I moved to Panama in 2003 after the 911 scam, and lived 9 years there, where I met and married my wonderful Panamanian wife. It is no better there, and the lock downs and quarantines were much worse there than here, so I moved back here. It is good that you are happier in Mexico, but do not delude yourself into thinking you are safer or better off there.
I moved to Panama in 2003 after the 911 scam, and lived 9 years there, where I met and married my wonderful Panamanian wife. It is no better there, and the lock downs and quarantines were much worse there than here, so I moved back here. It is good that you are happier in Mexico, but do not delude yourself into thinking you are safer or better off there.
For most of the past 33 years I have been dirt poor. The only preparations I could make were spiritual and mental...until four years ago. All those years I brainstormed about how I could put my plans to work, without money. Some things worked...some did not. I went so far as to marry a Guatemalan in 2006 (any old port in a storm). I have no regrets about the past 33 years. Everything worked out exactly as it was supposed to work out.
I now have nerves of steel. Last June, while birdwatching on Sauvie Island in the Columbia River, a lunatic pointed a pistol in my face and threatened to blow my brains out if I did not return his phone to him (which of course, I did not have). I talked him down. Even I was amazed at how cool I remained. One can have 50 years of dried food in a bunker, but without spiritual preparation, they will not make it.
They are likely to run out of drinking water before most other countries since they lacked the sense to build a pipeline alongside the canal to provide water for its operation instead of relying on fresh water from lakes.
"France began work on the canal in 1881, but stopped because of lack of investors' confidence due to engineering problems and a high worker mortality rate. The United States took over the project in 1904 and opened the canal in 1914." Wikipedia
No, she is way better than a so called "meteorologist", since she actually lives there for the winter, and knows how the weather is for over 60 years! Would you trust a so called "meteorologist" more than that? Not me!
I moved to Panama in 2003 after the 911 scam, and lived 9 years there, where I met and married my wonderful Panamanian wife. It is no better there, and the lock downs and quarantines were much worse there than here, so I moved back here. It is good that you are happier in Mexico, but do not delude yourself into thinking you are safer or better off there.
For most of the past 33 years I have been dirt poor. The only preparations I could make were spiritual and mental...until four years ago. All those years I brainstormed about how I could put my plans to work, without money. Some things worked...some did not. I went so far as to marry a Guatemalan in 2006 (any old port in a storm). I have no regrets about the past 33 years. Everything worked out exactly as it was supposed to work out.
I now have nerves of steel. Last June, while birdwatching on Sauvie Island in the Columbia River, a lunatic pointed a pistol in my face and threatened to blow my brains out if I did not return his phone to him (which of course, I did not have). I talked him down. Even I was amazed at how cool I remained. One can have 50 years of dried food in a bunker, but without spiritual preparation, they will not make it.
Prepared at the core myself too, my friend.
They are likely to run out of drinking water before most other countries since they lacked the sense to build a pipeline alongside the canal to provide water for its operation instead of relying on fresh water from lakes.
From what I read, it was the French and English who built the Panama canal, so that was their design error.
Panama gets over 200"/year of rain which is about the same as Hawaii, and 10 times more than most of the US, so they are not lacking for water!
Their water management does need improvement though.
"France began work on the canal in 1881, but stopped because of lack of investors' confidence due to engineering problems and a high worker mortality rate. The United States took over the project in 1904 and opened the canal in 1914." Wikipedia
Then explain why their lakes are looking a lot like Lake Mead and Lake Powell right now.
My Panamanian wife says they got less than the normal rainfall in 2023, so that may just be a temporary situation.
Is she a Panamanian meteorologist?
No, she is way better than a so called "meteorologist", since she actually lives there for the winter, and knows how the weather is for over 60 years! Would you trust a so called "meteorologist" more than that? Not me!