees," said County Clerk Mark Von Nida. "It was actually pretty."

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